Horses with an NFQHA Certified sire & dam, and that carry a minimum of 80 percent Foundation Quarter Horse blood, and meet all other NFQHA requirements, are eligible for National Foundation Quarter Horse Certification.

Beginning 02/01/2017 all other horses (without NFQHA sire & dam) must carry 85 percent Quarter Horse Blood in order to qualify as a Foundation Quarter Horse.  (This is due to the Thoroughbred that drops off in the 11th generation – and the fact that since 1940 there have been almost 20 generations added, with another generation added every 4 years.)

This change also furthers the NFQHA stated goal of “Breeding the Quarter Horse Back into the Quarter Horse”.

We do the research for you! NFQHA research is conducted by computer with custom software.

NFQHA researches back 11 generations, or to the parents of the first registered horse on each line, and provides you with a computer-generated list of every registered TB found.

When your horse is Certified with NFQHA he has a genuine, and verified, claim to the coveted National Foundation Quarter Horse title, with written proof of his actual National Foundation Quarter Horse blood percentage.

See examples of NFQHA Foundation Certificate and Blood Analysis Fact Sheet.

CLICK HERE FOR THE REGISTRY RULES

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Pedigree Research

All NFQHA Foundation Quarter Horse research is conducted by computer to avoid errors, and based on the latest pedigree information available from AQHA. Our current database has 350,000 horses with more added each week.

All qualifying horses, are Certified as National Foundation Quarter Horses; and are issued a  Foundation Certificate and Blood Analysis Fact Sheet
showing all Thoroughbreds found in the pedigree.

Visit our links to information regarding our research methods and philosophies.

Calculating the Percentage of Quarter Horse Blood

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The following is a brief explanation of how NFQHA figures the percentage of Quarter Horse blood.

Our calculations are based on the amount of Thoroughbred blood in a pedigree. The reasoning behind this approach is that TB is the only outside blood that has been allowed to be added to AQHA registered Quarter Horses. Of course, when AQHA was originally founded by Robert Denhardt to preserve the Bulldog Type Quarter Horse, the blood in the founding stock was a mixture of Barb, Thoroughbred, Mustang, Arab, draft horse, and a myriad of other blood. However, the registry was closed to all of these breeds except the Thoroughbred.

NFQHA’s philosophy is that if the only added blood is taken out, what remains is the original foundation stock. NFQHA also believes that generally the more TB in a horse’s pedigree, the more TB attributes that horse will likely exhibit, and the more Quarter Horse attributes will be lost.

A horse must possess 80% Quarter Horse blood. It does not matter what generation the TB ancestors appear in as long as the combined total of TB blood does not exceed the allowable amount. In order to figure the TB percentage, the amount contributed by the first TB ancestor encountered on each line is added together to come up with the total Thoroughbred blood.

Each generation contributes one half as much to the pedigree as the prior one. A parent contributes 50%, a grandparent contributes 25%, a great grandparent contributes 12.5%, etc. A horse having one TB great grandparent (12.5%), one TB great great great grandparent (3.125%), and one TB great great great great grandparent (1.56%), carries 17.185% TB blood.  (12.5% + 3.125% + 1.56% = 17.185% TB Blood)

The horse in this example carries 82.815% Quarter Horse blood (which is rounded up to 83%) and is eligible for NFQHA registration.

To establish the TB in a pedigree, NFQHA researches the pedigree back ten generations, or to the parents of the first registered horse, whichever comes first on each line. Each time a TB is encountered, it is added to the total. The only two exceptions to this rule are Joe Reed #3, and Oklahoma Star #6. They were honored with #3 and #6, by AQHA because of their important contribution to the breed as Founding Sires. Because of this, NFQHA does not look at the TB in their parents, and they are considered 100% Quarter Horse blood.

This is a huge research project, possible only with sophisticated computers and software, but it was the only fair, comprehensive, black and white method that the NFQHA Board of Advisors could arrive at. We did not want a horse that had Thoroughbreds close up in its pedigree to be considered pure Foundation just because the offspring of those Thoroughbreds might have low AQHA numbers.

We hope that this explanation will help in understanding how our research is done. When your horse has been researched, a fact sheet showing all the contributing TB blood, and the position in the pedigree where it was found, will be forwarded to you with your certificate.

Copyright ©1998-2017 National Foundation Quarter Horse Association.

All rights reserved.

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Get the most accurate Foundation Quarter Horse Percentage. 

Only NFQHA researches back 11 generations!

All of our research is done by computer and based on AQHA downloaded records.