- Both firms specialize in German genealogy and citizenship by descent documentation.
- The biggest practical difference is where the researchers physically work.
- Pricing models and engagement style differ in ways that matter for your project.
Contents
Two Approaches to Professional German Genealogy
Professional German genealogy research comes in two main flavors. The first is the global firm model, where researchers are coordinated centrally and onsite agents are dispatched as needed. Legacy Tree Genealogists operates this way, with credentialed researchers around the world and a project management layer that assigns specialists to your case.
The second is the in-country specialist model. GermanResearchers.com is built this way. Our researchers live and work in Germany, full time. They are the people pulling church books off shelves in Bavaria, sitting in the Landesarchiv in Stuttgart, and reading Kirchenbücher (parish church books kept by Lutheran and Catholic priests) by hand.
Neither model is universally better. They are built for different things.
What Both Services Have in Common
Before the differences, the common ground is worth noting. Both GermanResearchers.com and Legacy Tree:
- Employ credentialed professional genealogists with real archive experience
- Handle old German script (Kurrent, Sütterlin, Fraktur) that most Americans cannot read
- Provide written research reports with sourced citations
- Assist clients pursuing German citizenship by descent under the Staatsangehörigkeitsgesetz (StAG)
- Offer initial consultations before quoting a full project
- Are widely reviewed by real clients with public ratings above 4.5 stars
If you hire either firm and follow their process, you will get further than DIY databases will take you. That is the floor, not the ceiling.
Side by Side: Service Model Comparison
| Factor | Global Firm Model | In-Country Specialist Model (GermanResearchers.com) |
|---|---|---|
| Where researchers are based | Distributed globally with German onsite agents | Full-time in Germany across Berlin, Munich, Hamburg, Frankfurt |
| Project management style | Central PM coordinates a researcher network | Direct contact between client and the assigned genealogist |
| Regional specialization | Broad coverage across many ancestral regions | Deep regional expertise in Bayern, Preußen, Rheinland, Sachsen |
| Initial preliminary search | Paid scoping engagement | Free preliminary search before any commitment |
| Pricing | Hourly research packages, typically billed in blocks | Project-based pricing with no hidden fees |
| Citizenship documentation support | Available as a defined service offering | Included as part of the descent research process |
Where Each Model Has the Edge
The global firm model wins when your research spans countries. If your family tree drifts through Germany, Poland, and then jumps to Argentina before settling in the United States, a globally distributed firm can move with the trail.
The in-country specialist model wins when the work is on the ground in Germany. If the question is which village in Franken your great-grandfather Friedrich Becker left in 1881, and which parish books survive there today, having a researcher who lives 90 minutes from the archive matters. They can walk in. They can read the original record under the lamp. They know the archivist by name.
For German citizenship by descent claims, the in-country model has a small but real practical edge. The records consulates ask for live in German archives. A researcher physically in Germany can retrieve them faster, and can handle requests in German with the right tone.
How to Decide Which Service Fits You
Three questions cut through the noise.
First, where is your ancestor’s village? If it is firmly in Germany, an in-country specialist firm has a structural advantage. If your family line crosses multiple countries, a global firm may match better.
Second, do you want to talk directly to the researcher? Some clients prefer a project manager who routes communication. Others want to email the genealogist who is actually pulling the records. Both are valid. Pick what fits how you work.
Third, are you committed to the project, or still exploring? If you are not sure whether enough records survive to make your case, a free preliminary search lowers your risk before you spend anything. If you have already done substantial U.S. research and want to commission a defined deliverable, an hourly package may move faster.
Either way, hire a real professional. The biggest mistake we see is families spending two years and a small fortune on DIY tools, hitting the same brick wall every time, then arriving at a real firm wishing they had started here.
A Word About Trust
Both services have earned their reputations through years of work and thousands of completed projects. We rate ourselves 4.8 out of 5 across 954 client reviews. Legacy Tree has its own strong record. Neither firm is going to disappear with your retainer.
Whichever service you hire, ask three things before signing. What is the deliverable? What happens if the records do not exist? And who, by name, will be doing the work?
If a firm answers those three questions clearly, you are dealing with professionals. If they dodge any of them, walk away and find a firm that does not.
Clients rate our German Genealogy Researchers ★★★★★ 4.8/5 based on 954 client reviews
Hannes S
★ 4.8/5 (100+ jobs)
Genealogy Researcher
Librarian, Tour Guide
Munich, Germany
Irmgard D
★ 4.9/5 (73 jobs)
Genealogy Researcher
Hamburg, Germany
Jörg K
★ 4.8/5 (92 jobs)
Genealogy Researcher
Tour Guide
Hannover, Germany
Tilman L
★ 4.9/5 (100+ jobs)
Genealogy Researcher
Tour Guide
Frankfurt am Main, Germany
FAQs
Is GermanResearchers.com a competitor of Legacy Tree?
Both are professional services offering German genealogy research. They serve overlapping audiences but operate on different models. Many families consider both before choosing. We respect Legacy Tree’s work and do not position ourselves against them. We position ourselves around our in-country specialization.
Which is cheaper?
It depends on the project. Hourly billing can be efficient for narrow questions. Project-based pricing tends to be more predictable for full descent research engagements. Both firms will quote you transparently. Ask for the total expected range, not just the hourly rate.
Does GermanResearchers.com handle non-German records?
Our specialty is Germany. Where U.S. records are needed to anchor a German genealogy project, we use them. For complex multi-country trees that primarily live outside Germany, a globally distributed firm may fit better.
How long does professional German genealogy research take?
Most of our projects finish within four weeks. Citizenship by descent documentation can take longer because of consulate timelines and archive request cycles. Both firms work within the same archive realities, so timelines tend to be comparable.
Can I switch firms partway through a project?
You can. Your prior research belongs to you. A new firm will need to review what has been done, which is part of why getting it right the first time matters.
Expert Tips
- Always start with a free or low-cost scoping conversation before committing. A firm that will not scope your project before quoting is a red flag, not a closer.
- Ask which specific archives the firm will be working with. A real answer names them. A vague answer is a sign you are talking to sales, not to a researcher.
- Send your U.S. side of the family research first. Every hour the firm does not spend rediscovering what you already know is an hour spent in Germany.
- Get the deliverable in writing. Number of records, format of the final report, what happens if a record cannot be found. Clarity now prevents friction later.
- Trust your instinct on the first phone call. If you feel rushed, hire someone else. The good firms know they do not need to push.
Related Resources
- Hire a German Genealogist: What Professional Research Finds That DIY Cannot
- Genealogy Researcher: What a Professional Finds That Ancestry and FamilySearch Leave Behind
- German Ancestry Research: How to Find Your German Ancestors When the Trail Goes Cold
