Submitted by PPHurt22 t3_y2mq78 in askscience
I’ve lived in a border town for my whole life and it seems as though every one is somewhat related to one another in some way. It worries me that there may be issues when distant cousins have kids with each other but how far apart would they need to be to not cause problems in the gene pool?
urzu_seven t1_is8on7x wrote
Assuming no history of inbreeding and little/no chance your future kids will inbreed, 1st cousin is generally safe as a one off. It raises the genetic risks a bit but not enough to be a red flag. Obviously there are present day social mores to be concerned about.
The further you go from that the better, about 5 steps is probably sufficient though (closest shared ancestor is your great-great-great-great grandparent).
But really the problem with inbreeding is repeated incidents, as you are narrowing the gene pool significantly. This is a concern in more insular communities (like the Amish) where you don't get a lot of people from outside adding to the gene pool.