How to use this calculator
Enter your dog’s age, size aging factor, weight, and activity level. Use 4 for small dogs, 5 for medium dogs, 6 for large dogs, and 7 for giant breeds after the second year.
Convert dog age into approximate human years using dog size, weight, and activity. See life stage, senior alert, and vet visit recommendation for better pet care planning.
Enter your dog’s age, size aging factor, weight, and activity level. Use 4 for small dogs, 5 for medium dogs, 6 for large dogs, and 7 for giant breeds after the second year.
The result converts dog age into approximate human years and indicates whether the dog is entering adult, mature, or senior care stages.
This is an estimate. Breed, genetics, weight, and medical history can change life expectancy and senior care timing.
A 5-year-old medium dog uses 24 + (5 - 2) × 5 = 39 human years.
Enter the dog’s real age and size factor to estimate human-equivalent age using the first two years plus size-adjusted aging.
Yes. Large and giant dogs generally age faster after the early years, so they use a higher annual conversion factor.
Many dogs are considered senior around 7 to 10 years, but large breeds often reach senior status earlier.
Senior dogs often benefit from checkups at least twice per year, especially if weight, mobility, or appetite changes.
Smaller breeds often live longer on average, although individual health and genetics matter.
| Module | Purpose |
|---|---|
| Conversion type | Size-adjusted dog years |
| Best for | Pet age and care planning |
| Senior signal | Human-equivalent age above about 55 |