Geoffrey de Neville (died c. 1225) was an English nobleman who served as King's Chamberlain and Seneschal of Gascony and Périgord.
In gratitude for his loyalty, the king gave him some possessions of dispossessed members of the baronial opposition in England.
In November 1217, Neville was part of the re-recognition of Magna Carta by the regent William Marshal, Earl of Pembroke.
In 1218 he was in Worcester when the Welsh prince Llywelyn ap Iorwerth signed a peace treaty with the regency council.
In October 1219 he gave William Gauler the administration of Gascony and returned to England, where he reached Dover on 1 November.
On 23 January 1221, the king summoned him to Northampton against the rebellious William de Forz, Earl of Albemarle, who had occupied Fotheringhay Castle.
In 1222, he paid the king £100 to obtain guardianship for Alexander de Neville, presumably a second cousin of his and possessions in Lincolnshire, Yorkshire, and Cumberland.