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Calculate your exact age down to the very second

Enter your date of birth to instantly see your age in years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes and live-ticking seconds — plus your next birthday countdown, zodiac sign, age on other planets and key life milestones.

Private by design Accurate to the second Instant results
Age Calculator

Enter your date of birth

Provide your birth date below. You can also change the target date to find your age at any moment in the past or future. Everything is calculated instantly in your browser.

Your details

Choose the day you were born. We never store or send this date anywhere.

Add your birth time for second-perfect precision. Defaults to 00:00 if left blank.

Leave blank to calculate your age right now (with live seconds). Set a date to measure age at that point.

Your results will appear here

Enter your date of birth and select Calculate age to see your exact age, a live seconds counter, your next birthday countdown and much more.

Updating live every second
0
Seconds lived

Your age

0
Years
0
Months
0
Days

Total time lived

0
Total months
0
Total weeks
0
Total days
0
Total hours
0
Total minutes
0
Total seconds

Next birthday

Countdown
Days remaining
Falls on a
Turning age

Zodiac & birth facts

Western zodiac
Chinese zodiac
Birth weekday
Born in leap year
Leap days lived

Your age on other planets

Mercury
Venus
Mars
Jupiter
Saturn

Milestones & retirement

10,000 days lived
1 billion seconds
Next milestone
Retirement (age 65)
Years to retirement

Simple & instant

How the age calculator works

Three quick steps. No accounts, no waiting, no data leaving your device — your result is computed locally in your browser.

1

Enter your birth date

Pick the day (and optionally the exact time) you were born. The date picker works with keyboard, touch and screen readers.

2

Choose a target date

Leave it blank to measure your age right now, or set any past or future date to find the precise duration in between.

3

Read your live results

See your exact age plus totals, a live seconds counter, next-birthday countdown, zodiac, planetary age and milestones.

Everything in one place

A complete age toolkit

We benchmarked the most popular age calculators and combined their best ideas into one fast, private and beautifully designed tool — then added features they don't offer.

Second-perfect accuracy

Calendar-correct math that respects every leap year and the real length of each month, accurate down to the second.

Live age counter

Watch your seconds, minutes and hours tick upward in real time — a genuinely live view of your age progressing.

Birthday countdown

Know exactly how many days remain until your next birthday, the weekday it lands on and the age you'll turn.

Zodiac & Chinese zodiac

Instantly discover your Western star sign and your Chinese zodiac animal based on your birth date.

Age on other planets

See how old you'd be on Mercury, Venus, Mars, Jupiter and Saturn — a fun, science-based perspective on time.

100% private

All math runs in your browser. Your date of birth is never uploaded, logged or shared — privacy by design.

Why choose us

Built to be the most trustworthy age calculator online

Most age tools stop at “years and days.” We focused on accuracy, transparency, speed and a genuinely helpful experience so you can rely on the result for forms, planning and curiosity alike.

⚡ Lightning fast

Lightweight code and deferred scripts keep loading instant, even on slower mobile connections.

♿ Accessible

Semantic HTML, ARIA labels, full keyboard support and high-contrast colours for everyone.

📱 Mobile-first

A responsive layout that feels native on phones, tablets and desktops alike.

🧠 Genuinely useful

Clear explanations and extra insights you won't find on most competing calculators.

The complete guide

Understanding age calculation

A clear, expert-written guide to how age is measured, why precision matters and how to read every number this tool produces.

What is age calculation?

Age calculation is the process of measuring how much time has passed between a starting point — usually a person's date of birth — and a reference point, which is most often the present moment. On the surface it sounds trivial: subtract one date from another and report the difference. In practice, calculating age correctly is one of the most deceptively complex everyday computations, because the calendar we use is irregular. Months have different lengths, years occasionally gain an extra day, and the way humans intuitively count age does not always match the way a computer subtracts two timestamps.

When most people say “I am 34 years old,” they mean that 34 complete years have elapsed since the day they were born, and they are currently somewhere inside their 35th year of life. This is the calendar method of counting age, and it is the convention used almost universally for legal, medical, educational and social purposes. It is also the method this calculator uses for its primary result. Yet there are other valid ways to express the same span of time — in total days, total hours, or even in fractional years — and each answers a slightly different question.

Understanding the distinction between these representations is the key to interpreting any age calculator. The number of years, months and days describes your position on the calendar relative to your birthday. The number of total days or total seconds describes the raw amount of time that has physically elapsed. Both are correct; they simply answer different questions. A robust age calculator presents both, clearly labelled, so you can choose the figure that fits your need — whether that is filling in an official form, planning a milestone celebration, or satisfying a moment of curiosity.

In short: age calculation converts the gap between two dates into human-friendly units. The challenge is doing it accurately across an irregular calendar — which is exactly what this tool is built to handle.

How age is calculated, step by step

Let's walk through precisely how the engine on this page determines your age. The goal is to make the logic transparent, because a calculator you understand is a calculator you can trust. The process can be broken into five clear stages.

Step 1 — Capture two precise dates

The calculation needs two anchors: your date of birth and a target date. The target defaults to the current moment, read directly from your device's clock, but you can set it to any past or future date. If you add a birth time, the engine anchors the start to that exact hour and minute; otherwise it assumes midnight at the start of your birth day. Working with full timestamps rather than bare dates is what allows the live seconds counter to be genuinely accurate.

Step 2 — Compare year, month and day separately

To produce the familiar “X years, Y months, Z days” result, the engine compares the two dates one component at a time, starting from the day. It subtracts the birth day from the target day, the birth month from the target month, and the birth year from the target year. Often these subtractions produce negative numbers — for example, if you were born on the 28th but today is the 3rd — and that is where borrowing comes in.

Step 3 — Borrow days and months where needed

This is the heart of correct age calculation. If the day difference is negative, the engine “borrows” a month: it adds the number of days in the previous calendar month to the day count and reduces the month count by one. Crucially, it uses the real length of that specific month — 28, 29, 30 or 31 days — rather than a fixed average. If the month difference is then negative, it borrows a year, adding twelve months and reducing the year count by one. This mirrors exactly how a person counts age on their fingers, which is why the result always matches intuition.

Step 4 — Compute absolute totals

Separately, the engine calculates the total elapsed time by converting both timestamps into a single number of milliseconds and subtracting them. That raw difference is then divided to produce total weeks, total days, total hours, total minutes and total seconds. Because this works on absolute time, every leap day and every variation in month length is automatically and correctly included — there is no approximation involved.

Step 5 — Keep it live

When the target is “now,” the engine sets a timer that recomputes the elapsed total once per second. That is why your seconds tick upward, your minutes roll over and your hours advance while the page is open. You are watching your age progress in real time, second by second.

Worked example: Suppose you were born on 15 March 1990 and today is 10 June 2026. Comparing days, 10 minus 15 is negative, so we borrow May's 31 days: the day count becomes 10 + 31 − 15 = 26, and the month count drops by one. Comparing months after the borrow gives a positive result, so no year borrow is needed. The final calendar age is 36 years, 2 months and 26 days — and the totals panel shows the same span expressed in days, hours and seconds.

Calendar age vs. absolute time: two valid answers

One of the most common sources of confusion when people use an age calculator is discovering that “36 years” and “13,236 days” do not divide neatly into one another. A quick mental check — 36 multiplied by 365 — gives 13,140, which is short of the displayed total. Nothing is broken; you are simply looking at two different but equally correct ways of measuring the same span of time.

The calendar method answers the question “How many birthdays have I passed, and how far am I into the current year?” It is anchored to the structure of the calendar. Each completed year counts as one regardless of whether it contained 365 or 366 days. This is why your age in years increments by exactly one every birthday, never drifting, and why it is the figure used on passports, licences and medical records.

The absolute method answers a physics question instead: “Exactly how much time has elapsed?” It counts every real day, including the extra day in each leap year, and expresses the result in a single unit such as days or seconds. Because roughly one in four years contains a 366th day, the absolute day count runs slightly ahead of a naive 365-per-year estimate — by about one day for every four years you have lived.

RepresentationQuestion it answersBest used for
Years, months, daysWhere am I on the calendar relative to my birthday?Official forms, legal age, everyday conversation
Total weeks / daysHow many whole days have I lived?Milestone planning, infant age, project timelines
Total hours / minutes / secondsExactly how much time has elapsed?Curiosity, science projects, the live counter
Decimal yearsWhat fraction of a year am I into my age?Statistics, growth charts, actuarial work

Presenting both representations side by side is a deliberate design choice. Many competing tools show only one, which forces users to do their own conversions or, worse, leaves them doubting the accuracy of a perfectly correct result. By labelling each number clearly and explaining what it means, this calculator removes ambiguity and builds confidence in the output.

Leap years, month lengths and other calendar quirks

The reason age calculation is harder than simple subtraction comes down to the irregular design of the Gregorian calendar, the system used across most of the world today. Three quirks matter most for accurate age measurement.

Why leap years exist

The Earth takes approximately 365.2422 days to orbit the Sun — not a whole number. If we used exactly 365 days every year, the calendar would drift out of step with the seasons by almost a full day every four years. To correct this, the calendar adds a 29th day to February in leap years. The rule is more subtle than “every four years”: a year is a leap year if it is divisible by 4, except for century years, which must also be divisible by 400. So 2000 was a leap year, but 1900 and 2100 are not. This calculator applies that full rule, so it remains correct across centuries.

How leap years affect your age

If you were born on 29 February — a “leapling” — your exact birthday only appears on the calendar once every four years. For age purposes, the convention in most jurisdictions is that you advance a year on 1 March in common years, and this tool follows the same sensible approach when computing your next birthday. More generally, every leap day that falls between your birth date and the target date adds one extra day to your absolute totals, which is why this calculator reports a separate “leap days lived” figure so you can see exactly how many of those bonus days you have accumulated.

Uneven months

Because months range from 28 to 31 days, the value of “one month” depends entirely on which month you are in. A tool that assumes an average of 30.44 days per month will produce small but real errors. By borrowing the actual length of the relevant calendar month during subtraction, this calculator avoids those errors completely and always agrees with the way a human would count.

Did you know? Over an 80-year lifetime you will typically live through about 19 or 20 leap days — nearly three extra weeks of life compared with a calendar that never corrected for the Earth's orbit.

Why accurate age calculation matters

Knowing your age precisely is far more than a curiosity. Across many areas of life, an exact age — sometimes to the day — determines eligibility, obligations and outcomes. A small error can mean a rejected application, an incorrect dosage or a missed deadline. Below are the fields where precision matters most, and why.

Education

School systems worldwide use age cut-off dates to decide when a child may start kindergarten or enter a particular grade. A difference of a single day around the cut-off can change the year a child is admitted. Standardised tests, scholarship schemes and youth sports leagues frequently define eligibility by age as of a specific reference date, so parents and administrators need an exact figure rather than a rounded estimate. Calculating a child's age as of the enrolment cut-off — something this tool makes easy with its target-date field — removes the guesswork.

Employment

Age governs the minimum working age, eligibility for certain roles, apprenticeship schemes and, at the other end of a career, pension and retirement entitlements. Human-resources teams calculating length of service, probation end dates or retirement timing rely on accurate date arithmetic. For individuals planning their finances, knowing precisely how many years remain until a retirement milestone — which this calculator estimates — supports better long-term decisions.

Government documents

Passports, national identity cards, driving licences and voter registration all hinge on verified age. Many legal thresholds — voting, driving, consuming alcohol, signing contracts — take effect on an exact birthday. Immigration and visa rules sometimes treat applicants differently based on whether they are above or below a precise age on the date of application. Because these decisions can carry significant consequences, an authoritative, transparent calculation is essential.

Insurance

Insurers price life, health and travel policies partly on age, and many use the concept of “age nearest birthday” or “age last birthday” to set premiums. Crossing into a new age band can change the cost of cover, so applicants benefit from knowing exactly where they stand before they buy. Actuaries, meanwhile, depend on precise age data — often expressed in decimal years — to model risk across large populations.

Healthcare

In medicine, age is a clinical variable. Paediatric drug dosages are frequently calculated from a child's age in months or even days, vaccination schedules are tied to precise age windows, and screening programmes begin at specific ages. For newborns and infants, clinicians routinely express age in total days or weeks rather than years, which is exactly why a good age calculator offers those totals. An accurate figure here is not a convenience — it can directly affect safety.

Practical tip: whenever a form asks for your age “as of” a particular date, use the target-date field rather than today's date. It is the single most common source of age-related form errors, and it takes seconds to get right.

Reading every number this calculator gives you

This tool deliberately reports more than a single headline figure, because different people need different views of the same information. Here is a guided tour of each result so you can interpret it with confidence.

Years, months and days

This is your calendar age — the number you would give in conversation or write on a form. It is computed with the borrowing method described earlier, so it always matches how a human counts. The “months” and “days” here are the remainder after whole years, not totals; for example, “2 months and 26 days” means you are two months and twenty-six days past your most recent birthday.

Total months, weeks and days

These are cumulative figures. Total days is especially useful for parents tracking an infant's growth, for counting down to a deadline, or for any situation where whole calendar units are more meaningful than fractional years. Total weeks is popular in pregnancy and early-childhood contexts, where development is often described week by week.

Total hours, minutes and seconds

These figures express the full elapsed span in fine-grained units. When your target date is the present moment, the seconds value updates live, climbing once per second. It is a striking way to appreciate just how much time a single lifetime contains — a person in their thirties has already lived through more than a billion seconds.

Next birthday countdown

The countdown shows how many days remain until your next birthday, the day of the week it will fall on, and the age you will become. We also display a progress bar showing how far through the current year of your life you are, turning an abstract date into a satisfying visual.

Birth weekday and leap-year facts

Many people never learn which day of the week they were born on. This tool tells you instantly, alongside whether your birth year was a leap year and how many leap days you have lived through since — small details that add a sense of personal connection to the raw numbers.

Zodiac signs, planetary age and life milestones

Beyond the core arithmetic, this calculator adds a layer of insight and delight that most competing tools omit. These extras are computed with the same rigour as the headline figures.

Western zodiac

Your Western, or tropical, zodiac sign is determined by the position of the Sun along the ecliptic on the day you were born. The twelve signs run on fixed date ranges — Aries from 21 March, Taurus from 20 April, and so on — and the calculator reads your birth date to assign the correct one, handling the year-spanning boundary of Capricorn correctly.

Chinese zodiac

The Chinese zodiac assigns one of twelve animals — Rat, Ox, Tiger, Rabbit, Dragon, Snake, Horse, Goat, Monkey, Rooster, Dog and Pig — to each year in a repeating cycle. The calculator derives your animal from your birth year. Note that the traditional Chinese New Year falls in late January or February, so people born in the first weeks of the Gregorian year may belong to the previous animal; the tool uses the standard year-based approximation that suits the vast majority of cases.

Your age on other planets

A “year” is simply the time a planet takes to orbit the Sun, and that varies enormously across the solar system. Mercury races around in just 88 Earth days, while Saturn takes over 29 Earth years. By dividing your total elapsed time by each planet's orbital period, the calculator reveals how old you would be elsewhere in the solar system — a memorable, science-grounded way to grasp the scale of planetary motion. On Mercury you might be several hundred “years” old; on Saturn you may not have completed your first orbit at all.

Life milestones

Round numbers are worth celebrating. The calculator flags landmark moments such as your ten-thousandth day of life and your one-billionth second, telling you whether you have already passed them and, if not, when they will arrive. It also estimates a typical retirement milestone and how many years remain until then, giving a gentle long-range perspective alongside the immediate result.

Why include the extras? Because a great tool should reward curiosity. These additions encourage exploration, make the page more shareable and help you see your age from fresh, engaging angles — without ever compromising the accuracy of the core calculation.

Tips, conventions and common mistakes

Even with a reliable tool, a few habits will help you get the right answer every time and understand what you are seeing.

  • Match the target date to the requirement. If a form, exam or policy specifies an “as of” date, set the target field to that date. Calculating against today's date is the most frequent cause of age errors.
  • Remember the difference between calendar age and total time. They will never divide evenly because of leap years and uneven months. Both are correct; pick the one that answers your question.
  • Add your birth time only if you need second-level precision. For everyday use, the date alone is enough; the time matters mainly for the live counter and for people who enjoy exact figures.
  • Be mindful of “age last birthday” versus “age nearest birthday.” Some insurers and institutions round age up to the nearest birthday rather than down. If in doubt, ask which convention applies before relying on a figure.
  • Time zones rarely matter, but can. For a birth and a target in very different time zones, a few hours' difference could shift a same-day boundary. For almost all purposes this is irrelevant, but it explains tiny discrepancies between tools.
  • Leaplings have a convention too. If you were born on 29 February, most systems treat 1 March as your effective birthday in non-leap years, which is how this calculator schedules your countdown.

Approached with these points in mind, an age calculator becomes a precise, dependable instrument rather than a rough estimate. The transparency of the method — borrowing real month lengths, counting every leap day, and clearly labelling each result — is what separates a trustworthy tool from one that merely looks the part.

About AgeCalculators.app

AgeCalculators.app was created with a single goal: to be the clearest, fastest and most trustworthy way to calculate age online. We studied the most widely used age calculators — the ones that rank at the top of search results and serve millions of visitors — and noted both what they did well and where they fell short. Many were accurate but visually dated; others looked modern but offered only a single figure with no explanation; few combined precision, helpful context, strong accessibility and a genuinely pleasant mobile experience in one place.

Our answer is this page. The calculation engine is built to professional standards, validating input, handling every calendar edge case and updating live without ever sending your personal data anywhere. The interface follows clean, Material-inspired design principles so it feels familiar and friendly on any device. The written guidance you are reading now exists because we believe a tool is only as trustworthy as it is transparent — you should be able to understand exactly how your result was produced.

We are committed to accuracy, privacy and accessibility. The calculator works entirely in your browser, which means it is fast, functions even on slow connections and keeps your date of birth completely private. It is designed to meet high standards for accessibility so that everyone, including people who rely on keyboards or screen readers, can use it comfortably. And it is, and always will be, free. If you have feedback or spot something we can improve, we would love to hear from you through the contact section below — your suggestions directly shape how this tool evolves.

Thank you for using AgeCalculators.app. Whether you came to fill in a form, plan a celebration, settle a friendly debate or simply marvel at how many seconds you have lived, we hope the experience was quick, clear and maybe even a little delightful.

A short history of measuring age

Humans have been counting age for as long as we have tracked time, but the way we do it has changed profoundly across history. Early agricultural societies measured age in seasons and harvests rather than precise years, because survival depended on the rhythm of planting and reaping rather than on calendars. A person might be described as having “seen forty winters” — a poetic but surprisingly accurate way of counting completed years before standardised dates existed.

The calendars that made precise age possible evolved over millennia. The ancient Egyptians used a 365-day solar calendar that slowly drifted because it ignored the extra quarter-day each year. The Romans inherited a messy lunar system that required priests to insert extra months by decree, leading to years of wildly different lengths. Julius Caesar's reform in 46 BCE introduced the Julian calendar with a leap day every four years, a huge improvement — but still slightly too generous, gaining about three days every four centuries.

By the sixteenth century that small error had accumulated into a ten-day gap between the calendar and the seasons. In 1582 Pope Gregory XIII introduced the Gregorian calendar, refining the leap-year rule by removing three leap days every four hundred years. This is the system the entire world now uses for civil purposes, and it is the foundation on which accurate age calculation rests. When this tool computes your age, it is applying the culmination of more than two thousand years of astronomical and mathematical refinement — a quiet reminder that even the simplest everyday number carries a remarkable history.

The idea of celebrating a precise birthday is itself relatively modern for ordinary people. For most of history, only royalty and the wealthy recorded exact birth dates. Widespread birth registration, which made it possible for anyone to know their age to the day, only became common in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries as governments built civil registration systems for taxation, conscription and public health. The ability to type your birth date into a calculator and instantly learn how many seconds you have lived would have seemed almost magical to your great-grandparents.

How the world counts age differently

One of the most surprising facts about age is that it is not counted the same way everywhere. The system most of the world uses — starting at zero on the day of birth and adding a year on each birthday — is sometimes called “international age” or “reckoning by completed years.” But several cultures have used, and in some cases still use, alternative systems.

East Asian age reckoning

In the traditional East Asian system, a baby is considered one year old at birth, because the time spent in the womb is counted as the first year of life. Everyone then gains a year together at the start of the lunar new year rather than on individual birthdays. This means a baby born just before the new year could be considered “two years old” only days after birth in international terms. South Korea famously used a version of this system in daily life for generations, which could make a person one or even two years “older” than their international age. In 2023 South Korea standardised official documents on the international system, but the traditional count still appears in casual conversation, showing how deeply cultural age customs run.

Lunar and religious calendars

Many communities track significant dates using lunar or lunisolar calendars — such as the Islamic, Hebrew and traditional Chinese calendars — in parallel with the Gregorian calendar. Because a lunar year is roughly eleven days shorter than a solar year, an age expressed in lunar years will gradually diverge from the same age in solar years. Someone who is 33 solar years old is approximately 34 lunar years old. This calculator uses the Gregorian solar calendar, the global civil standard, but understanding these parallel systems explains why a birth date may map to different “ages” in different cultural contexts.

Why it matters: if you are filling in documents across cultures, or comparing ages between family members raised under different traditions, knowing that several valid systems exist prevents confusion. For all international and official purposes, the completed-years figure this tool reports is the one you want.

How this calculator compares to the popular alternatives

Before designing this tool we studied the most widely used age calculators on the web — the large utility sites, the dedicated time-and-date services, the science-focused calculators and the simpler single-purpose pages. Each does some things well, and we deliberately set out to combine their strengths while removing their weaknesses. The table below summarises the qualities we prioritised and how they map to what users actually need.

CapabilityWhat many tools offerWhat this calculator does
Core accuracyCorrect years/months/daysCorrect to the second, with full century-rule leap handling
Live counterOften static, or seconds onlyLive seconds, minutes and hours plus a live calendar headline
Context & explanationMinimal or noneIn-depth, transparent explanation of every figure
Extra insightsSometimes zodiac or weekdayZodiac, Chinese zodiac, planetary age, leap days, milestones, retirement
PrivacyServer-side processing varies100% in-browser — nothing is uploaded
AccessibilityInconsistentSemantic structure, ARIA, keyboard and screen-reader support
DesignFrequently dated or clutteredClean, Material-inspired, mobile-first and fast

The point of this comparison is not to criticise other tools — many are excellent and have served users well for years. It is to be transparent about our design philosophy: accuracy first, clarity second, and delight third, all delivered in an experience that is fast and respectful of your privacy. We believe a calculator should not only give you a number but help you understand and trust it, and should reward the few extra seconds of curiosity with genuinely interesting insights.

Age in data, statistics and demography

Beyond the personal, age is one of the most important variables in the study of human populations. Demographers — the scientists who study populations — rely on precise age data to build the age pyramids that reveal whether a society is young and growing or older and shrinking. Public-health planners use age distributions to decide how many schools, hospitals and pension funds a country will need decades into the future. Insurers and pension funds depend on actuarial life tables, which express survival probabilities at each exact age, often to a fraction of a year.

In all of these contexts, age is frequently expressed as a decimal — for example, 42.7 years — rather than in years, months and days, because decimals are easier to average and model statistically. Converting a calendar age into a decimal age is simply a matter of dividing the total elapsed days by the average length of a year, and the total-days figure this calculator provides makes that conversion straightforward. Researchers studying child development, by contrast, often need age in completed months or weeks, which is exactly why those totals are surfaced here too.

Understanding that the same underlying span of time can be expressed as a calendar age, a decimal age, a count of days or a count of seconds is the single most useful insight for anyone working with age data. Each representation is a different lens on the same reality, and choosing the right lens for the task at hand is what separates confident analysis from confusion. Whether you are a student, a researcher, a parent or simply curious, this tool gives you every lens at once.

Glossary of age and calendar terms

A quick reference to the terms used throughout this guide and in age calculation generally:

  • Calendar age: Age expressed as completed years, plus the remaining months and days since your last birthday. The everyday, legal definition of age.
  • Absolute age / elapsed time: The total amount of time that has passed since birth, expressed in a single unit such as days, hours or seconds, counting every real day including leap days.
  • Decimal age: Age written as a single number with a fractional part, such as 27.4 years, used widely in statistics and medicine.
  • Leap year: A year containing a 29th day in February, added to keep the calendar aligned with the Earth's orbit. Occurs in years divisible by 4, except century years not divisible by 400.
  • Leapling: A person born on 29 February, whose exact birthday occurs only once every four years.
  • Gregorian calendar: The internationally standard civil calendar, introduced in 1582, used by this tool for all calculations.
  • Age last birthday: Age rounded down to the most recent completed birthday — the everyday convention.
  • Age nearest birthday: Age rounded to whichever birthday is closer, sometimes used by insurers when pricing policies.
  • Orbital period: The time a planet takes to complete one orbit of the Sun, used to calculate your age on other planets.
  • Gestational age: In medicine, age measured from conception or last menstrual period rather than from birth, usually expressed in weeks.

With these terms in hand, every figure this calculator produces should be transparent and meaningful. If a number ever surprises you, the explanation almost always lies in the difference between calendar age and absolute elapsed time — two correct answers to two slightly different questions, both presented here so you never have to guess.

Everyday situations where this calculator helps

An age calculator is one of those quietly useful tools that proves its worth across an enormous range of moments — some practical, some sentimental, some purely fun. Understanding the situations where precise age matters helps you get the most from this page, and shows why we invested so much care in accuracy and clarity. Here are some of the most common ways people put it to work.

Filling in official forms correctly

Application forms for schools, jobs, visas, licences and benefits frequently ask for your age as of a specific date rather than today. Getting this wrong is one of the most common reasons applications are delayed or rejected. By setting the target-date field to the exact date the form specifies, you can read off your age with complete confidence and avoid a costly mistake. The same applies when a parent needs to confirm whether a child meets an age cut-off for enrolment, a sports league or a youth programme.

Planning birthdays and milestone celebrations

Knowing precisely how many days remain until a birthday turns vague intentions into concrete plans. Families use the countdown to organise surprise parties, book venues and send invitations with the right amount of notice. The milestone feature adds a delightful extra dimension: marking a child's ten-thousandth day, a partner's billionth second or a grandparent's twenty-thousandth day of life creates memorable, unusual celebrations that stand out from the ordinary annual birthday.

Health, fitness and child development

Parents of newborns and infants often need to express their child's age in weeks or months for medical appointments, vaccination schedules and developmental milestones. The total-weeks and total-days figures make this effortless. Adults tracking fitness goals or long-term health targets sometimes find it motivating to see their age expressed as a running total of days lived, reframing time as a resource to be used well rather than simply counted.

Curiosity, conversation and learning

Not every use is strictly practical, and that is part of the appeal. Discovering the weekday you were born on, your age on Saturn, or exactly how many seconds you have been alive sparks conversation and wonder. Teachers use these features to make lessons about the calendar, astronomy and large numbers tangible for students. The calculator becomes a small window into how time works — and a reminder that the numbers describing our lives are richer and more surprising than a single figure can capture.

Whatever brought you here, the goal is the same: to give you a fast, accurate and genuinely helpful answer, presented clearly enough that you can trust it and explore it. That combination of precision and approachability is what we believe a modern age calculator should deliver, and it is the standard we hold this tool to with every detail on the page.

Answers

Frequently asked questions

Everything you might want to know about calculating age accurately, using this tool and keeping your data private.

Enter your date of birth and, optionally, a target date. The tool compares the two dates using the calendar borrowing method — borrowing real month lengths and counting every leap day — then converts the gap into years, months, weeks, days, hours, minutes and live seconds, all inside your browser.

Yes, completely free with no sign-up, no limits and no hidden fees. It works on any device with a modern web browser.

No. Every calculation runs locally in your browser using JavaScript. Your date of birth is never uploaded to a server, stored in a database or shared with any third party.

We subtract your birth date from the target date one unit at a time. If the day is negative we borrow the previous month's actual number of days; if the month is negative we borrow twelve months from the year. This matches exactly how people naturally count age.

Yes. Because it compares real calendar dates, every leap day between your birth date and the target date is automatically included. It even applies the full century rule, so years like 1900 and 2100 are correctly treated as non-leap years.

When you calculate your age up to the present moment, a live timer recomputes the elapsed time once per second, so seconds, minutes and hours update in real time — letting you watch your age progress live.

Absolutely. Set the “Age at the date of” field to any past or future date to find the exact duration between your birth date and that date — perfect for forms that ask for your age as of a particular day.

It is accurate to the second. The engine uses your device's date system, includes every leap year and respects the true number of days in each month, so the figures match official calculations.

Because of leap years and uneven month lengths. Calendar age counts completed birthdays, while total days counts every real day including leap days. Both numbers are correct; they simply answer different questions.

In common (non-leap) years, most systems treat 1 March as your effective birthday, and this calculator schedules your countdown the same way. In leap years your birthday falls on its true date, 29 February.

Yes. After calculating, the “Zodiac & birth facts” panel shows the exact day of the week you were born, along with whether it was a leap year.

The tool finds the next occurrence of your birth month and day, then counts the whole days remaining until then. It also tells you the weekday it lands on and the age you'll be turning.

Your Western zodiac sign is read from your birth month and day using the standard tropical date ranges, with the year-spanning boundary of Capricorn handled correctly.

It assigns one of twelve animals based on your birth year in a repeating cycle. Because the Chinese New Year falls in late January or February, people born in the first weeks of the year may belong to the previous animal; we use the widely used year-based approximation.

A “year” is one orbit around the Sun, and each planet takes a different amount of time. Dividing your total elapsed time by a planet's orbital period gives your age there — much older on fast Mercury, much younger on slow Saturn.

Yes. The layout is mobile-first and fully responsive, with large touch targets and a native date picker, so it works smoothly on phones, tablets and desktops.

No installation, plugin or app is required. It runs entirely in your web browser and works offline once the page has loaded.

Yes. It uses semantic HTML, ARIA labels, full keyboard navigation, live regions for results and high-contrast colours, so it is usable with assistive technology.

Yes. The totals panel shows total weeks and total days, which are ideal for expressing the age of newborns and infants the way clinicians often do.

It projects a common retirement milestone of age 65 from your birth date and shows the date you'd reach it along with the years remaining. It's a general guide — your actual retirement age depends on your country and circumstances.

Milestones are memorable round numbers such as your 10,000th day of life or your 1-billionth second. The tool tells you whether you've passed each one and, if not, the date it arrives.

Yes. Use the “Copy summary” button to copy a clean text summary to your clipboard, or “Share result” to use your device's native share sheet where supported.

It uses the Gregorian calendar, the internationally standard civil calendar, including its full leap-year rules, which is what virtually all official and everyday age calculations rely on.

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