Piperic
similar sites
‹ ProfileAI ReportTools

Sites similar to lahayes.com

Home of the Lahaye family of Maine · ranked by shared content topics & relevance
71match
norrie.com
norrie.com - home of the norrie family
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
70match
max-lino.com
Home - The Max-Lino family
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
70match
dixhome.com
DixHome Family Tree
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
70match
bellfamilytree.net
The Bell Family Tree - Main Index
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
adamscousins.org
Adams Family Pages
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
kuhnfamily.com
kuhn family home page
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
cobbfamilytree.com
Cobb Family Tree
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
pimblott.com
Pimblott Family Tree
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
polifkafamily.com
Home Page: Our Family History
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
adkinsfamily.org
The Adkins Family Organization
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
69match
thelanyonstree.com
The Lanyons – 800 years of family history
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
mcclurefamilytree.com
Home - Mcclure Family Tree
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
thepepins.com
The Pepin Family
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
pixelvista.com
Our Family Genealogy Pages
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
5thcrow.com
This is home. | Exploring Family History and Connections to the Land
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
thelodertree.com
Loder Family Tree
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
familyandplace.com
Home - Family and Place
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry
68match
groufsky.com
Groufsky Family Web Site
1 shared topicsgenealogy-and-ancestry

How the match score works

Each match is a 0–100 similarity score — the higher it is, the more two sites resemble one another. It’s computed automatically from our own crawl data (never from what a site says about itself) by combining several independent signals, so a high score means several of them point the same way:

No single signal decides the result — they’re blended together. Treat the score as a way to rank candidates rather than an absolute percentage; the chips on each result show which signals contributed.