Your family is bigger than one address book.
Five generations, four continents, a dozen calendars and every tradition your household lives by. Build one living tree — for the folks who came before, the ones beside you, and the ones still to arrive.
No credit card · Invite by phone or email · Export any time
The Khan-Cohen tree
What it does
One tree, every kind of family
Pan-community, multi-generational, diaspora-ready — designed from the first sketch to fit every household.
Multi-generational tree
5+ generations, in-laws, step, adopted and chosen family — first-class citizens, not afterthoughts.
Living + ancestor profiles
Per-person privacy, photos, audio stories and key dates in the calendar your tradition keeps.
Cross-tree linking
Link to relatives' trees with mutual consent — discoverable through the public lineage archive.
Every detail covered
The features families actually ask for
From drag-to-build to GEDCOM export — built for first-time tree-keepers and genealogy nerds alike.
Drag-to-build editor
Add a parent, drop a sibling, draw a marriage — the tree rearranges itself. No genealogy software learning curve.
Invite by phone, email or QR
Send Nani a WhatsApp link, your cousin a QR code, your uncle an email — they join their branch in seconds.
Adopted, step, foster, chosen
Every relationship type — blood, adoptive, step, foster, godparent, chosen — supported as a first-class connection.
Per-person calendar layer
Birthdays, death anniversaries, name days, bar mitzvahs, baptisms, shraddha tithis — each in its native calendar.
Voice & video memories
Attach Dadi's lullaby, Abuelo's migration story, Zayde's niggun — pinned to the right person, forever.
Photo galleries, year-tagged
Multiple photos per person, tagged with year and place. A face at 6, at 26, at 86 — all in one timeline.
Surnames across cultures
Spanish double surnames, Icelandic patronymics, Tamil house names, Arabic kunyas, Korean clan / bon-gwan — modelled, not flattened.
Diaspora-aware
Timezone and location per person. A glance shows who's asleep in Toronto when it's dawn in Jaipur.
GEDCOM, PDF, poster export
Take your tree anywhere — import from Ancestry or MyHeritage, export to print-quality wall posters or PDFs for elders.
How it works
From one name to a whole tree
Most families have a full branch within a week. Here's how it grows.
Add yourself
Your name, your birthday in your calendar, your photo. Sixty seconds.
Invite an elder
A parent, grandparent or aunt — by phone, email or QR. They join their own branch.
They add their people
Each elder fills in the names only they remember — siblings, cousins, in-laws, the village.
The tree grows
Within weeks, your tree spans continents — without you typing a hundred names alone.
Privacy & dignity
Your tree, on your terms
A family tree is the most intimate map you'll ever make. We treat it that way.
Privacy controls per person
Each living person decides what is private, what is family-only, and what (if anything) is public.
Minors are never indexed
No child under 18 appears in public search, ever — regardless of what an adult relative toggles.
Deceased opt-in by family rep
A nominated family representative confirms whether a deceased person appears in the public archive.
Fully exportable data
GEDCOM, JSON, PDF — your data leaves with you. No vendor lock-in, no hostage-keeping.
GDPR & regional residency
Data stored in your home region (UK, EU, India, Canada, Australia). Right-to-be-forgotten honoured within 30 days.
Audit log of every change
Who added whom, who edited a date, who toggled a privacy flag — visible to every adult in the tree.
Built for every household
Sample trees from our families
No two trees look alike — and they shouldn't. A few real shapes we already support.
The Singh-O'Connor tree
A Sikh dad in Birmingham, a Catholic mum from Cork. Anand karaj + church wedding, both calendars layered, baisakhi and Christmas equally weighted.
The Adeyemi three-country tree
Lagos roots, London middle generation, Houston grandkids. Three timezones, two surnames per branch, one shared name day.
The Iyer joint tree
Four generations under one gotra in Chennai and Coimbatore, with cousins extending out to Sydney and Singapore.
The Rivera-Chen chosen tree
Two adoptive mothers, three children adopted from two countries, godparents elevated to grandparent status. All first-class.
The Cohen 600-year line
Ashkenazi line documented back to 14th-century Mainz. Linked to seven other family trees through the public archive.
The Kim bon-gwan tree
Gimhae Kim clan branch tracked alongside Yoruba oriki, Tamil kuladeivam and Telugu gotra — every clan structure modelled natively.
Pricing
Free to start. Premium when you outgrow it.
Your tree, on the house
5 generations · unlimited people · invite the whole family · photo uploads · GEDCOM import.
Start freePremium
Unlimited voice & video memories, cross-tree search and merge, ritual coordination across branches, and print-quality poster export.
From ₹999 lifetime · founder pricing
Questions, answered
Family-tree questions we hear most
The ones our founding families asked first.
Can I import from Ancestry, MyHeritage or a GEDCOM file?
How do you handle adopted, step, foster and chosen relations?
Are non-Indian families fully supported?
What if a relative refuses to join the tree?
Who owns the data?
Our Folks
Plant the tree your
grandchildren will climb.
One name today. A whole family within the week. Five generations within the year.