Full-Time
Genealogy platform with DNA testing
$21 - $26/hr
Draper, UT, USA
In Person
Ancestry provides a genealogy platform with tools to build family trees, access historical records, view photos, and analyze DNA to learn about ancestry. Users subscribe for access to records and tree-building features, while DNA kits are purchased separately and analyzed to show ethnic backgrounds and relative connections. The platform combines the world’s largest online collection of family history records with integrated DNA testing in one place to help users connect with living relatives and uncover documents. The goal is to help people understand their roots and trace their lineage using data-backed genealogical tools and DNA insights.
Company Size
1,001-5,000
Company Stage
Acquired
Total Funding
$6.5B
Headquarters
Lehi, Utah
Founded
1983
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AI + Genealogy monthly review - December 2025. Dec 31, 2025 December felt like a "new interface" month for family history: less search box only, more AI-guided storytelling, tree-building nudges, and machine-reading at scale. In this issue. * Ancestry turns records into narrated "AI Stories" * FamilySearch adds tree-extending hints powered by its AI Research Assistant * Genealogy education keeps leveling up (plus an Internet Archive + AI workflow) * Manuscripts meet machine learning: Cairo Geniza / MiDRASH momentum 1) Ancestry launches AI Stories (narrated audio from records). Ancestry introduced AI Stories in beta, generating a short narrated story from a historical record. Ancestry said 940M+ records are currently eligible for audio narration, and the feature supports multiple languages. Ancestry+1 Why it matters: this is AI being used as a presentation layer - helping families understand records faster, and making discoveries easier to share with relatives who won't read a census page for fun. 2) FamilySearch adds tree-extending hints via its AI Research Assistant. FamilySearch announced new home-page hints designed to surface record hints that could add a new spouse, parent, or child - with a workflow that still routes you back through review + source linking. familysearch.org Why it matters: it's a shift from "here's a record" to "here's what this record might unlock," which can reduce the time you spend staring at gaps in your tree. 3) Canada's 1931 Census index shows what "AI at scale" looks like in archives. Library and Archives Canada described the rollout of a free, searchable index for the 1931 Census of Canada (built in collaboration with Ancestry and FamilySearch) as part of its phased accessibility plan. Canada+1 Why it matters: beyond consumer genealogy sites, large institutions are now routinely using OCR/handwriting recognition + structured extraction to turn massive collections into searchable data. 4) the "machine finally learned to read" conversation goes mainstream (genealogy edition). A popular December post from AI Genealogy Insights argues that newer multimodal models (discussed there as "Gemini 3") are crossing a threshold for reading messy, real-world documents - while still requiring careful verification. AI Genealogy Insights Why it matters: for genealogists, the practical question isn't "is it perfect?" - it's "is it good enough to speed up my workflow without adding new errors?" 5) A smarter way to use AI: decompose first, prompt second. Another AI Genealogy Insights post offered a framework for breaking big research questions into smaller, testable tasks - so you can validate outputs step-by-step instead of trusting one giant answer. AI Genealogy Insights Try it: take one hard problem (e.g., "Who were John Smith's parents?") and turn it into mini-tasks: extract facts from each record | build a timeline | compare conflicts | propose hypotheses | list what evidence would confirm each. 6) Genealogy education keeps professionalizing around AI. Legacy Family Tree Webinars highlighted practical "best uses" of AI for genealogy - document understanding, extracting details, and turning research into readable narratives - plus a look at what to watch next year. Legacy Family Tree Webinars Why it matters: the community is moving from novelty prompts to repeatable, teachable methodology. 7) Internet Archive + AI: turning big books into working indexes. A webinar-focused deep dive showcased how AI can help build a surname index from a long digitized genealogy book and extract structured data (like migration routes) into spreadsheet-ready output. Legacy Family Tree Webinars Why it matters: this is "DIY indexing" - the kind of work that used to take days now becomes an afternoon project (with verification!). 8) medieval manuscripts meet deep learning: Cairo Geniza + MiDRASH momentum. Coverage this month spotlighted AI-assisted transcription and reconstruction of Cairo Geniza fragments (hundreds of thousands of manuscript pieces), including the MiDRASH effort and related "transcribe-a-thon" work using specialized manuscript platforms. Reuters+2RNS+2 Why it matters: it's a reminder that genealogy-adjacent breakthroughs often come from the wider archives/manuscripts world - and the tooling eventually trickles down into family history workflows. Key takeaways for December. * AI is becoming the "wrapper" around records (audio, summaries, guided prompts) - not just a search aid. Ancestry * Platforms are nudging users toward tree-building actions, while still keeping humans in the proof loop. familysearch.org * The biggest long-term unlock remains machine-reading at scale - especially for handwritten and semi-structured archival material. Canada+1 Ancestry AI Stories announcement (Dec 15, 2025): https://www.ancestry.com/corporate/blog/ancestry-brings-family-history-to-life-with-new-ai-powered-stori Semafor coverage (Dec 12, 2025): https://www.semafor.com/article/12/12/2025/ancestrys-new-ai-feature-narrates-ancestors-stories FamilySearch tree-extending hints (Dec 22, 2025): https://www.familysearch.org/en/blog/ai-research-assistant-home-page-hints LAC "1931 Census phase two complete" (Jul 30, 2025): https://www.canada.ca/en/library-archives/corporate/updates/2023/1931-census-phase-two-complete.html AI Genealogy Insights (Dec 16, 2025): https://aigenealogyinsights.com/2025/12/16/when-the-machine-finally-learned-to-read-gemini-3-and-the-question-of-good-enough/ AI Genealogy Insights framework (Dec 18, 2025): https://aigenealogyinsights.com/2025/12/18/the-art-of-breaking-things-apart-a-framework-for-ai-assisted-genealogical-research/ Legacy webinar: Best Uses of AI for Genealogists (Dec 19, 2025): https://familytreewebinars.com/webinar/the-best-uses-of-ai-for-genealogists/ Reuters on MiDRASH / Geniza (Nov 26, 2025): https://www.reuters.com/business/media-telecom/vast-trove-medieval-jewish-records-opened-up-by-ai-2025-11-26/ Religion News Service (Dec 17, 2025): https://religionnews.com/2025/12/17/ai-is-enlisted-to-rescue-jews-cultural-heritage-and-give-new-life-to-ancient-languages/ Times of Israel (Nov 25, 2025): https://www.timesofisrael.com/scholars-transcribe-hundreds-of-thousands-of-cairo-geniza-fragments-some-never-read-before/
Family history giant Ancestry announced its acquisition of iMemories, a media digitization and cloud-based content preservation services company.
Ancestry has just introduced Networks, an innovative feature designed to help genealogists create and organize groups of connected individuals.
The board of directors of Lehi-based family history and DNA testing platform Ancestry has named Howard Hochhauser to succeed Deb Liu as the company's president and CEO.
Dublin, Jan. 13, 2025 (GLOBE NEWSWIRE) -- The "Relationship Genetic Tests Market Report 2024" has been added to ResearchAndMarkets.com's offering.The relationship genetic tests market size has grown exponentially in recent years. It will grow from $3.16 billion in 2023 to $3.87 billion in 2024 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22.4%. The historical growth can be attributed to several factors, including increased healthcare expenditure, advancements in genetic research, the expansion of educational programs on genetics, a rising prevalence of infertility, and the growth of awareness campaigns.The relationship genetic tests market size is expected to see exponential growth in the next few years. It will grow to $8.81 billion in 2028 at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 22.8%. The historical growth can be attributed to several factors, including increased healthcare expenditure, advancements in genetic research, the expansion of educational programs on genetics, a rising prevalence of infertility, and the growth of awareness campaigns.The growing adoption of personalized medicine is expected to drive the expansion of the relationship genetic tests market