AncestryDNA raw data interpretation
Interpret your AncestryDNA raw data in a readable report.
GenoSight interprets the raw DNA data export from your existing AncestryDNA account and turns it into plain-language educational reports with citations, caveats, and privacy boundaries.
Use the raw export
Use the raw DNA data download from DNA Settings.
What GenoSight does with your AncestryDNA file
The goal is to make a raw genotype file understandable without pretending it is a clinical test. GenoSight prioritizes findings, explains uncertainty, and keeps the report readable.
Readable sections
GenoSight turns supported AncestryDNA genotype calls into structured report sections instead of leaving you with a raw data table.
Context beyond ancestry
Explore educational context across nutrition, traits, fitness, pharmacogenomics, ClinVar-style health flags, and carrier-status context where the file has coverage.
Health report path
If you are specifically looking for an AncestryDNA health report, start with the provider health-report guide and use GenoSight only for educational context from a compatible raw data file.
Coverage-aware caveats
Reports explain missing calls, chip limits, and why a consumer raw data export is not clinical confirmation.
Before you upload
AncestryDNA lets the test owner download DNA Data from DNA Settings after confirmation and account verification. Use the raw data export, not an ethnicity report or family tree file.
AncestryDNA sends an email link for the raw DNA data download after you request it from DNA Settings.
Ancestry notes that its SNP calls are reported on the forward strand with respect to GRCh37.
Once you download a local copy, it is no longer protected by Ancestry account security. Treat it like a sensitive private record.
Raw file parsing
GenoSight parses the genotype file first, checks provider format, and derives structured findings before report synthesis.
LLM boundary
The raw genotype file is not sent to the LLM. Report synthesis uses structured findings and your profile context.
Privacy stance
Files are stored under your account with encryption at rest, and GenoSight does not sell genetic data.
Pricing path
Start with the free report path, then upgrade only if it helps.
A provider-specific raw DNA file should earn trust with a real output first. Paid plans add more credits, PDFs, and report-grounded follow-up when the first report is worth continuing.
Free trial
$0
250 signup credits, no card
Run a real starter report from the provider file before deciding whether to pay.
Start freeMonthly
Popular$11.99
1,500 credits per month
Continue with more reports and findings-grounded follow-up chat after the first useful result.
Choose monthlyYearly
$99.99
18,000 credits per year
Best fit when you want broader coverage, PDFs, regenerations, and longer follow-up over time.
Choose yearlyLifetime
$229
6,000 credits per month, for life
For revisiting the same raw DNA file and future report updates without renewals.
Choose lifetimeFAQ
Can GenoSight interpret AncestryDNA raw data?
Yes. GenoSight is built to interpret and analyze compatible AncestryDNA raw data files. It does not interpret ethnicity screenshots, family tree exports, PDF reports, FASTQ, BAM, or whole-genome VCF files.
Is AncestryDNA raw data enough for health reports?
It can support educational reports where the file has relevant coverage, but it is not a clinical test or an official AncestryHealth report. GenoSight shows caveats and missing-coverage limits when they matter.
Do I need a new DNA kit?
No. If you already have a compatible AncestryDNA raw data download, you can upload that file to GenoSight.
Can I start without paying?
Yes. New accounts receive 250 free credits with no card required, enough to preview the report format before choosing a paid plan.