Picking a breed sets the size automatically. For mixed breeds, just choose a size below.
Not sure of the exact date? An approximate month works — results update instantly.
Choose a size and enter a birthday —
your dog's human-equivalent age appears here instantly.
Human Equivalent Age
Uses the size-adjusted AVMA formula with different aging rates for small, medium, large and giant dogs — not the crude "multiply by 7" rule.
Pick a breed or size, enter the birthday, and instantly see the human-equivalent age, a life stage timeline and stage-specific care tips.
Completely free, no sign-up required. Everything is calculated locally in your browser — nothing about your dog is ever uploaded.
The old "one dog year equals seven human years" rule is a myth. Dogs mature extremely fast early in life: by the end of their first year, a dog is roughly equivalent to a 15-year-old human, and by age two they are about 24 in human years. Only after that does aging settle into a steadier pace — and that pace depends heavily on body size. This calculator uses the widely cited size-adjusted guideline from the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA): after age two, each additional year adds about 4 human years for small dogs, 5 for medium dogs, 6 for large dogs, and 7 for giant breeds.
Size matters because dogs show an unusual pattern among mammals: bigger dogs age faster and live shorter lives, the opposite of the general "larger species live longer" rule. Researchers link this to the rapid early growth of large breeds, higher metabolic load, and elevated IGF-1 growth factor levels. A Chihuahua often lives past 15, while a Great Dane typically reaches only 8 to 10 — so a 7-year-old toy breed is still in its prime, while a 7-year-old Great Dane is already a senior. In 2019, researchers at UC San Diego compared DNA methylation patterns (epigenetic clocks) in dogs and humans and confirmed that the dog-to-human age mapping is strongly non-linear, with far higher conversion rates in puppyhood than in adulthood — consistent with the piecewise AVMA approach used here.
The tool also follows the AAHA (American Animal Hospital Association) Canine Life Stage Guidelines, dividing a dog's life into five stages — puppy, adolescent, adult, senior and geriatric — each with its own vaccination, diet, check-up and joint-care priorities. All results are statistical estimates for reference only; always rely on your veterinarian for an individual health assessment.
Where the 7:1 myth came from, why the AVMA calls it inaccurate, and the better way to convert.
How UCSD researchers used DNA methylation to map dog aging onto human aging.
About one month of life lost per extra 4.4 lb — the science of size and aging speed.
From the 2023 AAHA guidelines: when seniorhood starts, exam frequency and home care.
Age conversion, breed lifespans, weight management, spay/neuter research and more.