Abstract Primordial germ cells (PGCs) are the precursors of germline that are specified at embryonic stage. Recent studies reveal that humans employ different mechanisms for PGC specification compared with model organisms such as mice. Moreover, the specific regulatory machinery is still largely unexplored, mainly due to the inaccessible nature of this complex biological process. Here, we collect and integrate multi-omics data, including 581 RNA-seq, 54 ATAC-seq, 45 ChIP-seq, and 69 single-cell RNA-seq samples from different stages of human PGC development to recapitulate the precisely controlled and stepwise process, presenting an atlas in the human PGC database (hPGCdb). With these uniformly processed data and integrated analyses, we characterize the potential key transcription factors and regulatory networks governing human germ cell fate. We validate the important roles of some of the key factors in germ cell development by CRISPRi knockdown. We also identify the soma-germline interaction network and discover the involvement of SDC2 and LAMA4 for PGC development, as well as soma-derived NOTCH2 signaling for germ cell differentiation. Taken together, we have built a database for human PGCs and demonstrate that hPGCdb enables the identification of the missing pieces of mechanisms governing germline development, including both intrinsic and extrinsic regulatory programs.