Dog Age Calculator
Convert your dog's age to human years by size
The old “multiply by 7” rule is a myth. This calculator uses modern veterinary science to convert your dog’s age to human years, adjusting for size — because small dogs age differently than large breeds.
Most common answer: A 5-year-old medium-sized dog is roughly equivalent to a 39-year-old human. Large and giant breeds age faster after maturity, while small breeds tend to live longer.
Dog Age in Human Years Calculator
How to Use This Calculator
Enter your dog’s age and select their size category. The calculator shows the equivalent human age, life stage, and a comparison across all size categories.
Why the “Multiply by 7” Rule Is Wrong
Dogs mature much faster in their first two years. A 1-year-old dog is sexually mature and roughly equivalent to a 15-year-old human. After age 2, aging slows to approximately 4–5 human years per dog year, with significant variation by size.
The Modern Formula
- Year 1: 15 human years
- Year 2: 9 human years
- Year 3+: ~5 human years, adjusted by size factor
Average Lifespan by Size
| Size | Weight | Avg Lifespan | Examples |
|---|---|---|---|
| Small | Under 20 lbs | 12–16 years | Chihuahua, Yorkie |
| Medium | 20–50 lbs | 10–14 years | Beagle, Bulldog |
| Large | 50–90 lbs | 8–12 years | Lab, Golden Retriever |
| Giant | 90+ lbs | 6–10 years | Great Dane, Mastiff |
Sources
- Wang, T. et al. (2020). Dog-to-human aging. Cell Systems, 11(2), 176–185.
- American Kennel Club — Dog Age Calculator
- American Veterinary Medical Association
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الأسئلة الشائعة
It depends on your dog age and size. A 1-year-old dog is roughly 15 in human years. A 2-year-old dog is about 24 in human years. After age 2, add about 5 human years per dog year, adjusted by size: small dogs age slower (4.25 years per dog year), large dogs age faster (5.75 years per dog year), and giant breeds age fastest (6.75 years per dog year).
The "multiply by 7" rule does not account for the fact that dogs mature much faster in their first two years and then age more slowly after that. A 1-year-old dog is sexually mature, equivalent to a 15-year-old human, not a 7-year-old. The rule also ignores that large dogs age significantly faster than small dogs after maturity.
Yes, this is well-documented. Small breeds (under 20 lbs) average 12-16 years, while giant breeds (over 90 lbs) average 6-10 years. Researchers believe this is because larger dogs grow faster, leading to earlier onset of age-related diseases. Their organs and joints experience more stress relative to body size. The longest-lived breeds include Chihuahuas, Dachshunds, and Toy Poodles.
It varies by size. Small dogs (under 20 lbs): around 10-12 years. Medium dogs (20-50 lbs): around 8-10 years. Large dogs (50-90 lbs): around 7-8 years. Giant breeds (90+ lbs): around 5-6 years. Senior dogs benefit from biannual vet visits, adjusted diet, joint supplements, softer bedding, and modified exercise routines.
The verified oldest dog was Bobi, a Rafeiro do Alentejo from Portugal, who lived to 31 years and 165 days (2023 Guinness record). Previously, Bluey, an Australian Cattle Dog, held the record at 29 years 5 months (1939). Most dogs over 20 years old are small to medium breeds. Genetics, diet, veterinary care, and environment all affect longevity.
Key factors for dog longevity: maintain a healthy weight (overweight dogs live 1.8 years less on average), provide regular exercise appropriate for age and breed, feed a balanced diet, keep up with dental care (dental disease affects organ health), schedule annual vet checkups (biannual for seniors), keep vaccinations current, and provide mental stimulation.
Common signs include: graying around the muzzle, reduced activity and energy, stiffness or difficulty with stairs and jumping, cloudy eyes (nuclear sclerosis), hearing loss, increased sleep, weight changes, and behavioral changes like confusion or anxiety. Many age-related conditions are treatable, so report changes to your veterinarian.
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