Your New Digital Research Team: 3 AI Tools That Are Changing Genealogy in 2026
Senior Roots Guide  ยท  Genealogy Guidance for Every Generation  ยท  Est. 2026
๐Ÿค–   Technology & Tools  ยท  Beginner Friendly  ยท  2026 Edition

Your New Digital Research Team:
3 AI Tools That Are Changing Genealogy

No jargon. No tech degree required. Just a plain-English guide to three AI tools that can genuinely help you find your family โ€” and what they actually can and cannot do.

By Senior Roots Guide ยท June 2026 ยท 14 min read

Let us start with a confession: the word "artificial intelligence" has become so overused that it has almost stopped meaning anything. Every app, every website, every product seems to describe itself as "AI-powered" these days, whether that means a genuinely sophisticated language system or simply a search engine with a fancier search bar. Before we talk about any specific tools, it helps to have a clearer picture of what AI actually is and โ€” just as importantly โ€” what it is not.

๐Ÿ“š   Think of AI as a Digital Librarian

The most useful way to think about AI tools for genealogy is to imagine a very well-read library assistant who has read millions of books, documents, and records, and can answer questions quickly using that reading. Ask them "what does this Latin phrase mean?" and they can answer immediately. Ask them "where might I find records for someone born in Bavaria in 1870?" and they can give you a solid starting list.

But โ€” and this is important โ€” they can also get things wrong. They might mis-remember a detail, confuse two similar records, or confidently answer a question with information that sounds right but isn't. Just as you would double-check important facts with a librarian, you should always verify what an AI tool tells you against the original historical records.

AI tools are your research assistants. You are still the researcher. Your critical judgment is still the most important part of the process.

With that framing established, here are three AI tools that have earned a genuine place in the modern genealogist's toolkit โ€” not because they are impressive technology, but because they are practically useful for the specific challenges of family history research.

๐Ÿ’ฌ
ChatGPT & Claude
Your research strategy advisor
Free + Paid options
Conversational AI assistants that can summarise long documents, translate old languages, and help you plan research strategy.
๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ
MyHeritage Photo AI
Your family photo restorer
Subscription or credits
Enhances, sharpens, and colourises old family photographs โ€” and can animate them. Makes blurry faces recognisable.
๐Ÿ“ท
Google Lens
Your visual identification tool
Completely free
Point your phone's camera at any object โ€” a piece of jewellery, a military medal, an old tool โ€” and Google Lens identifies it.

None of these tools does your genealogy for you. All of them make specific parts of the process faster, easier, and more accessible โ€” particularly for researchers who may not have specialist knowledge in areas like historical languages or antique identification.

1 Tool One
ChatGPT & Claude: Your AI Research Advisor
For summarising documents, translating old languages, and planning your research

ChatGPT (made by OpenAI) and Claude (made by Anthropic) are the two most widely used conversational AI assistants in 2026. They work the same way: you type a question or request in plain English, and they reply in plain English. No forms to fill out, no menus to navigate โ€” just a conversation, like texting a very knowledgeable friend.

For genealogists, their most useful ability is not searching for your specific ancestors โ€” these tools do not have access to historical records databases, and asking them about your great-grandmother will produce either a wrong answer or an honest acknowledgment that they don't know. Their real value lies in three more specific tasks: summarising long documents, explaining things you don't understand, and helping you plan where to search next.

What they are genuinely brilliant at

โœ…   What they do well
  • Summarising a long, difficult probate document into plain English
  • Translating Latin, German, Old English, French, or other languages found in historical records
  • Explaining what a historical term means ("what is a quit rent?", "what does 'intemperance' mean in an 1889 record?")
  • Suggesting what kinds of records would exist for a specific ancestor in a specific place and time
  • Explaining how a historical event (the Famine, the Great Depression) would have affected your ancestor's community
  • Helping you draft a letter to a state archive requesting specific records
  • Explaining a confusing census field or an unfamiliar occupation
โš ๏ธ   What they get wrong
  • They do not have access to historical record databases โ€” do not ask them to search for your ancestor
  • They can "hallucinate" โ€” produce confident-sounding facts that are completely invented
  • They may give you plausible but incorrect historical details about a specific family
  • Do not trust them to give you correct dates, names, or places about real historical people without verifying against original sources

Seeing it in action: document summarisation

One of the most practical uses for ChatGPT or Claude is pasting in the text of a long, difficult historical document and asking for a plain-English summary. An 1847 probate inventory, a four-page land deed in archaic legal language, or a church record in nineteenth-century German โ€” all of these can be pasted into the chat window and translated or summarised in under a minute.

Example โ€” summarising a probate document
I have a probate document from 1847 Virginia that I am having trouble reading. Here is the text: [paste the document text here]. Can you summarise what this document says in plain English, and tell me who it names?
The AI will identify all the named individuals, explain the legal terms, summarise the property being transferred, and flag any relationships mentioned โ€” saving you an hour of careful reading and possible misinterpretation.
Example โ€” research strategy question
My ancestor Maria Gruber was born in Bavaria around 1855 and emigrated to Ohio around 1878. I cannot find her in any census before 1880. What types of records might help me find her between her birth and emigration?
The AI will suggest: Bavarian Catholic church records (baptism, confirmation), emigration passenger lists, Bavarian police registration records, and the specific FamilySearch collections most likely to cover that region and period.
โš ๏ธ One essential rule
  • Never accept an AI summary as a substitute for reading the original. Use the summary to understand the document quickly, then verify the key facts โ€” names, dates, relationships โ€” against the original image or transcript yourself.
  • AI tools cannot search genealogy databases. If you ask ChatGPT or Claude to find your ancestor in a census, they will either say they cannot or โ€” worse โ€” generate a plausible but invented result. Always use proper genealogy platforms (Ancestry, FamilySearch, MyHeritage) for record searching.

How to Get Started: ChatGPT and Claude

๐Ÿ’ฌ   Quick Start: Using AI as Your Research Advisor
1
Open either tool in your browser โ€” both have free tiers
For ChatGPT, go to chat.openai.com and create a free account. For Claude, go to claude.ai and create a free account. Both work on any computer, tablet, or smartphone.
chat.openai.com   claude.ai
2
Type your question in plain, natural English
You do not need technical language. Write exactly as you would if you were asking a knowledgeable friend: "I found a document from 1880 that uses the word 'messuage' โ€” what does that mean?" or "What records would exist for a family in rural Ireland in the 1840s?"
Tip: The more context you give, the better the answer. Include the time period, the country or region, and what you already know about your ancestor.
3
To summarise a document: paste the text directly into the chat
If you have a typed or digitised transcript of a document, paste it in after your question. For example: "Here is a probate record from 1847. Can you tell me in plain English what it says and list everyone it names?" followed by the document text.
4
Ask follow-up questions if the first answer needs clarification
This is a conversation โ€” if something in the response is unclear, just ask: "What did you mean by 'intestate'?" or "Can you explain that last part in simpler language?" The AI will refine its answer.
Tip: Claude tends to be particularly good at careful, detailed document analysis. ChatGPT is often slightly faster. Both are genuinely useful โ€” try both and see which one's style you prefer.
2 Tool Two
MyHeritage Photo Enhancer & AI Photo Tools
For bringing blurry, faded, or damaged family photographs back to life

If you have ever held a 130-year-old photograph up to the light and wished you could see the face more clearly โ€” the person's expression, whether they looked happy or tired, whether their eyes were light or dark โ€” this tool is for you. MyHeritage's Photo Enhancer uses AI to sharpen and clarify old photographs, recovering detail that was always present in the image but obscured by age, damage, or the technical limitations of 19th and early 20th century photography.

The tool is part of MyHeritage's broader suite of photo AI features, which also includes colourisation (adding realistic colour to black-and-white photographs), photo repair (fixing tears, scratches, and water damage), and Deep Nostalgia (briefly animating a still portrait so the face moves). These are genuinely remarkable tools when used on appropriate photographs โ€” and they have emotional power that is hard to overstate. Seeing a great-great-grandmother's face suddenly in focus, then in colour, is an experience that many researchers describe as one of the most moving moments in their genealogy work.

What the Photo AI tools do

โœ…   What they do well
  • Photo Enhancement: sharpens faces and recovers detail from blurry, low-resolution, or slightly out-of-focus photographs
  • Colourisation: adds realistic colour to black-and-white photographs using AI trained on period-appropriate colours
  • Photo Repair: reduces the appearance of scratches, tears, water stains, and foxing (age spots on paper)
  • Deep Nostalgia: briefly animates a face in a still portrait โ€” particularly effective for oval portrait-style photographs
  • Works on uploaded photos without requiring any special software โ€” all processing happens on MyHeritage's servers
โš ๏ธ   Honest limitations
  • Cannot recover detail that was never captured โ€” an extremely blurry photograph may still be blurry after enhancement
  • Colourisation is an AI interpretation, not a historical record โ€” colours are educated guesses, not documented facts
  • Deep Nostalgia animations can occasionally look uncanny โ€” not all photographs produce convincing results
  • The AI photo tools require a MyHeritage subscription or the purchase of individual enhancement credits
  • Always keep the original unmodified scan โ€” only share or use the enhanced version as a supplement, never as a replacement for the original
What a typical result looks like
A cabinet card portrait from approximately 1885, slightly blurred from age, showing a woman in a dark dress.
After Photo Enhancement: facial features, hair detail, and dress texture become noticeably sharper. After Colourisation: the dress is rendered in deep charcoal-brown, skin tones are warm and realistic, and the studio backdrop takes on a greenish-grey that matches typical period photography backgrounds. After Deep Nostalgia: the face makes several small natural-looking movements โ€” blinking, slight head turn, suggestion of a breath. Total processing time: under 60 seconds.

How to Get Started: MyHeritage Photo Tools

๐Ÿ–ผ๏ธ   Quick Start: Enhancing a Family Photograph
1
Scan your photograph at the highest resolution possible
Before uploading to any AI tool, scan the original at 600 dpi minimum using a flatbed scanner. This gives the AI the most detail to work with. If you don't have a scanner, your phone's camera in good natural light (no flash) produces workable results for most photographs.
Important: Save the original unedited scan to your archive before doing anything else. Never work from the original photograph; always work from a copy.
2
Create a free MyHeritage account or sign in
Go to MyHeritage.com and sign in, or create a free account. The photo enhancement tools are available through the "Memories" section of your account. A limited number of free enhancements are included; additional enhancements require a subscription or credits.
myheritage.com
3
Upload your photograph and select the enhancement type
In the Memories or Photo section, click "Upload" and select your scanned photograph. Once uploaded, you will see options for Enhance, Colourize, Repair, and Deep Nostalgia. Start with Enhance to sharpen the image, then try Colourize if the result looks good.
Tip: Try Photo Repair first on damaged photographs before Enhance โ€” removing scratches and tears first gives the sharpening algorithm cleaner data to work with.
4
Download the enhanced version and save it alongside the original
After processing, download the enhanced photograph and save it in your research files using the standard naming convention โ€” but label it clearly as an AI-enhanced version:
1885_Smith_Margaret_Portrait_ENHANCED.jpg alongside the original 1885_Smith_Margaret_Portrait_ORIGINAL.jpg
3 Tool Three
Google Lens: Your Family Heirloom Identifier
For identifying objects, places, military insignia, and handwritten text โ€” for free

Google Lens is, in some ways, the most straightforwardly useful AI tool in this list โ€” because it does one thing extremely well and costs nothing. Point your smartphone's camera at any object, image, or piece of text, and Google Lens will search the internet for visual matches and tell you what it has found.

For genealogists, this has practical applications across several types of research challenges. You find a piece of jewellery in a deceased relative's belongings and want to know if it is a family heirloom, a fraternal organisation pin, or simply a vintage brooch from a particular era. You have a photograph showing a building in the background and want to identify the town. You have a photograph of a man in uniform and want to identify the regiment from his cap badge. You have a handwritten address in a foreign language and need it transcribed. Google Lens handles all of these tasks โ€” imperfectly, but often remarkably well.

What Google Lens can identify for genealogists

โš ๏ธ   Honest limitations
  • Does not reliably identify faces from historical photographs โ€” facial recognition technology for old photos is not accurate and raises privacy concerns
  • May return visually similar but contextually different results โ€” a cavalry badge from one country that looks like a badge from another
  • Works best when searching a cropped section of an image rather than the whole photograph โ€” crop tightly to the specific object you want identified
  • Some very specialised or regional items (small-town commemorative pins, obscure fraternal organisations) may not return useful results
Example โ€” identifying a military medal
A photograph of an oval bronze medal on a striped ribbon, found in a relative's jewellery box. No inscription visible on the front. Estimated date of the relative's service: 1917โ€“1918.
Google Lens search on the medal image: returns results identifying it as a British War Medal 1914โ€“1920, with links to the Imperial War Museum's medal database and several genealogy forum discussions about how to research the recipient using the medal roll records held by the National Archives in London. This is the starting point for a complete military research trail.

How to Get Started: Google Lens

๐Ÿ“ท   Quick Start: Identifying an Object with Google Lens
1
Open Google Lens on your phone โ€” it is already built in
On most Android phones, Google Lens is built into the camera app โ€” look for a small Lens icon when your camera is open. On iPhones, download the free Google app from the App Store; tap the Lens icon in the search bar. On a computer, go to images.google.com and click the camera icon in the search bar.
Tip: Google Lens is entirely free and requires no account to use the basic visual search function.
2
For physical objects: photograph the item in good natural light
Place the object on a plain, contrasting background. Use natural daylight rather than flash โ€” flash creates glare that makes identifying inscriptions, hallmarks, and surface details harder. Take several photographs from slightly different angles if the first result is not helpful.
3
For photographs: crop tightly to the specific element you want to identify
Do not search the whole family portrait if you want to identify the badge on a lapel. Use your phone's photo editing tools to crop tightly to just the badge, then search that cropped image. Focused searches return far more useful results than whole-photograph searches.
Tip: If the first search returns too many similar-looking but contextually irrelevant results, add a text description to the search: after the image search loads, type "military medal UK 1918" in the text field to narrow the results.
4
Read the results critically and follow the leads
Google Lens returns visual matches and web links. Do not assume the first result is correct โ€” look at several results and assess which is most consistent with the object's apparent age and origin. Use the identification as a starting point for further research, not as a definitive conclusion.
5
For better results, also try Microsoft Bing Visual Search
Different visual search engines return different results from different image databases. If Google Lens doesn't find what you're looking for, try the same image in Bing's visual search at bing.com โ€” select the camera icon in the search bar to upload or photograph an image.

All three of these tools are available today. All three have free tiers that allow you to try them without any financial commitment. And all three address real, specific research challenges that have traditionally required either specialist knowledge or hours of manual work.

The honest summary: ChatGPT and Claude are most useful when you have a document you do not fully understand or a research strategy question you do not know how to answer. MyHeritage's photo tools are most useful when you have old photographs that are difficult to read or identify. Google Lens is most useful when you have a physical object or a visual detail in a photograph that you cannot identify. None of them searches genealogy records for your specific ancestors. All of them can make your research sessions more productive and more rewarding.

The family historian who uses these tools wisely โ€” as assistants rather than authorities, as starting points rather than conclusions โ€” has genuinely more resources available to them today than any previous generation of researchers. Use them well, verify everything they tell you, and enjoy the extra help.

Your turn to try

Which Tool Will You
Try First?

Have you already used any of these tools in your genealogy research? We would love to hear what worked, what surprised you, and what you wish they could do better. Share your experience in the comments below.

Share Your Experience โ†’
Happy researching  ยท  Senior Roots Guide  ยท  2026