A family tree maker built for Nepali families
Most genealogy tools are built around Western names and record systems. MyPusta is different — it is designed for the way Nepali families actually trace their lineage, generation by generation (पुस्ता by पुस्ता), across hill villages, the Terai, Kathmandu and a diaspora spread from Sydney to New York.
You can add Devanagari and romanized names side by side, record ancestral villages and gotra, and grow a tree that everyone in the family can read and recognise.
How to start your Nepali family tree
Getting started takes about two minutes — no app download, no cost.
- Create a free account and add yourself as the first member.
- Add your parents, grandparents and great-grandparents, one generation at a time.
- Invite relatives by link so they can fill in the names, dates and villages only they remember.
- Attach old photographs so faces stay tied to names forever.
Why families across the diaspora choose MyPusta
When elders pass, decades of memory can disappear with them. MyPusta turns that fragile knowledge into a living archive your grandchildren can open in any browser.
Your tree is private by default. You decide exactly who can view or contribute, so the work stays within your family unless you choose to share it.
Frequently asked questions
Is the Nepali family tree maker free?
Yes. MyPusta is completely free during our beta — every Nepali family can build and preserve their पुस्ता at no cost.
Can relatives in Nepal use it too?
Absolutely. MyPusta runs in any web browser on any device. Just share an invite link and relatives anywhere can add the names and stories they remember.
Can I write names in Nepali (Devanagari)?
Yes — you can record names in Devanagari and in romanized form, along with ancestral villages, so the tree reads naturally for every member of the family.
How many generations can I add?
There is no limit. Many families map 8–10+ generations of their पुस्ता, with as many branches as they need.