What Kind of a Cousin Are They? How to Make Sense of These Boggling Relationships
Last Updated August 8, 2023
Ancestry 50% Off Gift Memberships for Black Friday (Gift to Anyone, Even Yourself!)
No matter how long you’ve studied your family’s history, you may still find yourself asking, What is a second cousin? or Wait, what does once removed mean again?
Don’t feel bad; determining cousin relationships can be confusing – even the most experienced genealogists still have to consult a cousin chart every now and then.
And while you may only really find yourself caring about these designations during a family reunion or after taking a DNA test, it can be very helpful to understand how they work in general.
Understanding Cousin Relationships, Such as Second Cousin Once Removed (and Other Confusing Terms)
As you build your own family tree online, most genealogy programs will calculate cousin relationships for you and include those designations in an individual’s profile (although this only works if you have included and properly identified yourself in the tree.)
Make Instant Discoveries in Your Family Tree Now Imagine adding your family tree to a simple website and getting hundreds of new family history discoveries instantly.
MyHeritage is offering 2 free weeks of access to their extensive collection of 20 billion historical records, as well as their matching technology that instantly connects you with new information about your ancestors. Sign up using the link below to find out what you can uncover about your family. Discover New Genealogy Records Instantly
Also, as DNA studies become more refined and better integrated into genealogy programs like Ancestry and MyHeritage, technology will use our genetic connections to determine who is a second cousin and who is twice removed, then present the results to us in a neat little package — but as we’ll see, this determination is not just yet an exact science.
For these reasons, learning how to identify a first, second, or third cousin relationship and determine how “removed” they are – without a chart or genealogy program – is still a crucial skill for family historians to master … and it all starts with a basic understanding of familial relationships.
What is a cousin?
Many people will use the term cousin loosely to refer to someone they know is related in some way, even if they’re not exactly sure how. As genealogists, though, we often want more specific labels for our familial relationships and the general term “cousin” just won’t do.
If a biological relation in your family tree is not direct ancestor, or a sibling of your direct ancestor (aunt or uncle), then there is a good likelihood that they are a cousin of some sort. These relationships are calculated based on the number of generations to the most recent common ancestor (that you and your cousin share) on your mother or father’s line.
Removal is added by calculating the cousin relationship first, and then the difference between your generational removal from that ancestor and your cousin’s (two generations vs three for instance).
This is where cousin labels like “first, second, etc.” and “once removed, twice removed, etc.” come into play. A person who shares great-grandparents (but not grandparents), for instance, is your second cousin. A second cousin’s child is your second cousin once removed because they are in a different generation than you.
20 Billion Genealogy Records Are Free for 2 Weeks Get two full weeks of free access to more than 20 billion genealogy records right now. You’ll also gain access to the MyHeritage discoveries tool that locates information about your ancestors automatically when you upload or create a tree. What will you discover about your family’s past?
Claim My Free Record Access Now
Let’s take look at these designations in more detail.
What is a first cousin?
Simply put, first cousins share grandparents and about 12.5% of their DNA (this can vary quite a bit). The parents of first cousins are siblings.
As the chart below shows, first cousins are in the same generation with one another, even if they are far apart in age. For example, I have first cousins who are closer to my mother’s age than mine! However, we both called the same person “Granny” and our parents were siblings, so we are definitely first cousins.
You can also simply count the generations between you and this common ancestor, so your parents, which is 1, hence a first cousin.
What is a second cousin?
A second cousin is someone that you share a great-grandparent with (usually both great-grandparents). Second cousins share about 3.2% of their genetic material, on average.
Your parent and your cousin’s parent are first cousins, and one of your grandparents (such as your great-grandfather) was a sibling of your cousin’s grandparent. Remember: The first, second, etc. designation is determined by the grandparent you share with a cousin of your same generation.
Using some math, we can calculate it as the number of generations counting back to your most recent common ancestor (MRCA) minus 1 (parent> grandparent > great-grandparent minus 1 = 2) or simply the number of generations between you and the common ancestor (in this case two, parent and grandparent).
This is why when two people share a great grandparent as their MRCA (your grandparents were siblings) they are second cousins.
How about third or fourth cousins?
Using this logic, we can just as easily figure out more distant cousin labels. Your third cousin, for instance, is someone of your same generation with whom you share a common great-great-grandparent. Your great-grandparents were siblings, your grandparents were first cousins, and your parents were second cousins.
Your fourth cousin would be someone you share a great-great-great grandparent with. There are 4 generations between you and that shared ancestor – you > parent > grandparent > great-grandparent > great-great-grandparent > great-great-great-grandparent).
So, what is a first cousin once removed?
The removed designation comes into play when a cousin is born into a different generation than you.
Now, just to be perfectly clear, when we say “generation,” we’re not referring to Boomers, Gen Xers, or Millennials. Those demographic labels were created in the 20th century to help businesses and advertisers understand the different attitudes, motivations, and shared historical experiences of a group of people born within a roughly 20-year span. So, just because you have a cousin who witnessed World War II, while you were just a kid when the Vietnam War ended, doesn’t necessarily mean you’re of different ancestral generations.
Your first cousin once removed, then, is the child of your first cousin. You and your first cousin once removed do not share a common grandparent, because you were born in different generations of your family line. Your grandparent is their great-grandparent, your great-grandparent is their great-great-grandparent, and so on.
If your first cousin once removed has a child, that child is now two generations away from you, and would therefore be your first cousin twice removed (or, two generations removed from you). In other words, that child is your first cousin’s grandchild.
What is a second cousin twice removed?
Your second cousin twice removed is the grandchild of your second cousin. They are two generations away from you, because, remember — you and your second cousin are of the same generation and share a great-grandparent.
The more generations that separate you and a cousin, and the further back you have to trace your family tree to determine if you share a common great-grandparent, the more numbers you’ll have to add to your cousin relationship. Calculating these when it comes to a distant relative or long deceased person in your tree can seem difficult, but once you have a tree laid out where you can count the generations you will always be able to with the advice in this guide – whether that’s a fifth cousin or a second cousin 12 times removed.
Once you understand that you’re counting generations to determine how removed you are from a person, and tracking your grandparents to pinpoint whether you have a first, second, or third cousin kinship, though, you’ve mastered the most important tools to calculating cousin relationships!
If you’re looking for a quick reference to help you with these determinations, check out Family History Daily’s handy dandy Cousin Relationship Chart here or read our article for more details on the simple math needed for cousin relationships.
Understanding a Half Cousin
As mentioned, full cousins share, in common, two people who produced children in the same generation, The cousins are descended from different children that these two people produced.
If we only share one of those ancestors (in a single generation), that person would have less genetical material in common and we may call them a half-cousin (such as a half first cousin). Although, generally, this designation is removed for simplicity, it can cause some confusion when determining relationships after a DNA test.
Double Cousins Explained
Some family trees include a somewhat rare, but not unheard-of cousin relationship: Double first cousins. These are cousins of the same generation who share the same two sets of grandparents. This scenario occurs when two siblings marry two siblings from another family; the two couples’ children will be double first cousins.
Let’s say the Mr. and Mrs. Jones have a son and a daughter and Mr. and Mrs. Smith also have a son and a daughter. Imagine that the Jones daughter meets and marries the Smith son. At the wedding, the bride’s brother falls hopelessly in love with the groom’s sister, and they eventually marry. The children of each couple will be double first cousins.
Leave a Reply