Understanding DNA Inheritance: Uncle and Nephew
Updated on July 1, 2025
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Understanding DNA Inheritance: Uncle and Nephew

Uncles and nephews typically share around 25% of their DNA. This reflects the fact that uncles and aunts share roughly 50% of their DNA with their siblings (your parent), and you inherit about half of your DNA from each parent.

However, your test result might say something different. Learn more about how this happens and how inheritance works.

How DNA Moves Through Families

DNA mixes for each generation before being passed on through a process called recombination. This shuffles your DNA around, meaning relatives rarely inherit the same segments of DNA.

During meiosis, each parent passes down half of their DNA to their child, creating a 50% genetic match. Since your uncle shares about half of his DNA with your parent, your genetic overlap with him typically averages around 25%. 

While the average is around 25%, most uncles and nephews share about 1.7 % to 34 % of their DNA. This overlap explains why relying on percentages alone can be misleading when figuring out exact family relationships.

Percentages vs. Centimorgans

Testing services usually show DNA results in both percentages and centimorgans (cM). While percentages give a simple overview, cM numbers tell a more precise story.

Companies report both numbers because cM totals and DNA segment patterns offer clues that percentages alone can’t. Here's how two matches might look identical percentage-wise but differ strongly in centimorgan patterns:

Match PercentageCentimorgan Total (cM)Likely Relationship
31%2,100 cMLikely uncle–nephew
20%1,400 cMCould be a grandparent or half-sibling

When Percentages Fall Outside the Norm

Sometimes, the percentage of shared DNA falls significantly outside the expected range, which could raise questions about the true nature of a relationship.

When this happens, the uncle getting his DNA tested may have to compare results with his sibling (the child's parent) instead. This will prove that they share a significant amount of DNA with their sibling, proving uncle status.

While the average DNA shared between uncles and nephews is about 25%, the randomness of genetic inheritance means the actual percentage will vary. This highlights the uniqueness of each individual's genetic makeup.

Updated on July 1, 2025
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Updated on July 1, 2025
Angela Natividad
Angela Natividad
Content Contributor
Angela is a full-time digital content manager and editor for Know Your DNA. She also contributes freelance articles to several local and international websites when she has the time. She's always been a voracious believer in finding the truth and ensuring the science is sound.