DNA Day Sale: Save on Family Finder, Y-DNA, & mtDNA. Now through April 25th.

Celebrate DNA Day.
Up to $50 off Y-DNA.

Explore your father’s paternal line with Y-DNA.

ONLY $99USD

Save $20 (was $119)

A test for genetic males, Y-DNA is used to help answer questions about relatedness on the paternal male line.

Y-37

ONLY $99USD

Save $20 (was $119)
Examines 37 short tandem
repeats (STRs) on
the Y chromosome
 

Y-111

ONLY $209USD

Save $40 (was $249)

Examines 111 short tandem
repeats (STRs) on
the Y chromosome
 

Big Y-700

ONLY $399USD

Save $50 (was $449)

Examines 700 short tandem
repeats and over 500k+ SNPs
on the Y chromosome
WHY Y-DNA?

Y-DNA is passed down from father to son

Genetic males can have their Y-DNA tested. Y-DNA testing can help you discover and verify your direct paternal ancestry by connecting you with other individuals who are descendants of a shared common patrilineal ancestor.

If you are a genetic male...
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If you are a <span style="color: #047ac1;">genetic male...</span>
The Y chromosome is passed down from father to son. Therefore, if you are a genetic male, you can take a Y-DNA test and research your paternal line.
If you are a genetic female...
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If you are a <span style="color: #e0004d;">genetic female...</span>
Genetic females cannot take a Y-DNA test because they do not have a Y chromosome. However, if you are interested in learning about your paternal line’s ancestry, we recommend finding a genetic male to test—like a brother, uncle, father, or cousin.
If you are a <span style="color: #047ac1;">genetic male...</span>
CONNECT WITH Y-DNA RELATIVES

Join the world’s largest database of Y-DNA testers

Your Y-DNA matches will share a common ancestor with you on your direct paternal line. That common ancestor can be recent (meaning within a generation or two) or more distant (living up to around 1,000 years ago). The tools and data gained through a Y-DNA test can help you learn more about your patrilineal family history.

DISCOVER YOUR Y-DNA HAPLOGROUP

Follow the path of your
direct male ancestors

Genetic males can use Y-DNA to determine where their direct paternal ancestors came from, their locations in historic times, and how they migrated throughout the world.

Y-DNA FTDNATIP™ REPORT

Get estimates of how far back in time you and a match shared a common paternal ancestor

Access FamilyTreeDNA Discover™

New reports based on your confirmed Y-DNA haplogroup

Haplogroup Story
Haplogroup Story
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When did your ancestors branch off, and where are their descendants found today?
Country Frequency
Country Frequency
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Where is your direct paternal haplogroup most commonly found today?
Notable Connections
Notable Connections
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Discover your connections to famous, historical, and modern people.
Migration Maps
Migration Maps
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View your ancient ancestors’ migration history all the way from Y-Adam!
Ancient Connections
Ancient Connections
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See who your closest archaeological relatives are.
Ancestral Path
Ancestral Path
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Provides details about each generation back to Y chromosomal Adam.
Time Tree
Time Tree
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Shows how Y-DNA testers relate to each other with ancestors reconstructed and pinpointed in time through DNA.
Group Time Tree
Group Time Tree
Big Y-700 Exclusive
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Shows the project’s various subgroups and allows members to see connections between members of a subgroup.
Globetrekker
Globetrekker
Big Y-700 Exclusive
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Globetrekker is an interactive map that provides estimates of your geographic origins and reveals the detailed migrations of your ancestors worldwide.
GROUP PROJECTS

Y-DNA Group Projects

Your DNA sample is stored in our lab, so you can easily add-on or upgrade your testing level.

Y-DNA Tests

A test for genetic males, Y-DNA is used to help answer questions about relatedness on the paternal male line.

Pick A Test
A GOOD START

Y-37

$99USD
REFINED MATCHING
Y-111
(Includes Y-37)
$209USD
GENEALOGIST FAVORITE
Big Y-700
(Includes Y-37 and Y-111)
$399USD
Connect with your paternal line relatives in our Y-DNA database.
Distant relatives
(compares 37 STRs)
Distant & More Recent relatives
(compares 111 STRs)
All relatives within the
genealogical time frame
(compares 700+ STRs and 500k+ SNPs)
See your paternal line’s surnames in our Y-DNA database and their ancestral locations.
Get your Y-DNA haplogroup and the story behind it’s origins.
BROAD
Oldest timeframe: Y-Adam
(~200,000+ years ago)
Youngest timeframe: Stone Age
(~100,000 years ago)
BROAD
Oldest timeframe: Y-Adam
(~200,000+ years ago)
Youngest timeframe: Stone Age
(~100,000 years ago)
REFINED
Oldest timeframe: Y-Adam
(~200,000+ years ago)
Youngest timeframe: Modern Age
(within ~1,000 years)
Detailed Y-DNA Migration Map
One of 40 Stone Age
migration paths
One of 40 Stone Age
migration paths
One of 50,000+ Modern-Day
migration paths from Y-DNA
Adam to your paternal line
Compare your Y-DNA relatives and origins on the block tree
Notable Y-DNA Connections
Up to 10 distant connections
Up to 10 distant connections
Up to 20 connections
(distant, close, and rare)
Ancient Y-DNA Connections
Up to 10 distant connections
Up to 10 distant connections
Up to 30 connections
(distant, close, and rare)
Join Group Projects to connect with others who have similar interests and research goals and expand your search beyond simply matching another tester.
STR Testing
STR download available as a CSV.
STR Markers
37
111
700+
SNP Testing
SNP download as a CSV and VCF included.
Sequences 600k+ known SNPs on the Y-chromosome tree to help you identify your family’s unique Y-chromosome mutations, thus confirming your haplogroup and placement on the Y-DNA Tree of Humankind.

Have questions? We have answers.

Here are the most frequently asked questions about FamilyTreeDNA. If you have additional questions, feel free to visit our Help Center or reach out to our Customer Service team.

Which test should I buy?

If you are looking to begin Y-DNA testing, the Y-37 Marker test allows you to become familiar with Y-DNA results. The Y-111 test is the most beneficial for joining our free Group Projects or for those looking to confirm Y-chromosome matching between two living men. The Big Y-700 is for explorer users, it provides over 400K SNPs and additional STRs. If you’re looking to find your placement on the Y-DNA Haplotree, then the Big Y-700 is the test you will need to purchase.

Each of the Y-DNA levels we offer will test different amounts of the Y chromosome. The more of the Y chromosome that is tested, the more closely related we can tell if someone is to you.

Out of the three levels that we offer, the Y-37 tests the fewest STRs, and so through analysis of your matches, you can only know you share a common patrilineal ancestor within several hundred years for certain.

The Y-111 provides more STR results for a higher-resolution comparison and includes the Y-37 test, so through analysis of your matches you can determine a better timeframe of when your common patrilineal ancestor lived.

The Big Y-700 looks at everything that is genealogically relevant on the Y chromosome, so you’ll receive everything that you would with the Y-37 and the Y-111, plus additional results that allow us to provide more analysis and help you refine even further to determine the best timeframe for when your common patrilineal ancestor lived as well as find your best placement on the world’s largest Y-DNA haplotree.

Y-DNA is what we call the sex chromosome “Y” that is passed from a father to his sons only, women do not receive a Y chromosome. Testing the Y chromosome allows for investigation into a male’s paternal family line and can help identify surname lines, living relatives whose Y chromosome is similar to yours, and ancient migration routes your paternal ancestors may have taken.

Every male individual who takes one of our Y-DNA tests will also receive their Y-DNA haplogroup. When humans left Africa tens of thousands of years ago, they departed in small groups that migrated into different parts of the world. Over many generations, each group developed distinct mutations allowing us to identify one from the other. We call these groups of mutations haplogroups, and they can tell us which migratory routes our paternal ancestors traveled.

Single nucleotide polymorphisms, frequently called SNPs (pronounced “snips”), are the most common type of genetic variations. Each SNP is a mutation or new branch on the tree. The number of SNPs on which people match within a database can be used to tell how closely related they are.

A marker is what we test in our basic Y-DNA tests. These markers are also referred to as STRs (Short Tandem Repeats) which are a series of repeating nucleotides (A, T, G, C). For example: GACTACTACTACTGG – the STR consists of the three repeated CTA segments. Y-DNA tests look for matching markers or “STRs” between two men, if they match, which would indicate a genetic relationship.

Nearly 100% of Y-DNA testers are able to find a match that shares a common surname with them with some specific exceptions.

If your direct paternal line is from a society or culture that did not adopt surnames until recently or from a society that used patronymic surnames that changed every generation, you may see many surnames on your match list.

Many countries and regions did not officially adopt standard surnames as we think of them today until the 1700s, 1800s, and even the 1900s in some cases.

If your matches share a common ancestor with you before the time when surnames were established in your ancestral location, then you may have multiple different surnames on your match list.

There are various different cultural practices that may have existed prior to the standardization of surnames. A last name may have been based on an occupation, patronymics, or on a location where your ancestors lived. A last name may have been taken because your ancestors were part of a specific clan, even though not all men were directly related on the paternal line.

You may also have situations where a different surname than you expected shows up repeatedly in your matches list. This may be because of an undocumented name change or an out-of-wedlock birth somewhere in your direct paternal line.

This rarely means that through the test you discovered that you are adopted and that your birth father is not who you thought he was. The vast majority of the time, this is going to be a situation that is much further back in time.

Every now and then, there are no or very few testers in the database who share your direct paternal line. This is either because few people from your ancestral location or line have tested or because there are not many people available to test on your direct line in general.

The Y-DNA test results will typically provide you with fewer matches than a test like the Family Finder™. The Family Finder™ is looking at all of your ancestral lines. The Y-DNA is focusing on just one of those lines. If your direct paternal line does not have many descendants, or if it was decimated through an event such as the Holocaust or the Armenian Genocide, then you may have limited matches.

Your match list will typically grow over time. As more people test, more people will match you and be added to your list. We’ll send you a notification when this happens. There are many other historical and cultural reasons why you may not share the same surname with all of your Y-DNA matches. Joining surname, geographical, and the appropriate haplogroup Group Projects, as well as reaching out to your matches, can help you uncover your connections.