🐾 Dog Age Science

Advanced Dog Age Calculator

Uses breed-size-specific aging tables from the AAHA Senior Care Guidelines (2019) and the epigenetic DNA methylation model (Wang et al., 2020, Cell Systems) — not the outdated ×7 rule.




📐 Methodology & Formulas

Why ×7 is Wrong

The popular “multiply by 7” rule has no scientific basis. It emerged as a simplification in the 1950s and ignores that dogs age rapidly in early years and that large breeds age faster than small breeds.

Method 1 — AAHA Breed-Size Tables (Primary Result)

The American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) Senior Care Guidelines (2019) provide empirically derived human-age equivalents based on veterinary mortality and disease-onset data across thousands of dogs, stratified by body weight class.

Dog Age (yr) Small <10 kg Medium 10–25 kg Large 25–45 kg Giant >45 kg
1 15 15 15 12
2 24 24 24 22
3 28 28 28 31
4 32 32 32 38
5 36 36 36 45
6 40 42 45 49
7 44 47 50 56
8 48 51 55 64
9 52 56 61 71
10 56 60 66 79
11 60 65 72 86
12 64 69 77 93
13 68 74 82 100
14 72 78 88 107
15 76 83 93 114

Method 2 — Epigenetic DNA Methylation Model (Wang et al., 2020)

A landmark 2020 study from UC San Diego used whole-genome bisulfite sequencing across 104 Labrador Retrievers, mapping conserved methylation changes against a human cohort. The derived continuous formula:

Human Age = 16 × ln(Dog Age in years) + 31

Where ln = natural logarithm.
Validated on Labrador Retrievers (~23 kg). Results for giant or toy breeds
should be interpreted alongside breed-size table values.

Example: Dog age = 4 yr
Human equivalent = 16 × ln(4) + 31 = 16 × 1.386 + 31 ≈ 53.2 years

📚 References

  1. Wang, T., Ma, J., Hogan, A.N., et al. (2020). Quantitative translation of dog-to-human aging by conserved remodeling of epigenetic networks. Cell Systems, 11(2), 176–185.e6. doi:10.1016/j.cels.2020.06.006
  2. American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA). (2019). AAHA Senior Care Guidelines for Dogs and Cats. Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association, 55(5), 267–290.
  3. Fleming, J.M., Creevy, K.E., & Promislow, D.E.L. (2011). Mortality in North American dogs from 1984 to 2004. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 25(2), 187–198.
  4. Vogt, A.H., et al. (2010). AAHA Senior Care Guidelines. Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association, 46(1), 70–85.

⚠ Educational purposes only. Consult a licensed veterinarian for health assessments.