Hiring a professional genealogist typically costs between $500 and $4,500 for a standalone family history project, with total price often driven by project scope, depth of research, and regional access fees. The cost to hire varies by research depth, location, and deliverables such as reports, charts, and sourced records.
| Item | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Basic genealogical search | $500 | $1,200 | $2,000 | Initial pedigree, basic source citations |
| Comprehensive family history | $1,000 | $2,500 | $4,500 | Deep archival work, multiple lines, full report |
| Record fees & access | $50 | $200 | $1,000 | Public and restricted records, subscription costs |
| Consultation & project management | $200 | $600 | $1,200 | Planning, progress updates, revisions |
| Travel & onsite research | $0 | $400 | $1,500 | Onsite archives, local libraries, courthouse visits |
Assumptions: region, scope, and depth of archival access.
Overview Of Costs
Costs combine a base research fee with per-hour labor and third-party record access. The total depends on project breadth, archival obstacles, and the number of generations pursued. A typical project spans a few weeks to several months, with milestones for initial findings, midline progress, and final reports. Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.
Cost Breakdown
The following table outlines the likely cost components for a professional genealogist project, with typical ranges and brief assumptions.
| Component | Low | Average | High | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Labor | $25 | $60 | $120 | Hourly research time; SEER-like thresholds do not apply |
| Materials & Records | $50 | $200 | $1,000 | Copies, microfilm, database access |
| Deliverables | $100 | $400 | $1,000 | Written report, charts, source index |
| Permits & Access Fees | $0 | $100 | $500 | Archive fees, subscription costs |
| Travel | $0 | $400 | $1,500 | Onsite research at distant archives |
| Contingency | $50 | $150 | $500 | Unexpected sources or dead ends |
What Drives Price
Key price factors include the depth of lineage pursued and the accessibility of records. Additional drivers include geographic distance to archives, language barriers, and the complexity of identifying correct family lines. A project concentrating on a single surname with abundant local records will be cheaper than a multi-branch investigation across several regions. Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.
Cost By Region
Regional differences can shift pricing by roughly ±20% to ±40% due to density of archives and local market rates. Urban markets tend to be higher, while rural areas may offer lower hourly rates.
| Region | Typical Range | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Urban Northeast | $1,000-$3,000 | Higher access fees and consultant rates |
| Midwest / Suburban | $800-$2,500 | Balanced costs, strong local archives |
| Rural / Southern | $600-$2,000 | Lower labor rates, variable record access |
Real-World Pricing Examples
Three scenario cards illustrate typical engagements and pricing structure. They blend labor hours, per-unit costs, and deliverables to show real-world expectations.
Basic
Scope: 2 generations, limited records, summary report. Labor: 15 hours at $60/hour. Materials: $60. Deliverables: 1-page summary with key sources.
Total: $1,260; per-hour estimate: $60; per-generation estimate: $630.
Mid-Range
Scope: 3–4 generations, journal and family chart, multiple sources. Labor: 40 hours at $60/hour. Materials: $200. Access: $150. Deliverables: full report + family charts.
Total: $3,100; per-hour average: $60; per-lineage: ~$775.
Premium
Scope: 5+ generations, distant records, translated records, photo index. Labor: 70 hours at $95/hour. Materials: $500. Access: $400. Travel: $600. Deliverables: comprehensive report, source index, annotated timeline.
Total: $9,300; per-hour rate: $95; per-generation: ~$1,260.
Assumptions: scope, depth, and region impact pricing.
Ways To Save
Save by clarifying goals early and selecting deliverables that match needs. Consider restricting the scope to essential lines, requesting phased deliverables, and combining records requests where possible. Booking in non-peak archival hours and choosing digital deliverables can reduce costs. Assumptions: region, specs, labor hours.
Price Components
Understanding where money goes helps manage expectations. The following components often appear in invoices.
- Labor: research time, analysis, and writing
- Records & Access: subscriptions, digitization fees, and archive charges
- Deliverables: reports, charts, and bibliographies
- Travel & Onsite Research: trips to libraries or courthouses
- Contingency: coverage for dead ends or new discoveries