Which Desktop Genealogy Software
Is Right for You?
An honest, senior-focused comparison of the two leading desktop programs โ covering font size, ease of navigation, cloud syncing, and who should choose which.
If you have been doing genealogy research for any length of time, you have probably heard the same argument repeated at every family history society meeting and online forum: "I use RootsMagic and it's the best." Followed immediately by someone else: "I've used Legacy for twenty years and I would never switch." Both of these people are right โ for their own situations. And that is the crux of the comparison we are going to work through here.
RootsMagic 10 and Legacy Family Tree 10 are the two most widely used dedicated desktop genealogy programs among serious researchers in 2026. Both run on your own computer, not in a web browser. Both store your data locally. Both connect to Ancestry and FamilySearch. And both have been refined over decades of development by companies that understand their users deeply.
This review focuses specifically on what matters most to senior researchers: how easy the software is to read and navigate with older eyes, how well it syncs with the online platforms you already use, why keeping your data on your own computer rather than in the cloud makes sense for many people, and โ most importantly โ which one to choose based on your comfort with technology and how you actually work.
The best genealogy software is the one you will actually use โ consistently, comfortably, and without the computer making you feel like the problem. Both of these programs can be that program for different types of researchers.
๐ญ First Impressions: What Each Program Is
- Modern redesigned interface (left-side navigation panel)
- Direct two-way sync with Ancestry and FamilySearch
- DNA match management with Leeds method support
- Available on both Windows and Mac
- Free Essentials version includes core features permanently
- One-time purchase โ no annual subscription required
- Consistently rated "best all-around" by Family Tree Magazine
- Legacy 10 made the entire program free in 2024 โ no more paid Deluxe edition
- Windows only (no Mac version)
- Deep FamilySearch integration; Ancestry sync via GEDCOM
- Outstanding webinar library โ hundreds of free instructional videos
- Long-established user community; extremely active support forums
- Highly customisable reports and family history books
- Owned by MyHeritage since 2017
Legacy Family Tree 10 is now completely free โ including all features that were previously exclusive to the paid Deluxe edition. This dramatically changes the value comparison: Legacy is free and RootsMagic 10 costs $39.95 (with regular 50% off sales bringing it to around $20). For researchers on a fixed budget, Legacy is now the clear choice on price alone. RootsMagic's free Essentials tier omits several important features including full Ancestry TreeShare sync.
๐ What Matters to Seniors: A Category-by-Category Comparison
The standard software review covers features like reporting options and GEDCOM compatibility. Those things matter โ but they are not the things that determine whether a senior researcher can use a program comfortably every day. The following categories are the ones that actually affect daily usability for researchers who may be dealing with smaller screens, vision changes, or less tolerance for complex menus.
| Category | ๐ฟ RootsMagic 10 | ๐ Legacy Family Tree 10 |
|---|---|---|
| Font size / readability | Respects Windows/Mac system accessibility settings; interface text scales well; document and report fonts customisable | Has built-in font size controls within the program; users who have switched screens or changed vision needs report good flexibility |
| Learning curve for beginners | Redesigned interface with context-sensitive menus โ only shows options relevant to what you are currently doing; new users report fast orientation | Traditional interface closely resembles earlier versions โ easier for existing users; new users may find more menus than they expect |
| Navigation between people | Click-to-navigate pedigree and family views; "pick up where you left off" orientation; descendant view now expandable | Family view with clickable boxes; familiar to long-term users; some users find navigating between family views requires more clicks |
| Help and support | Good built-in help files; active user community; blog and YouTube channel for tutorials | Exceptional webinar library (hundreds of free videos); some of the most comprehensive free genealogy education available anywhere; active forum community |
| Getting started | Free Essentials version allows a complete trial; import from GEDCOM is automatic; sample data loads easily | Also excellent; sample file built in; walks through first tree creation step by step; free to try with no limitations |
| Mac compatibility | Full support for Windows and Mac (macOS 12 through 15) | Windows only โ no Mac version. Mac users must use Windows emulation (Parallels, etc.) or choose a different program |
| Ancestry sync | Full two-way TreeShare sync โ add, edit, and compare records between RootsMagic and your Ancestry tree in real time | No direct Ancestry sync โ GEDCOM file transfer only, which is a one-time export/import rather than ongoing two-way sync |
| FamilySearch sync | Direct FamilySearch integration โ hints, matching, and sync built into the main program | Strong FamilySearch integration โ import from FamilySearch account on first setup; ongoing sync available |
| Price | $39.95 (often 50% off); free Essentials tier with limited features | Completely free โ no paid tier; all features included at no cost |
๐ The Senior Experience: Three Features Under the Microscope
Neither program will make you squint at tiny text โ both respect your computer's accessibility settings, and both offer some degree of in-program font customisation. Legacy has direct font size controls within the program itself, which some users find easier to access than going through Windows settings. RootsMagic's modern interface uses clean, well-spaced typography that many users find more visually comfortable than Legacy's denser traditional layout.
Practical advice: try both on your own computer before deciding. Your specific screen size, resolution, and vision needs will determine which looks better to you personally.
RootsMagic 10's context-sensitive menus โ which only show options relevant to where you are in the program โ significantly reduce the sense of being overwhelmed by choices. The redesigned left-side navigation panel gives you a clear sense of where you are at all times. Users of previous versions face a slight learning curve with the new layout, but new users report that the redesigned interface is easier to pick up.
Legacy's interface will feel immediately familiar to anyone who has used a previous version โ which is its greatest strength for existing users and its main limitation for first-time users encountering a more traditional, menu-heavy layout.
Legacy Family Tree has one of the best free educational resources of any software in any category: its webinar library, hosted at FamilyTreeWebinars.com, contains hundreds of recordings covering every aspect of genealogy research and Legacy-specific workflows. These are not just "here's how to use the software" videos โ they cover research strategy, specific record types, DNA analysis, and more.
RootsMagic's blog, YouTube channel, and documentation are good but not as comprehensive. For senior researchers who value learning alongside the software โ not just using it โ Legacy's educational ecosystem is genuinely exceptional.
This is RootsMagic's clearest advantage. Its TreeShare feature allows genuine two-way synchronisation with Ancestry.com โ you can see what has changed in your Ancestry tree, accept or reject individual changes, and push updates from your desktop to Ancestry without overwriting everything. This is dramatically more useful than Legacy's approach of exporting a GEDCOM file and reimporting it.
For researchers who use Ancestry as their primary record platform and want their desktop software to stay in sync with it automatically, this feature alone may be worth the $39.95 cost of RootsMagic's paid version.
๐ Online Sync in Detail: Ancestry and FamilySearch
Online synchronisation โ the ability to connect your desktop software to Ancestry and FamilySearch so that records and hints flow between them โ is one of the most important practical features for modern genealogical research. The two programs handle this very differently, and the difference matters.
| Platform | RootsMagic 10 | Legacy Family Tree 10 |
|---|---|---|
| Ancestry TreeShare | โ Full two-way live sync โ add, compare, accept individual changes | โ GEDCOM import/export only โ one-way file transfer, not live sync |
| FamilySearch integration | โ Built-in hints, matching, and sync with FamilySearch trees | โ Strong integration โ import from FamilySearch on setup; ongoing sync available |
| MyHeritage sync | โ Direct sync with MyHeritage trees available | โฌ Legacy is owned by MyHeritage, but sync integration is not as seamless as might be expected |
| Hints from online databases | โ Hints surfaced from Ancestry, FamilySearch, and MyHeritage alongside person records | โ FamilySearch hints shown; Ancestry hints available through web search panel |
| Record attachment from Ancestry | โ Attach records found on Ancestry directly to desktop tree via TreeShare | โฌ Records can be attached but require more manual steps through the web search panel |
| Offline use | โ Full functionality without internet connection; syncs when reconnected | โ Full offline capability โ "you can work totally offline" for data entry with no restrictions |
The practical significance of the Ancestry sync difference: if you do most of your record searching on Ancestry.com (the most common workflow for American genealogists) and want those records to live in your desktop software too, RootsMagic's TreeShare makes this genuinely easy. With Legacy, you are manually managing a GEDCOM export whenever you want the two to be in sync โ a clunky process that many researchers simply stop doing.
๐ป The Cloud vs. Desktop Debate: Why Your Own Computer Still Makes Sense
when everything is in the cloud now?
Both Ancestry and FamilySearch offer online-only family trees โ trees that live entirely on their servers, accessible through a web browser. Many newer researchers use only these online trees. So why would you want desktop software at all? Here are the reasons โ and they are good ones.
โ Cloud-only (Ancestry, FamilySearch trees)
- Accessible from any device, anywhere
- No software to install or update
- Easy to share with family members
- Records attach automatically as hints
- But: your data lives on someone else's servers
- But: if the service shuts down or changes its terms, your data is at risk
- But: requires an active subscription to access your full tree
- But: limited customisation of reports and charts
๐ป Desktop software (RootsMagic, Legacy)
- Your data lives on your own computer โ you own it completely
- Works without an internet connection
- No subscription required to access your own tree
- Vastly more powerful reporting, charting, and book-creation tools
- Your research can survive any change to an online service's policies
- Your data can be backed up to multiple locations you control
- More detailed source citation management
- Can sync with online trees while keeping the master copy local
For senior researchers specifically, there is an additional dimension to the cloud vs. desktop question: familiarity and privacy. Many seniors are uncomfortable with the idea that their family's private data โ names, dates, relationships, photographs โ lives on a commercial company's server rather than on their own hard drive. This is not a paranoid concern. It is a reasonable preference about where sensitive personal information belongs.
Desktop software gives you clear ownership: your tree is a file on your computer, like a Word document or a folder of photographs. You can back it up to an external drive. You can copy it to a flash drive and give it to a family member. You can open it in twenty years regardless of whether Ancestry still exists or still offers the same pricing. That clarity of ownership is genuinely valuable.
๐ The Final Recommendation: Which One to Choose
Here is the honest answer: both programs are excellent, and most researchers who try either one will be well served by it. But the recommendation differs meaningfully based on two factors โ your budget, and whether you actively use Ancestry.com for your research.
RootsMagic is the clear choice if you do most of your record searching on Ancestry.com and want your desktop software to stay in sync with your Ancestry tree automatically. The TreeShare two-way sync feature is genuinely transformative for this workflow โ and it is available in no other program at this price point.
Also choose RootsMagic if you are a Mac user (Legacy is Windows only), if you value a more modern, less cluttered interface, or if you want DNA match management built into your genealogy software.
Legacy Family Tree 10 is now completely free โ and "free" does not mean limited. It includes everything that was in the paid Deluxe edition. For researchers on a fixed budget, or those who primarily use FamilySearch rather than Ancestry for their record searching, Legacy offers exceptional value.
Also choose Legacy if you are a Windows user who learns best from video tutorials (Legacy's webinar library is unmatched), if you are switching from an older version of Legacy and want continuity, or if you value having access to the most comprehensive free genealogy education available alongside your software.
RootsMagic Essentials is free. Legacy Family Tree 10 is completely free. You can download both today, import your GEDCOM file into each, and spend an afternoon with each program before deciding. The best way to choose genealogy software is not to read reviews โ it is to use it. Your instinct about which one feels more comfortable is the right answer, because comfort is what determines whether you actually use it.
โฆ The Bottom Line
Desktop genealogy software has not become obsolete in the age of cloud-based family trees. If anything, it has become more valuable โ as a stable, privately controlled home base for your research that connects to the major online platforms rather than depending on them.
RootsMagic 10 is the better choice for most researchers who use Ancestry actively and want seamless two-way sync. Legacy Family Tree 10 is the better choice for researchers on a budget or those who primarily use FamilySearch, and its completely free status makes it an extraordinarily good value regardless of your research style.
Download both. Try both. Your family's story deserves a home that you control.
Both are free to try โ
download and decide for yourself
The only way to know which program feels right is to open it, import your tree, and spend an hour navigating your own family history in it. Both offer free versions with no time limit.
Try RootsMagic Free โ Download Legacy Free โ