📊 Did You Know?
As of 2026, the average life expectancy in the US is 77.5 years (CDC, 2026). The US median age is 38.9 years (US Census Bureau, 2026).
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your birth date (or a start date) and a target date.
- Review the calendar breakdown (years/months/days) and total days.
- For eligibility, use the exact cutoff date and avoid rounding.
The Formula Explained
Days = |End Date − Start Date| / (1000 * 60 * 60 * 24)Under the hood, calculators convert dates to timestamps, compute the difference, and then format it. Leap years and month lengths are accounted for automatically when you use real dates rather than approximations.
Tips & What Your Results Mean
If you’re planning for a milestone (retirement eligibility, a benefit start date, enrollment cutoffs), run the calculation using the official effective date. Being “close enough” can still be wrong by a day.
For informal planning, a years-and-months breakdown is intuitive. For contracts and deadlines, total days or business days (see the Days Between Dates calculator) is often the safest representation.
Leap years add a day every four years (with century exceptions). That’s why an “age in days” number is usually slightly higher than years × 365.
If you were born on Feb 29, you still age normally. The “birthday” celebration date is a convention, but the time lived is exact.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is US life expectancy in 2026?
A common reference point is about 77.5 years for US life expectancy. (CDC, 2026)
What is the US median age?
A commonly cited US median age is 38.9 years. (US Census Bureau, 2026)
How is exact age calculated?
Exact age is the difference between your birth date and a target date, accounting for leap years and month length. The calculator returns both a calendar-style breakdown and exact day counts.
Can I calculate my age on a future date?
Yes—set the target date in the future to compute your age at that time. This is useful for eligibility rules, retirement planning, and milestone dates.
Why do manual age calculations go wrong?
People often assume every year is 365 days and every month is 30 days. Leap years and varying month lengths create errors unless you use exact date math.