Is IQ Genetic? What the Research Actually Says
Last updated: June 1, 2025
Last updated: June 1, 2025
Is IQ genetic?
Partly yes โ genetic factors account for roughly 50โ80% of the variation in adult IQ scores, based on twin and adoption studies. But "heritability" does not mean "fixed." It means that, in a particular population and environment, genes explain a certain proportion of the differences between individuals. Environmental factors โ nutrition, education, childhood stimulation, stress, and health โ account for the rest and can dramatically shift outcomes.
What twin studies tell us about IQ heritability
Twin studies compare identical twins (who share ~100% of DNA) with fraternal twins (who share ~50% of DNA) to estimate genetic contributions. Key findings:
| Study Type | IQ Correlation | Interpretation |
|---|---|---|
| Identical twins raised together | ~0.86 | Very high genetic contribution |
| Identical twins raised apart | ~0.72โ0.78 | Genes matter even without shared environment |
| Fraternal twins raised together | ~0.55โ0.60 | Both genes and shared environment |
| Adopted siblings (unrelated) | ~0.00โ0.04 | Little shared-environment effect in adults |
These figures come from several large studies including work by Bouchard et al. (1990) on the famous Minnesota Study of Twins Reared Apart.
Does heritability mean IQ is fixed?
No. Heritability describes what is happening in a population now, not what is possible. A classic illustration: height is highly heritable (~80%), but average heights have increased dramatically across generations due to better nutrition. The same logic applies to IQ. The Flynn Effect โ a documented rise of roughly 3 IQ points per decade throughout the 20th century โ shows that environmental changes can produce large population-level IQ shifts, even as heritability within a population stays high.
What environmental factors affect IQ?
Several non-genetic factors have large, documented effects on measured IQ:
| Factor | Documented Effect |
|---|---|
| Severe iodine deficiency | โ10 to โ15 IQ points |
| Lead exposure in childhood | โ5 to โ10 IQ points |
| Malnutrition in early childhood | โ5 to โ10 IQ points |
| Breastfeeding | +3 to +5 points (modest) |
| Quality early education | +5 to +10 points |
| Reading to children | Positive verbal development |
The largest environmental effects are negative and relate to deprivation and toxin exposure. Positive environmental interventions have smaller โ but real โ effects.
How many genes are involved in intelligence?
Thousands of genes each contribute tiny effects. No single "intelligence gene" exists. The largest genome-wide association studies (GWAS) of intelligence have identified thousands of genetic variants, each explaining a tiny fraction of variance. The combined effect of measured common genetic variants accounts for perhaps 20โ30% of IQ variance โ far less than the heritability estimates from twin studies, suggesting many genetic effects are still unmeasured.
What does this mean for individuals?
For any given person, knowing the population heritability of IQ tells you very little about your own ceiling. Children from disadvantaged backgrounds who are adopted into enriched environments show substantial IQ gains. Education, cognitive stimulation, and eliminating deprivation can meaningfully improve measured intelligence โ especially in children.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can you inherit a high IQ from your parents?
You can inherit genetic variants that, on average, predispose toward higher cognitive ability. But parental IQ is an imperfect predictor of a child's IQ, both because inheritance is probabilistic and because environment shapes outcomes substantially.
Does race affect IQ?
Observed group differences in average IQ scores exist, but these are widely explained by socioeconomic, educational, and historical factors rather than genetic differences between racial groups. There is no scientific consensus supporting a genetic basis for group IQ differences. Racial groups are also not meaningfully genetically discrete categories.
Is IQ determined at birth?
No. Genetics sets a range of possible outcomes, not a fixed score. The environment you grow up in determines where within that range your IQ lands.
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