Understanding age

Dog Years Calculator: How Old Is My Dog in Human Years?

5 min read · Last reviewed July 10, 2026

Everyone has heard "one dog year equals seven human years" — but veterinarians agree that rule is not accurate. Dogs age fastest early in life, and how quickly they age afterward depends heavily on their size. Here is a more reliable way to estimate the human-age equivalent of your dog's age, plus a size-based reference table.

Why "times 7" is a myth

The times-7 rule assumes dogs age at a constant rate over an average 10-year lifespan compared to an average 70-year human lifespan. In reality, a 1-year-old dog is already sexually mature and roughly comparable to a 15-year-old human — nowhere close to age 7. Aging then slows down, but the rate at which it slows depends heavily on the dog's adult size.

Because of this, veterinary and research groups (including the American Veterinary Medical Association) now describe dog aging as non-linear and size-dependent rather than a flat multiplier.

A more accurate estimate

A widely used approximation: the first year of a dog's life is roughly equal to 15 human years, the second year adds roughly 9 more (about 24 total by age 2), and each year after that adds a smaller amount that varies by size — larger dogs age faster per year than smaller ones from that point on.

  • Age 1: ~15 human years, across all sizes
  • Age 2: ~24 human years, across all sizes
  • Each year after 2 (small/medium dogs, under ~50 lbs): add roughly 4–5 human years
  • Each year after 2 (large/giant dogs, 50+ lbs): add roughly 6–8 human years

Human-age equivalent by size

This table applies the pattern above. Treat the numbers as a useful estimate for conversation and general planning, not a precise medical figure — your veterinarian is the best source for how your individual dog is aging.

  • Dog age 1 → about 15 human years (all sizes)
  • Dog age 2 → about 24 human years (all sizes)
  • Dog age 5 → about 33 years (small/medium) or about 40 years (large/giant)
  • Dog age 7 → about 44 years (small/medium) or about 54 years (large/giant) — the age this site treats as the start of "senior"
  • Dog age 10 → about 56 years (small/medium) or about 71 years (large/giant)
  • Dog age 12 → about 64 years (small/medium) or about 84 years (large/giant)
  • Dog age 15 → about 76 years (small/medium) or, for many giant breeds, well beyond typical lifespan

Why size matters so much

Small and medium dogs tend to live longer and age more slowly year-to-year once past puppyhood, while large and giant breeds mature faster and enter their senior years much sooner — sometimes as early as 5 or 6. This is the same size-driven pattern that determines when a dog is considered a "senior" in the first place. For a closer look at that cutoff, see How Old Is a "Senior" Dog?

What this number is useful for

A human-age estimate is mostly a helpful, intuitive way to talk about your dog's life stage — it is not a diagnostic tool. What matters more day to day is how your individual dog is actually doing: their mobility, appetite, weight, and any changes your vet flags at checkups. Two dogs with the same "human age" can have very different care needs.

Sources

This guide provides general educational information and is not individualized veterinary or behavioral advice. Always confirm health and care decisions with your own veterinarian, behavior or training concerns with a qualified, reward-based trainer or board-certified veterinary behaviorist, and adoption details directly with the shelter or rescue.

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