Donate SIGN UP

Ancestry.co.uk

Avatar Image
yelenots | 22:08 Thu 08th Aug 2013 | History
8 Answers
I joined the free 14 day trial and have been on it nearly every night and managed to trace my mothers side of the family back to 1797 :-)
When the free trial finishes does anyone know whether I'll still be able to access the information or do I have to pay/join?
Thanks
Gravatar

Answers

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Best Answer

No best answer has yet been selected by yelenots. Once a best answer has been selected, it will be shown here.

For more on marking an answer as the "Best Answer", please visit our FAQ.
Yele you will have to pay as soon as your 14 days are up, I think there are price tiers to suit.
Question Author
I was going to cancel the subscription as I've found out what I wanted too! Just wondered if I would be able to still see everything I've found or whether I should print it out to be on the safe side!
Id print to be on the safe side, you can hardly get anything without paying for it. At the moment you can see the 1911 census for free. Only familysearch is still free, and I think parts of that have to be paid for now.
Question Author
Okay ...thanks!
no any research you have saved to your tree will remain, you can still look at all the saved data and your tree in full. There are some indexed records that are free to look at (but not the primary source) and you won;t be able to contact other ancestry members without a subscription, but trust me, if you've done so well on that side you will want to do more, do what i do, I pay £10.95 a month for the monthly subscription, I use my debit card and it is quick and easy, you can also cancel a few days before the monthly reneqal if you don;t want to carry on.
Question Author
I might just do that....... It is very addictive!
To be honest the monthly sub is not excessive, you may wish to consider paying for the facility in any case. In my case I'm foolishly retaining membership even though I'm not doing so much these days.
Or go to your library and access it all for free!

1 to 8 of 8rss feed

Do you know the answer?

Ancestry.co.uk

Answer Question >>