Abstract Lanthanum oxyhydrides were recently reported to be fast hydride ion conductors with the highest conductivity at 100–400 °C. Here, the relationship between the hydride‐ion conduction and the ammonia synthesis activity of ruthenium‐loaded lanthanum oxyhydrides (Ru/LaH 3 − 2 x O x ) is investigated. The onset ammonia formation temperature by the Ru/LaH 3 − 2 x O x is lower by 100 °C when compared to the Ru‐loaded lanthanum oxides. The apparent activation energy of ammonia synthesis over Ru/LaH 3 − 2 x O x is 64 kJ mol −1 , which is much smaller than that of hydride‐ion conductivity (≈100 kJ mol −1 ), indicating no direct relationship between the catalytic activity and the bulk hydride‐ion conductivity. However, the catalytic performance is strongly correlated with the surface H − ion mobility of Ru/LaH 3 − 2 x O x , which gives rise to the formation of low work function electrons at H − ion vacancies near the Ru‐support interface and high resistance for H 2 poisoning on the Ru catalyst. Moreover, LaH 3 − 2 x O x has high nitridation resistance as compared with lanthanum hydride (LaH 3 ) under ammonia synthesis condition. As a result, the high surface H − concentration of Ru/LaH 3 − 2 x O x is preserved during ammonia synthesis, exhibiting more robust activity than Ru/LaH 3 . Almost the same results are obtained for Ru/CeH 3 − 2 x O x implicating the common characteristics of rare‐earth oxyhydride support.