Ward may refer to:
Assal al-Ward, Syria
Ward, Castleknock, Ireland
Ward, New Zealand
United States:
Ward, Alabama
Ward, Arkansas
Ward, California
Ward, Colorado
Ward, South Dakota
Ward, New York
Ward, South Carolina
Ward, Washington
Ward, West Virginia
Ward Reservation, Massachusetts
Ward Township, Todd County, Minnesota
Ward Township, Hocking County, Ohio
Ward Township, Tioga County, Pennsylvania
Wards of New Orleans
Hospital ward, a department, division, floor, or room of a hospital set aside for a particular class or group of patients, for example a convalescent or psychiatric ward
Prison ward, a division of a penal institution such as a prison
Ward (electoral subdivision), electoral district or unit of local government
Ward (KPK), local government in Khyber Pakhtunkhwa, Pakistan
Ward (South Africa)
Wards of Bangladesh
Wards of Germany
Wards of Japan
Wards of Myanmar
Wards of the United Kingdom
Ward (United States)
Ward (fortification), part of a castle
Ward (LDS Church), local congregation
WARD (AM), a radio station in Petoskey, Michigan
Ward Cleaver, a fictional character from the American television sitcom Leave It to Beaver
Warring Adolescents Revenge Division (WARD), organization in The Hardy Boys graphic novels
Watch and Ward, a short novel by Henry James first published as a serial in 1871 and later as a book in 1878
Brands and enterprises
Montgomery Ward, an online retailer and former department store chain
Ward Body Works, a school bus manufacturer, now IC Bus
Ward's, a publisher of Ward's AutoWorld and Ward's Dealer Business
Wards Brewing Company, a former English brewery, now a brand operated by Double Maxim Beer Company
Law and law enforcement
Ward (law), someone placed under the protection of a legal guardian
Watchman (law enforcement), a security guard
Ward (surname)
Ward (given name)
Ward, short form of the given names:
Edward
Howard
Ward (fencing), defensive position in the sport of fencing
USS Aaron Ward, various United States Navy destroyers
USS Ward (DD-139), a U.S. Navy destroyer in commission from 1918 to 1921 and from 1941 until sunk in 1944, the first ship to open fire in the Battle of Pearl Harbor