This makes it a great place to look for DNA matches (relatives) who may know something about your origins that you don’t. Return to top Websites for DNA tests 23andMeīest known for its health reports, 23andMe also has an enormous pool of DNA testers: over 10 million. You can pay just for family tree-building tools or historical record access or combine them. This Israeli website is strongest for continental Europe, Scandinavian countries and Jewish research. If you have more recent immigrant origins or are especially interested in finding overseas cousins, consider subscribing to MyHeritage, home to more than 5 billion historical records and DNA testing. DNA tests offered through Findmypast offer especially detailed geographic origins reports within Britain and Ireland. Under the Help menu, explore the Getting Started section come back to access Expert Advice and Top Tips as you’re ready for them. If you have roots in England, Scotland, Ireland or Wales, consider subscribing to gain access to millions of parish records, censuses, military and criminal records, and millions of British and Irish newspapers. The modest learning curve is well worth the effort. Join the world’s biggest shared family tree-or just mine it for information about your ancestors. The Catalog tab takes you to the most extensive genealogy library catalog in the world. Learn research skills with the Research Wiki (under the Search tab). The world’s best all-free genealogy website, with more than 7 billion global, name-searchable records and billions of additional ones to page through. The core historical record collections are for the United States, so this may be a good option for beginning researchers who believe their families have been in the United States for several generations. This is a budget-friendly, scaled-down version of, its owner.
Many US libraries offer Ancestry Library Edition free to patrons. Be sure to check out Ancestry Academy and Ancestry’s YouTube channel for beginner-friendly tutorials. This powerful subscription website is home to more than 11 billion old records, 100 million family trees and more than 15 million DNA profiles. Even those that seem similar often have very different records, trees, or tutorials that might supply just the thing you’re looking for next. That’s when you’ll come back here and look for another. Keep this list bookmarked, because at some point, the websites you’re using may run out of answers for you. Then choose what sounds most interesting or relevant to you from your options for learning online, exploring regional and ethnic resources, and digging into beginner-friendly newspaper and tombstone records. For example, to begin with, choose just one family tree-building website and DNA testing company.