Genes Reunited Press Office
Press office sections
Press releases
- brightsolid acquires Friends Reunited - 6th August 2009
- Genes Reunited is first to put Brits on the map! - February 2009
- Genes Reunited redesign makes genealogy accessible to all - January 2009
- Going for Gold - August 2008
- One in four Brits searches for long-lost family online - July 2008
- Genes Reunited adds 1 million military records to its database - April 2008
- 'Best of British' grandmothers unveiled and honoured - January 2008
- Brown moves into centre ground but Cameron tops the poll - October 2007
- Hidden story of slavery finally uncovered by internet age - March 2007
- Genes Reunited thrives under ITV - March 2007
- Genes Reunited wins Hitwise top 10 award - March 2007
- Six degrees of separation? How about sixty - December 2006
- Tide turning on lonely nuclear family - September 2006
- Running - or walking or dancing - in the family - June 2006
- Mr Emmerdale, meet Mrs Call centre - January 2006
- We wish you a nuclear chrsitmas - December 2005
- Friends Reunited buys 1901 census website - August 2005
- Most of us have gone up in the world, new survey reveals - June 2005
- It's official. The Irish know how to throw a good party - March 2005
- Top ancestry website Genes Reunited appoints new head - January 2005
- Don't park Granny on the sofa - December 2004
One in four Brits searches for long-lost family online
Genes Reunited's latest figures prove Britain's booming interest in ancestry
With Who Do You Think You Are on TV screens around the nation, Genes Reunited, the UK's biggest genealogy site, today reveals the extent to which family history has taken hold of the British imagination.
Genes Reunited is the UK's biggest genealogy site, with over 9 million registered members - one in four of the UK's adult online population. Its archives include over 500 million individual names, with a new one added every second. Genes Reunited is owned by ITV along with sister sites Friends Reunited and Friends Reunited Dating.
In a single day more than 480,000 individual names were added to the site, demonstrating the level of enthusiasm among the Genes users.
Martine Parnell, head of Genes Reunited, comments: "The hunger to find out who we are and where we come from has never been stronger across Britain. The internet makes it easier than ever before to uncover your family history or track down a family member you've lost touch with. It's a subject that fascinates us all and our members range from novices finding out about their family through to amateur heritage researchers and even experienced genealogists. The site has created a thriving community connected by a shared interest in finding out where they came from."
A few fast facts about Genes Reunited:
- Unique users to Genes Reunited in the month of June rose 71% on May 2008 to 1.8 million
- There were 198,000 new registrations in June taking the site to a 54% market share
- In addition to the millions of official records (census, birth, marriage and death) the site has just reached 170 million names in its family trees
- Members spend on average 10 minutes and 31 seconds on the site each time they visit - the highest ever level for Genes Reunited
- During the Patsy Kensit episode of Who Do You Think You Are 1000 people registered on Genes Reunited in one hour
- There are 1.3 million 'Smiths' on Genes Reunited and the largest family tree created on the site holds 149,787 members
- The largest audience, by sector, is women in their fifties
- Genes Reunited is the sister site to social network Friends Reunited and dating site Friends Reunited Dating
The site's easy-to-use format enables people to build their own family tree and find matches in other members' trees to discover a family connection. Users can input the names of known family members and Genes Reunited will search the 9 million family trees already on the site and highlight any similar entries in other people's trees - making tracing your family's roots easier than ever before. The site is entirely free to search with subscription fees applicable once users want to contact each other directly or access official records (including birth, marriage, death and war) through the site.



