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NutraHacker and Genetic Genie results

When two methylation tools match, what does that really mean?

If NutraHacker and Genetic Genie show the same MTHFR, COMT, or detox rows, the shared result is worth taking seriously as a raw-data clue. It still is not a diagnosis, a supplement order, or proof that one SNP explains anxiety, fatigue, methylation, or detox symptoms.

GenoSight is not affiliated with NutraHacker or Genetic Genie. This page is educational and does not provide medical advice.

Fast answer

Matching output helps, but context still matters.

Same raw file, same rsID

Matching rows usually mean both tools read the same genotype call from your uploaded raw DNA file.

Same color or risk label

Agreement can make a row worth understanding, but it does not turn a SNP into a diagnosis or treatment plan.

Missing or not found rows

Missing markers can come from chip coverage, no-calls, provider formatting, or file handling issues.

Matching supplement ideas

Treat supplement rows as questions to review with labs, symptoms, medication context, and a qualified clinician.

Agreement is a starting point, not the finish line.

Raw DNA tools can agree because they are reading the same row in the same file. The interpretation layer is separate: scientific evidence, effect size, ancestry context, lab measurements, and personal health history all sit outside the raw genotype table.

What NutraHacker and Genetic Genie can do well

They can surface methylation, detox, and nutrition-related SNP rows quickly from a raw data file. They are especially helpful when you want to identify exact markers to research further.

What the matching rows cannot prove

They cannot measure methylation status, nutrient levels, homocysteine, medication interactions, supplement tolerance, or whether a symptom is caused by a variant.

Before acting on a red or yellow row

Use this checklist before turning a matching result into a supplement decision or health conclusion.

Write down the exact rsID, gene, and zygosity before interpreting a red or yellow row.

Confirm which raw data provider produced the file: 23andMe, AncestryDNA, MyHeritage, FTDNA, WGS, or another source.

Keep the original raw DNA download untouched; do not resave it through Excel or Sheets before uploading elsewhere.

Separate genotype clues from measured labs such as homocysteine, folate, B12, vitamin D, ferritin, and thyroid markers.

Do not start, stop, or dose supplements from a color-coded row without medical context.

A careful second pass in GenoSight

GenoSight is useful when you want a readable explanation from your original raw file, with citations and caveats instead of genotype-only supplement instructions.

Upload the original raw file

GenoSight reads compatible raw DNA text files, not NutraHacker PDFs, Genetic Genie screenshots, or copied tables, so upload the original raw DNA file.

Run Detox & Methylation

Start with the report closest to MTHFR, COMT, methylation, detox, and nutrition-context questions.

Use the report as a second pass

Paid plans add PDFs and findings-grounded chat so you can ask follow-up questions without treating one SNP as destiny.

250 signup credits, no card required

Enough to run the first Detox & Methylation report from a compatible raw DNA file.

NutraHacker and Genetic Genie questions

If NutraHacker and Genetic Genie match, are the results accurate?

Matching rows are useful evidence that both tools are reading the same raw SNP call. They are not proof that a supplement recommendation, symptom explanation, or diagnosis is clinically correct.

Can GenoSight read my NutraHacker or Genetic Genie PDF?

No. GenoSight analyzes compatible raw DNA text files from sources such as 23andMe, AncestryDNA, or MyHeritage. Upload the original raw file, not a PDF, screenshot, or exported table.

Is MyHeritage raw data enough for methylation results?

It may cover many common markers, but coverage depends on the chip version, no-call rate, and whether the tool supports that file format. Missing markers should be treated as missing data, not normal or safe results.

Should I take supplements listed by NutraHacker or Genetic Genie?

Do not treat supplement lists as personal medical instructions. Review them alongside labs, symptoms, medications, pregnancy status, medical history, and a qualified clinician.