Dog Age Calculator
Convert your dog's age to human years using breed-specific aging curves. Small dogs age slower than large breeds — get an accurate conversion, not the outdated 7:1 rule.
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Dog age calculator
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This calculator provides estimates based on established veterinary formulas. Every dog is different — use results as a starting point and consult your veterinarian for personalized advice.
How to use
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Select your dog's size
Choose your dog's size category: small (under 20 lbs), medium (20–50 lbs), large (50–90 lbs), or giant (over 90 lbs). You can also select a specific breed to auto-detect size.
- 2
Enter your dog's age
Enter your dog's age in years and months. For puppies, every month matters — a 6-month-old puppy is already the equivalent of a young child.
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View the conversion
The calculator shows your dog's approximate age in human years, based on breed-specific aging curves. It also shows the life stage (puppy, adult, senior) and what that means for care.
- 4
Compare across sizes
See how the same dog age translates differently across size categories. A 7-year-old small dog is younger in human years than a 7-year-old large dog.
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Plan accordingly
Use the result to adjust your dog's care — diet, exercise, and vet visit frequency all change as dogs enter different life stages.
Dog Age Calculator FAQ
- No. The 7:1 rule is a rough average that ignores breed size, which is the biggest factor in canine aging. Small breeds like Chihuahuas can live 15–20 years and age slowly after maturity, while giant breeds like Great Danes rarely exceed 8–10 years and age much faster. A 5-year-old Chihuahua is roughly 36 in human years, while a 5-year-old Great Dane is closer to 45. This calculator uses breed-specific aging curves based on veterinary research to give a more accurate conversion.
- Yes, significantly. Small breeds (under 20 lbs) typically live 12–16 years, medium breeds 10–14 years, large breeds 8–12 years, and giant breeds 6–10 years. The exact reason isn't fully understood, but larger dogs grow faster, age faster, and are more prone to age-related diseases like cancer at younger ages. This is the opposite of most mammals — elephants outlive mice — which makes dogs a unique case in biology.
- It depends on size. Small dogs (under 20 lbs) are generally considered senior around 10–12 years. Medium dogs (20–50 lbs) become seniors at 8–10 years. Large dogs (50–90 lbs) at 7–8 years. Giant breeds (over 90 lbs) may be considered senior as early as 5–6 years. Senior status matters for diet (fewer calories, joint supplements), exercise (shorter, gentler sessions), and vet visits (twice-yearly checkups instead of annual).
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