Do you travel for the food? Festivals? Or maybe family? Over a quarter of travelers these days are interested in heritage or ancestry-based trips. The surge in DNA testing has been accompanied by a corresponding rise in the popularity of genealogy-focused trips.
People are putting their traveling ‘genes’ on. And not going sightseeing, but searching for their roots. Motivations vary from family heritage to the story of migration from their ancestral homes.
Do any of these ideas strike a chord in you and beckon you to your ancestors’ distant shores?
- Learning: discovering your original identity
- Connection: walking where your ancestors lived and left
- Closure: if your family didn’t choose their displacement or migration
- Curiosity: sparked by DNA surprises or family lore
- Legacy: sharing “where we come from” with the next generation
Ancestry Travel Hotspots
Do these destinations call you home? Here are some of the more popular destinations for North Americans to trace their roots.
- Ireland and Scotland, the emotional epicenter for those with Celtic roots
- Italy (especially Sicily and southern regions) draws diaspora descendants in droves
- Germany and Eastern Europe are seeing new interest as archives become more accessible
- Nordic countries like Sweden and Norway are booming with ancestral travelers, thanks to strong genealogical records
- West Africa — particularly Ghana — has become a powerful destination for many with African heritage, due to its connection to the transatlantic slave trade
How to do Ancestry Travel?
Family heritage travel is genealogy, part emotional archaeology. But how much information do you need to ‘start digging?’
Some travelers arrive armed with binders of family trees and DNA results. Others simply know that “Grandpa was from somewhere near Kraków.”
Ancestry travel gives all the questions new meaning: Who? Where? When? Why? How?
Here are tips to get the most from ancestry travel:
Do the Homework (But be Realistic)
Before you book a ticket, spend time with records — immigration documents, ship manifests, census forms, church registries. Sites like FamilySearch are invaluable, and many towns will respond to polite archive requests.
But remember: villages change. Borders shift. Records disappear.
Go looking for discovery — and be open to whatever you find, or don’t find.
Bring in a Local Expert
If you’re zeroing in on a specific town, hire a local genealogist or guide. They know which municipal office holds the birth records and who still remembers the families who left.
In small places, people — not paperwork — may be your best resource.
Balance Roots With Real Travel
Don’t turn your trip into a full-time research project.
Yes, visit the ancestral village. But also experience the destination. If your roots are in southern Italy, explore Puglia. If they trace to Portugal, spend time in Porto to understand the country's rhythm. Today’s lifestyle is as valuable a lesson in your heritage as your history.
Strike up Conversations
Walk into bakeries. Visit parish offices. Ask about your surname.
Bring documents. Smile. Be curious. And friendly.
A shared name can open doors you didn’t even know existed.
Manage Your Expectations
Sometimes you’ll find long-lost cousins. Sometimes you’ll find a locked archive and a shrug.
No matter what you discover, if you travel with an open mind and open heart, you’ll always come away richer than when you left.
START YOUR TRIP!
Image: Getty
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