What Is a Good DNA Match from a Research Perspective? - MyHeritage Knowledge Base (2024)

Genetic genealogy can help you break through brick walls in your research. Through DNA matching, you can identify new relatives and infer new information about your common ancestors.

But due to the considerable size of MyHeritage’s database, you may receive thousands of DNA matches. How do you know which ones you should focus on?

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The plainest answer to this question is: it depends what you’re looking for.

How much DNA do cousins share?

You share around 50% of your DNA with your parents and children, 25% with your grandparents and grandchildren, and 12.5% with your cousins, uncles, aunts, nephews, and nieces.

What Is a Good DNA Match from a Research Perspective? - MyHeritage Knowledge Base (1)

A match of 3% or more can be helpful for your genealogical research — but sometimes even less.

How do I know if a DNA Match is a close relative?

Most genealogists are interested in DNA matches that are most closely related to them and with whom they share the greatest number of ancestors.

If you want to focus on DNA matches that are more closely related to you, here’s what to look for:

1. Check the family tree

Any family tree information provided by the DNA Match may be more significant to your research than anything else.

For example, a 0.4% match with someone who has an extensive family tree might be much more helpful than a 3% match with someone who has only 3 people on their family tree.

You’ll be able to find this information right on the match card: See how many shared Smart Matches, ancestral surnames, and ancestral surnames you have.

Your match might even have a Theory of Family Relativity™, which corroborates all the data available through MyHeritage to come up with a plausible theory for how you may be related.

2. Check the percentage of shared DNA

In lieu of solid genealogical information, genetic information can come in handy. The more DNA you share with an individual, the more recent your common ancestor was.

You can find the percentage of DNA you share with a given DNA Match right on the match card.

You will also see that figure expressed in centimorgans. Centimorgans (cM) are units of genetic linkage between two given individuals. For example, if you share 1800 cM with an individual, that means you share around 25% of your DNA with them. A strong match will have around 200 cM or more.

3. Check the length of your shared DNA segments

Determining your relationship with a DNA match is not only a matter of how much DNA you share; it’s also a matter of which segments of DNA you share.

Longer segments of shared DNA indicate that your common ancestor was probably more recent.

Say you have 2 matches who both share 7% of your DNA. One of them shares a few long segments with you, while the other shares many small segments. In this case, the first one is a stronger match.

The second one may share multiple distant ancestors with you, rather than one close ancestor. This happens more frequently in endogamous communities (where people marry within the group), such as the Ashkenazi Jewish population. In populations like these, experts require a higher percentage of shared DNA and longer segments to confirm a strong match, because the shared DNA may not necessarily point to a recent common ancestor.

The number of shared segments and the size of the largest segment (in cM) will be listed on the DNA Match card under “DNA Match quality.” When reviewing the DNA Matches page, you can also sort your matches according to largest segment. This will conveniently place the matches with the largest segment of shared DNA at the top of the list.

How do I find out which ancestor I share with a DNA Match?

Perhaps, rather than trying to find close relatives, you’re trying to trace a particular line of lineage. In this case, you’re trying to identify DNA Matches who share a particular common ancestor.

How do you know which ancestor you and a given DNA match have in common?

That requires some more in-depth sleuthing. MyHeritage has a number of advanced DNA tools that can help.

1. Check for a Theory of Family Relativity™

If you have a Theory of Family Relativity™ for this match, you need not look any further! All you need to do is click “View theory.” This will show you the relationship path between you and your match as identified through Smart Matches™ and Record Matches. Your common ancestor will appear at the top of the chart.

2. Look for shared segments on the Chromosome Browser

The Chromosome Browser tool allows you to view a schematic graph of the DNA segments you share with your DNA Match.

In many cases, you’ll see a Chromosome Browser graph at the bottom of the Review Match page. Right away, you’ll be able to tell whether you share long or short segments of DNA with the match.

If you want to dig deeper, you can use the One-to-Many Chromosome Browser tool in the DNA Tools section. This allows you to compare your DNA to that of multiple DNA Matches — which can help you get a clearer picture of who might be related to whom.

Triangulated segments help you identify your common ancestor

When you compare multiple DNA Matches, you might encounter triangulated segments: segments of DNA that all 3 (or more) of you have in common. If you have a triangulated segment with a known relative and a mystery DNA Match, that means that all of you likely share a common ancestor.

So if what you’re looking for is DNA Matches who are descended from a specific ancestor, it’s very helpful to have known relatives who are descended from that ancestor take a DNA test. That way, you can see on the Chromosome Browser which segments of DNA you share with that person. That may help you infer whether additional DNA Matches who share those same segments are also descended from that ancestor.

If you test enough of that ancestor’s descendants, you may even begin to identify a particular segment of your DNA possibly inherited from that ancestor. If you do, and you find another DNA Match who shares part of that DNA segment with you, you’ll be able to tell right away that they’re descended from that ancestor, too.

Why the Chromosome Browser doesn’t always help

There are limits to the Chromosome Browser method of identifying common ancestors, though. The problem is that because we inherit a random mix of DNA from our parents, the common ancestor might not actually show up in our DNA.

Let’s demonstrate this in terms of ethnicity. Say your grandfather was 50% Italian and 50% Nigerian, and your grandmother was 100% Central Asian. Your dad and uncle each inherited 50% of your grandfather’s genes. However, your dad may have inherited only the Italian genes, while your uncle inherited only the Nigerian genes. That would make your dad 50% Italian and 50% Central Asian, and your uncle 50% Nigerian and 50% Central Asian.

That means that your uncle’s child — your cousin — could have inherited 25% of his Nigerian genes from your grandfather. You, on the other hand, inherited 25% of your Italian genes from your grandfather. Both of you share 25% of your genes with your grandfather, but it’s a different 25%! And you and this cousin will still share 12.5% of your genes — but those shared segments will be the ones inherited from your common grandmother, not your grandfather.

So if you compared your DNA to this cousin’s on the Chromosome Browser, you’d find that the gene segments you’ve identified as having been inherited from your grandfather don’t show up in his genes.

And that is where the AutoClusters DNA tool can help.

3. Find your DNA Match’s cluster on AutoClusters

AutoClusters organizes your DNA Matches by “clusters” that indicate that they may share a common ancestor, based on the DNA they share both with you and with each other.

So let’s say your dad also has a sister. She inherited 25% of your grandfather’s Italian genes and 25% of his Nigerian genes. She also has a child, who inherited 12.5% of your grandfather’s Nigerian genes and 12.5% of his Italian genes. In this case, both of your cousins inherited Nigerian ethnicity from your grandfather, while you didn’t — and the 12.5% of DNA you share with one cousin is different from the 12.5% you share with the other.

But because these cousins match each other, they will be “clustered” together with other descendants of your grandfather — helping you infer that they are, indeed, both descended from your grandfather.

In Summary

Determining whether a DNA Match is a strong match depends on your genetic genealogy goals. Percentage of shared DNA, the length of the shared DNA segments, the location of triangulated segments with other matches, and AutoClusters can all provide you with vital clues that will help move you forward in your genetic genealogy journey.

To determine whether a given DNA Match will help you grow your tree, we recommend taking the following steps:

  • Check to see if there’s a Theory of Family Relativity™
  • Look at the user’s family tree and review shared Smart Matches™, DNA Matches, and ancestral surnames and places
  • Use the Chromosome Browser to examine how much DNA you share and the length and location of shared DNA segments
  • Compare the match to known relatives on the One-to-Many Chromosome Browser
  • Generate an AutoCluster and locate the cluster that contains the match
  • Get as many of your known relatives as possible to take the MyHeritage DNA test — or, if they’ve already tested with another service, upload their data to your tree. Each additional relative’s DNA adds an exponential amount of information you can use to analyze your DNA Matches.

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What Is a Good DNA Match from a Research Perspective? - MyHeritage Knowledge Base (2024)

FAQs

What Is a Good DNA Match from a Research Perspective? - MyHeritage Knowledge Base? ›

If both you and the match can trace your ancestry 4–5 generations back, you're likely to find a common pair of ancestors. However, this is not always the case. We recommend considering all matches with whom you share more than 1.8% of your DNA.

What is a good DNA match from a research perspective? ›

You share around 50% of your DNA with your parents and children, 25% with your grandparents and grandchildren, and 12.5% with your cousins, uncles, aunts, nephews, and nieces. A match of 3% or more can be helpful for your genealogical research — but sometimes even less.

How accurate are DNA matches in MyHeritage? ›

The MyHeritage DNA test is extremely accurate and reliable for identifying DNA Matches. The Ethnicity Estimate provides very accurate results for most people, but it's still just an estimate and must be taken in context and with its inherent limitations in mind.

What is considered a strong DNA match? ›

Check the DNA percentage chart

A strong match shares around 200 cM or more with you, which would be around 3% of your DNA.

How to interpret MyHeritage DNA results? ›

Each Shared DNA Match is composed of three elements: - On the left side, you can see the estimated relationship to you. - On the right side, the estimated relationship to your DNA Match. - The shared DNA Match is displayed in the middle along with the value of the DNA Match for each (paternal or maternal) side.

What does a 17% DNA match mean? ›

If you and a relative were to share 17% of your DNA, for example, there would be some probability that the relative is your aunt, your niece, your grandmother, your grandchild, your half sister, or even your first cousin.

Why does AncestryDNA say my sister is my cousin? ›

Someone in this category is likely a brother or sister who shares both biological parents with you. In the rare situation that you have a half sibling who is also your first cousin, they may appear in this category too.

Why is my DNA different on MyHeritage and ancestry? ›

Also, each DNA testing company uses a different method for calculating ethnicity. That means if you test with more than one company, even though your DNA doesn't change, your ethnicity estimate results might.

Is MyHeritage as good as ancestry DNA? ›

Either option can help you learn a lot about your ancestry and build your family tree. Both have very similar ancestry reports, though MyHeritage DNA has a few more features. MyHeritage DNA is less expensive, both in the cost of its DNA test and the price of its monthly genealogy subscription.

Why does MyHeritage DNA match but not ancestry? ›

It means that indeed, the DNA segment is similar between you and your match, yet it is unlikely related to a recent known ancestor, but rather to some ancient DNA or random sequence.

Can you have a DNA match and not be related? ›

Finally, it is possible that our algorithm detected a matching segment between two individuals that do not share a recent common ancestor. This is more likely to happen when both people come from a genetically hom*ogeneous population.

Can a half sibling show up as a first cousin? ›

Can a half-sibling show up as a cousin? While the amount of DNA you share is different between half-siblings and cousins, your half-sibling still may show up as a “first cousin” because your centimorgans may be within the 1,300 range.

Should siblings have 100% DNA match? ›

Of these 3 million differences, on average we share about 50 percent of those with our full siblings. Children inherit half of their DNA from their mother and half from their father. However, unless they are identical twins, siblings won't inherit exactly the same DNA.

How accurate is MyHeritage ethnicity? ›

MyHeritage is considered to be a reliable DNA testing company that provides accurate ancestry results. However, the accuracy of any DNA test depends on several factors, including the size of the company's reference database, the quality of the sample, and the algorithms used to analyze the data.

How far back does MyHeritage DNA test go? ›

MyHeritage Genetic Groups now reveal locations in which your ancestors lived within the past 400 years—based on their genetic migratory clusters.

How many DNA matches are on MyHeritage? ›

When you take a MyHeritage DNA test, the amount of DNA matches you can expect to receive varies dramatically from community to community. While in some genetic groups, a user can expect tens of thousands of matches, others might have to make do with 100.

What is a good quality DNA? ›

Good-quality DNA will have an A260/A280 ratio of 1.7–2.0. A reading of 1.6 does not render the DNA unsuitable for any application, but lower ratios indicate more contaminants are present. The ratio can be calculated after correcting for turbidity (absorbance at 320nm).

What does a 50% DNA match mean? ›

For example, if you share 50% of your DNA with someone in your generation, that means you are full siblings, i.e., descended from the same parents. If you share 12.5%, that likely means you are first cousins, i.e., you share one pair of grandparents.

How much DNA is needed to be related? ›

Percent DNA Shared by Relationship
RelationshipAverage % DNA SharedRange
Identical Twin100%N/A
Parent / Child Full Sibling50%Varies by specific relationship
Grandparent / Grandchild Aunt / Uncle Niece / Nephew Half Sibling25%Varies by specific relationship
1st Cousin12.5%7.31% - 13.8%
7 more rows

What is a statistical DNA match? ›

Random match probabilities and likelihood ratios are most often used to interpret evidence from single source samples. Generally, once a DNA match is determined, a statistical computation is performed to estimate the statistical weight of that inclusion - the larger the number the more significant the inclusion.

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