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⏳ EPIGENETIC METHOD · 2020 RESEARCH

Dog Age Calculator

Forget "1 dog year = 7 human years." Our calculator uses the 2020 UCSD epigenetic clock formula adjusted for breed size, giving you a far more accurate human-equivalent age.

1.6M+ages calculated
4.8★user rating
2020UCSD research-backed

Tell Us About Your Dog

Two quick inputs deliver a research-grade human-equivalent age.

For puppies under 1, use decimals (e.g. 0.5 = 6 months).
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Your Results Will Appear Here

Enter age and breed size, then tap Calculate. We'll reveal the true human-equivalent age plus current life stage.

0
human years
Old "7 years" rule says — yrs
Life stage
Expected lifespan range — yrs
Years lived (%) —%

ℹ Based on the 2020 epigenetic clock formula by Wang et al., adjusted for breed size.

Why The "7 Year Rule" Is Wrong

Three reasons modern science replaced the old multiplier.

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DNA Methylation

The 2020 UCSD study scanned methylation patterns on the DNA of dogs and humans. The biological aging curve is logarithmic, not linear — fast early, slow later.

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Non-Linear Curve

A 1-year-old dog matches a 31-year-old human. By 4 years, your dog matches a 53-year-old. By age 12, around 70 human years — far from the 84 the old rule predicts.

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Breed Size Matters

Giant breeds age noticeably faster than tiny ones. A 7-year-old Great Dane is closer to 65 in human years; a 7-year-old Chihuahua is closer to 47.

The Formula We Use

Human age = 16 × ln(dog age) + 31

Then adjusted by breed size: small ×0.95 · medium ×1.00 · large ×1.10 · giant ×1.20

Source: Wang et al. 2020, Cell Systems — "Quantitative Translation of Dog-to-Human Aging by Conserved Remodeling of the DNA Methylome." Adjustments for breed size are based on lifespan data published in Veterinary Record.

Frequently Asked Questions

No, it is a myth. Dogs age very fast in the first two years, then slow down dramatically. A 1-year-old dog is roughly equivalent to a 31-year-old human, not 7.
UCSD researchers compared DNA methylation patterns in dogs and humans and derived the formula human age = 16 × ln(dog age) + 31, which is far more accurate than the old linear rule.
Yes. Small breeds often reach 14–16 years; giant breeds may only see 7–10 years. We apply a breed-size correction so the human-age estimate reflects this difference.
Small breeds become senior around 10–11 years, medium breeds 8–9, large breeds 7–8, and giant breeds 6–7. At this point, twice-yearly veterinary checkups are recommended.