AI Tools for Family History

This section introduces the kinds of AI tools genealogists can use and what each type does best. The goal is not to use every tool, but to understand which ones can help with research, records, writing, organization, and problem-solving.

Not all AI tools do the same thing

Some AI tools are good at conversation and brainstorming. Others are better at transcription, translation, note organization, image analysis, or document search. Knowing the difference can save time and help you choose the right tool for the job.

A good rule of thumb: start with the task, then choose the tool. Do not begin with the tool and hope it fits every genealogy problem.

Major categories of AI tools

Chat-Based AI

These tools are good for asking questions, brainstorming, summarizing, planning research, and getting help with writing.

Useful for: research plans, explanations, summaries, prompt-driven help

Transcription Tools

These tools help convert handwritten or printed documents into readable text.

Useful for: letters, parish records, probate files, old certificates, meeting notes

Translation Tools

These tools help translate records written in other languages and explain unfamiliar terms.

Useful for: foreign records, church books, civil registrations, old handwritten entries

Search and Organization Tools

These tools help you search documents, group notes, summarize files, and organize information across many sources.

Useful for: large note collections, handouts, document sets, project folders

Image Tools

These tools can improve readability, inspect images, or help pull text and details from scanned materials.

Useful for: photos, scanned documents, maps, handwritten pages, faded records

What different tool types do best

Chat-Based AI

Best for thinking with you. These tools are useful when you want to ask questions, test theories, create timelines, summarize material, or build a research plan.

Transcription and OCR

Best when you have something difficult to read. These tools can turn image-based or handwritten content into text you can search, analyze, and save.

Translation and Language Help

Best when you need a record translated and explained, especially if abbreviations, occupations, or local terms are involved.

Examples of how genealogists use AI tools

Example 1: Turning a scanned record into usable text

You have a parish register image that is hard to read. A transcription tool helps pull out the text. Then a chat-based tool helps summarize the entry and explain what the clues may mean.

Example 2: Translating a foreign-language death record

A translation tool gives you the English text. Then a chat-based AI tool helps identify names, relationships, occupations, places, and possible follow-up records to search.

Example 3: Building a research plan from scattered notes

You paste in census facts, a family story, and a few record clues. A chat-based AI tool helps organize the facts, separate guesses from evidence, and suggest next research steps.

A practical way to choose the right tool

If you need help thinking: use a chat-based AI tool.

If you need help reading: use a transcription or OCR tool.

If you need help understanding another language: use a translation tool.

If you need help organizing a lot of material: use a search or note-analysis tool.

Strengths and limitations

What AI tools do well

  • Speed up repetitive work
  • Help summarize and explain complex material
  • Support translation and transcription
  • Suggest research directions
  • Help organize notes and evidence

What AI tools still require caution

  • They can misunderstand unclear documents
  • They can mistranslate names or places
  • They may sound certain when they are wrong
  • They do not replace source analysis
  • They still need human review and judgment

Simple starter tasks to try

Try a summary

Paste a short record transcription into an AI tool and ask for the main genealogical clues.

Try a translation

Use a foreign-language record and ask the tool to translate it and explain the key details.

Try a research question

Describe one ancestor and ask what records you should search next and why.

Try organizing notes

Paste in a few research notes and ask the tool to turn them into a timeline or action plan.

Try it yourself

Think about a family history task you need help with right now. Is it reading a document, translating a record, organizing notes, or deciding what to search next? Match the task to the right kind of AI tool and test it on one small example.