Clangram is a shared family tree that a whole clan can actually use — quick to set up, pretty to look at, and private by default. It's made for the grandma who wants to see everyone's photos in one place and the cousin who keeps forgetting when the twins were born, not for serious genealogy research.
Existing family-tree tools tend to land in one of two places. On one end, heavyweight research platforms built for professional genealogists — powerful, but slow to learn and hostile to casual use. On the other end, static printed charts and spreadsheets nobody ever updates.
We wanted the middle: a tree that's good-looking enough to share in the family group chat, light enough that a non-technical relative can add their kids without help, and private enough that you're not worried about it showing up in search results. So we built Clangram.
Family trees aren't public. Clangram doesn't list your family anywhere, and search engines aren't allowed to index private family pages. You choose who gets in — via an invite link or a view password.
Charging per-seat didn't feel right for something that's supposed to bring a family together. The admin pays once a year ($12 or $24) and everyone else joins for free.
Bring your existing tree in with standard GEDCOM import (from Ancestry, FamilySearch, Gramps, etc.) and leave any time with a full GEDCOM export — photos and all. If Clangram ever stops being the right fit, you walk away with everything.
No jargon, no confusing "GEDCOM 5.5 compatibility modes", no multi-step wizard to add a niece. Click a person, add someone related to them. Done.
Explore a demo family with 60 members across 5 generations.