Every genealogy research session starts in the same place: the census. Not because it's the most exciting record — it's not. But because it's the one record that gives you everything at once: names, ages, relationships, occupations, birthplaces, and a snapshot of an entire household on a specific night in a specific year.
If you know where to look and how to read what you find, a few hours with the census can pull you back four or five generations. If you don't know what you're doing, it's easy to search for years without finding anything useful. Here's the complete guide.
The Constitution requires a decennial population count — Article I, Section 2. Every ten years since 1790, the federal government has sent enumerators door to door, recording every person in the country. The results are some of the most comprehensive personal records that exist for 19th- and early-20th-century Americans.
The census isn't a single record type — it changes every ten years, sometimes dramatically. The 1790 census recorded only the head of household and a count of other residents by category (white males 16+, white males under 16, white females, all other free persons, and enslaved persons). By 1940, the census recorded 33 distinct data points including home ownership, highest grade of school completed, wages, and whether the person had ever been married.
This matters because the record you're searching for changes depending on the decade. A search strategy that works for 1900 might miss a critical clue that was asked in 1910 but not in 1900.
The census runs from 1790 to 1940. Here's what changed and why it matters:
Knowing what the census asked is one thing. Knowing how to read the actual data takes a specific example.
From one page, you now know: Stefan and Anna emigrated from the same place (Galicia, probably a specific village you can research further); they arrived 1888–1889; their first child Josef was born in Chicago in early 1889, suggesting they were settling rather than transient; Stefan worked in steel — Chicago's South Side Polish community was built around steel mills. This is actionable. You now have a decade of arrival, a specific industry, and a probable village of origin.
Federal census records are released to the public 72 years after they're taken. This is set by Title 44 of the US Code — not an arbitrary rule, but a privacy protection standard. The 1940 census was the last one released (in April 2012) and remains the most recent.
The implications are concrete: there is no US federal census record for anyone who was alive in 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, or 2000. If your parent or grandparent died after 1940, the federal census will not show them by name. The 1950 census will be released in 2032. Until then, the most recent census that exists for recent generations is 1940.
This is why genealogy research on recent family history (post-1940) requires different tools entirely: state vital records, Social Security death index, newspaper obituaries, voter registration records, military discharge records, and school yearbooks. The census doesn't help you there.
The major census databases:
FamilySearch.org — Free. The Church of Latter-day Saints' database has the broadest collection of digitized census images with a name index. Strong for 1790–1940. Some records are browse-only (no index, must scroll to the right page), but the collection is deep and growing.
Ancestry.com — Subscription required for most census collections. Has the most comprehensive name indexes, including user-contributed corrections. If you're hitting a wall on FamilySearch, Ancestry's index often finds names that have unusual spellings.
US Census Bureau (census.gov) — The official source for census images. No index, but the images are high-quality and freely accessible. Best for verifying a record you've already found via the index.
Archive.org — Has some microfilm census records digitized. Less comprehensive, but occasionally has records not available elsewhere.
For the 1940 census specifically, the official finder is 1940census.archives.gov — run by the National Archives, free, with a name index.
Most genealogy platforms let you search one census at a time. You pick the year, enter the name, scroll through results. If the spelling is off — Kowalski vs. Kowalczyk — you'll miss the record entirely.
KinLore's research pipeline searches census records across all available years simultaneously, applying phonetic matching and variant spelling detection to account for transcription errors that accumulated over 150 years of enumerators writing down unfamiliar immigrant names. We cover county-level census records across all 3,233 US counties where they're available.
The goal isn't just to find a name in a census — it's to find every instance of an ancestor across multiple decades, reconstruct the household composition at each point, identify neighbors who might be extended family, and cross-reference occupations and birthplaces to confirm it's the right person. This is what turns a name search into a family story.
"I spent two weeks trying to find my great-grandfather in the 1900 census. FamilySearch kept returning nothing for 'Stanescu.' KinLore found him as 'Stanessku' — the enumerator clearly heard it differently. That one record gave me the village in Romania where his parents came from."
The census doesn't exist in isolation. Every census record is a chapter in a longer story, and the most productive research connects multiple record types.
For immigrant ancestors, the census is the anchor point — but it needs to connect to immigration records. The census tells you the decade of arrival; immigration records tell you the exact crossing. The census tells you the country of birth; church records in the destination community tell you the specific village. See our immigration records guide for how to take this further.
For surname research, census records are the confirmation mechanism. A name origin story — whether it comes from etymology, regional linguistics, or family tradition — should be testable against census data. If a surname is claimed to be Italian, the census should show Italian-born neighbors in the same enumeration district. See our surname origins guide for how census context validates name origin claims.
For a side-by-side comparison of census research tools and what you'll actually find in each, see our Genealogy Platform Comparison.
US federal census records are the decennial population counts taken every ten years from 1790 through 1940. They are the backbone of American genealogy research because they record every person in the country at a specific moment in time — name, age, sex, race, birthplace, occupation, and family relationships. No other record type gives you a snapshot of an entire household across 150 years in a single document. Census records let you track families forward and backward through time, identify immigration arrival decades, find neighbors who may be relatives, and narrow down birthplaces that point you to more specific records.
The 1940 census is the most recent publicly available census record. Federal law seals census records for 72 years — this is what kept the 1940 census restricted until April 2012. There is no US federal census for anyone alive in 1950, 1960, 1970, 1980, 1990, or 2000. The 1950 census will be released in 2032. For recent family history, researchers must use state vital records, Social Security death index, newspaper archives, and other non-federal sources.
The 1900 census is one of the most genealogically rich documents available. Each entry includes: full name, relationship to head of household, sex, race, age and birth month/year, marital status, years married, number of children born and number still living, birthplace (state or country), father's and mother's birthplace, year of immigration to the US (for foreign-born), naturalization status, occupation, and whether the home was owned or rented. From one entry you get the person's trade, spouse's maiden name, children's ages, whether parents were immigrants, and how long the family had been in the country.
The first US federal census was taken in 1790 as required by the Constitution. Before that, no systematic federal population counts existed in the American colonies or early United States. For pre-1790 ancestors, researchers use state and local records: tax lists, vital records, church registers, court records, and town records. Some colonies conducted their own population counts, but none are as standardized or as widely accessible as the federal census. For colonial-era research, local historical societies and state archives are the primary resources.
Yes — census records are one of the best tools for narrowing down when an immigrant ancestor arrived and where they came from. From 1880 onward, the census asks about immigration. From 1900 onward, it asks about naturalization. The 1900 and 1910 censuses are especially valuable because they record the specific country of birth (not just 'Austria' but 'Galicia,' not just 'Russia' but 'Poland'). Combining the 1900 census (years in the US) with the 1910 census (year of immigration) gives you a precise arrival window. From there, search ship passenger lists at ellisisland.org or FamilySearch.org to find the specific crossing.
See what KinLore found for your family
We search census records and more across 3,233 U.S. counties and build a 3,000+ word narrative from the documents we actually find.
See what KinLore found for your family — kinlore.ai/gift
Related: How to Start a Family Tree: Complete Beginner's Guide · What Does My Last Name Mean? How to Trace Your Surname Back Centuries · How to Trace Your Family's Immigration Records · 5 Free Ways to Research Your Family History