
Life Expectancy: Definition, Statistics, and Key Factors
Few numbers are as personal as the one that tells you how long you might live. But life expectancy isn’t a fixed prediction—it changes depending on age and location, with global averages at 73.8 years but a 70-year-old American woman expecting another 16.
Global life expectancy at birth (2026): 73.8 years · U.S. life expectancy at birth (2024): 79.0 years · U.S. female life expectancy: 81.4 years · U.S. male life expectancy: 76.5 years
Quick snapshot
- Statistical estimate of remaining years at a given age (OECD (international organization))
- Most common measure is life expectancy at birth (World Bank DataBank Glossary)
- Varies by country, gender, and age (OECD (international organization))
- Remaining years increase the older you get (CDC (U.S. National Vital Statistics))
- 70-year-old U.S. women live ~16 years longer on average (CDC (U.S. National Vital Statistics))
- 80-year-olds have ~8–9 years remaining (CDC (U.S. National Vital Statistics))
- Global average: 73.8 years (World Population Review (global data aggregator))
- Highest: Monaco, 86.5 years; lowest: Nigeria, 54.6 years (World Population Review)
- OECD average: 81.25 years (TheGlobalEconomy (economic data))
- Genetics and family history (NIH (National Institutes of Health))
- Lifestyle: diet, exercise, smoking (NIH (National Institutes of Health))
- Healthcare access and socioeconomic status (NIH (National Institutes of Health))
Five key facts, one pattern: the gap between the highest and lowest life expectancies across countries is more than 30 years, and gender differences persist everywhere.
| Metric | Value |
|---|---|
| Global life expectancy at birth | 73.8 years (World Population Review) |
| U.S. life expectancy at birth | 79.0 years (CDC) |
| U.S. female life expectancy | 81.4 years (CDC) |
| U.S. male life expectancy | 76.5 years (CDC) |
| Leading cause of death (80+) | Heart disease (CDC) |
What is the meaning of life expectancy?
Statistical measure
- The OECD (international organization) defines life expectancy at birth as the average lifespan a newborn can expect if age-specific mortality rates remain constant.
- The World Bank DataBank Glossary says it is derived from life tables based on sex- and age-specific death rates.
- It is not a prediction for any individual.
Life expectancy at birth vs. remaining years
- Life expectancy at birth is the most commonly reported figure.
- Once you reach age 65, your remaining life expectancy is higher than the at-birth number because you’ve already survived early-life risks.
The implication: definitions matter when interpreting national statistics, and the gap between birth and remaining years explains why many seniors outlive their initial life expectancy.
How long can a 70 year old woman expect to live?
Life expectancy at age 70 by gender
- In the United States, a 70-year-old woman has a remaining life expectancy of approximately 16.1 years (CDC).
- Life expectancy at older ages is generally higher for women than men.
- Remaining life expectancy increases with age because survivors have already avoided early-life risks.
Factors affecting remaining years
- Chronic conditions, activity level, and access to care all influence how those 16 years play out.
- Smoking avoidance, moderate exercise, and a balanced diet consistently correlate with longer life.
A 70-year-old woman in the U.S. faces a different reality than her peer in Japan, where remaining life expectancy at 70 is over 18 years. The gap reflects differences in healthcare systems, diet, and social support structures.
The pattern: age-specific life expectancy reveals that women consistently outlive men, and that surviving to 70 already selects for healthier individuals.
What is the most common cause of death in 80 year olds?
Heart disease
- Heart disease is the leading cause of death for adults aged 80 and older (CDC).
- Cancer, stroke, Alzheimer’s disease, and lower respiratory diseases are also common.
Other common causes
- Data from the World Health Organization (global health authority) provide detailed cause-of-death statistics.
- For 80-year-olds, chronic conditions dominate: heart disease, cancer, stroke, and Alzheimer’s together account for more than half of deaths.
The oldest old die from diseases that accumulate over decades, not from acute infections. That shifts the focus from emergency care to long-term management of chronic conditions.
The implication: public health strategies for aging populations must prioritize chronic disease prevention and management.
What is the biggest indicator of long life?
Genetics and family history
- Life expectancy is influenced by genetics, lifestyle, and environment.
- Studies show longevity runs in families, suggesting a genetic component (NIH (National Institutes of Health)).
Lifestyle factors: diet, exercise, smoking
- Smoking avoidance, moderate exercise, and a balanced diet consistently correlate with longer life (Health System Tracker (U.S. policy research)).
- Access to healthcare and socioeconomic status also play major roles.
The catch: personal choices matter, but they operate within structural constraints that differ across countries and communities.
What birthday lives the longest?
Most common age at death
- In developed countries, the most common age at death is around 80–85 years.
- Life expectancy at birth is lower than the typical age at death due to infant and child mortality.
Mortality peaks and survival rates
- The probability of living to very old ages (e.g., 90+) increases with each year survived.
- For example, among 80-year-olds, the chance of reaching 90 is about 30% for women and 20% for men (Social Security Administration (U.S. actuarial data)).
The most common age to die is around 80, but the older you already are, the older you’re likely to get. That’s because survivors are a select group—they’ve already dodged the major risks of early life.
What this means: the phrase “average life expectancy” is misleading for individuals; the older you get, the more your own expected remaining years increase.
Life Expectancy by Country – A Comparison
Seven OECD countries, one clear pattern: the U.S. trails most peers by several years.
| Country | Life Expectancy at Birth (2024) | Source |
|---|---|---|
| Switzerland | 84.41 years | TheGlobalEconomy |
| Japan | 84.30 years | TheGlobalEconomy |
| Spain | 84.08 years | Worldometer |
| Australia | 84.34 years | Worldometer |
| United States | 79.0 years | CDC |
| Mexico | 75.26 years | TheGlobalEconomy |
| OECD average | 81.25 years | TheGlobalEconomy |
Confirmed facts
- Global life expectancy at birth is 73.8 years (World Population Review)
- U.S. life expectancy at birth is 79.0 years (CDC)
- Heart disease is the leading cause of death for adults 80 and older (CDC)
- OECD average life expectancy is 81.25 years (TheGlobalEconomy)
What’s unclear
- Exact impact of future medical breakthroughs on life expectancy is uncertain.
- Regional differences in life expectancy may shift due to policy changes or pandemics.
- Whether the U.S. can close the 3.7-year gap with comparable countries (Health System Tracker)
- The long-term impact of climate change on mortality patterns remains an unknown factor.
The implication: the U.S. lags not because of a single factor but due to a combination of healthcare access, lifestyle, and social determinants that other countries address more effectively.
Expert perspectives
Global life expectancy increased by more than 6 years between 2000 and 2019, from 66.8 years to 73.1 years.
In the United States, life expectancy at birth was 76.4 years in 2021, ranking 32nd out of 38 OECD countries.
For Americans, the gap between U.S. life expectancy and that of comparable countries is not just a statistic—it’s a signal with real consequences. The choice is clear: invest in preventive care, healthier environments, and universal access, or accept a future where the U.S. continues to lag behind its peers.
data360.worldbank.org, genderdata.worldbank.org, macrotrends.net, pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov, ukreviewer.co.uk
Frequently asked questions
What percentage of 80 year olds live to 90?
Approximately 30% of women and 20% of men aged 80 in the U.S. are expected to reach age 90, based on actuarial tables from the Social Security Administration.
Is 70 years a long life?
Globally, 70 years is above the world average but below the typical age at death in developed countries, which is around 80–85. In the U.S., a 70-year-old woman still has about 16 years left.
At what age do most people start feeling older?
Surveys suggest that many people report feeling “old” around age 70, but this varies widely by health and lifestyle. No single age is universal.
At what age do most people pass away?
In developed countries, the most common age at death is between 80 and 85 years (CDC).
What is the leading cause of death in 70 year olds?
Cancer is the leading cause of death for 70-year-olds, followed by heart disease, according to CDC data.
How does life expectancy differ between men and women?
Women consistently outlive men by about 4–5 years in the U.S. (81.4 vs. 76.5 years) and globally. The gap is partly biological and partly behavioral.
Can life expectancy be calculated for individuals?
No, life expectancy is a statistical average for a group. Individual outcomes depend on genetics, lifestyle, and healthcare—far too many variables for a precise personal prediction.
These comparative perspectives reinforce that life expectancy is shaped by policy and environment, not just personal behavior.