Cat Age Calculator
Enter your cat's calendar age to find the human year equivalent and life stage.
Cat age (years)
Cat age (months)
How Is Cat Age Converted to Human Years?
The common claim "1 cat year = 7 human years" is scientifically incorrect. Cats develop extremely rapidly in the first year and this rate changes noticeably in subsequent years.
Rapid Development in a Cat's First 2 Years
By the end of the first year, a cat has reached sexual maturity, largely established its social identity and nearly completed physical development. This intense development is equivalent to 15 human years. The second year continues this pace, adding 9 more human years — so a 2-year-old cat is equivalent to a 24-year-old human.
Year 1
15 human years
Sexual maturity
Year 2
+9 human years
Total: 24 years
Ageing Rate After Age 2
From the third year onwards, each cat year equals approximately 4 human years — a rate that continues consistently. The table below shows the key reference points:
| Cat Age | Human Age | Life Stage |
|---|---|---|
| 6 months | 10 | Kitten |
| 1 year | 15 | Junior |
| 2 years | 24 | Young adult |
| 3 years | 28 | Adult |
| 5 years | 36 | Adult |
| 8 years | 48 | Mature adult |
| 10 years | 56 | Senior |
| 13 years | 68 | Senior |
| 15 years | 76 | Geriatric |
| 18 years | 88 | Geriatric |
| 20 years | 96 | Very old |
What Are the Life Stages of Cats?
Kitten and Junior Cats (Ages 0–2)
- Period of rapid physical and social development
- Vaccination schedule should begin (weeks 6–8)
- Transition to solid food after week 8
- Spaying/neutering can be planned from weeks 12–16
- Growth completing; energy at its peak
- Socialisation window closing
- Annual vaccination and parasite control
- Intensive play and mental stimulation needed
Adult and Senior Cats (Ages 3+)
- Fully physically developed; stable period
- One vet visit per year is sufficient
- Dental health monitoring should begin
- Weight management becomes important
- Metabolism begins to slow
- Weight gain risk increases; portion control needed
- Vet visit every 6 months recommended
- Joint health should be monitored
- Kidney, dental and thyroid issues become common
- Blood and urine tests every 6 months
- Age-appropriate (senior) food recommended
- Climbing may become more difficult
- Increased need for special care and warmth
- High-quality protein is a priority
- Cognitive decline (feline dementia) may occur
- Frequent veterinary monitoring is essential
How to Estimate the Age of a Cat with Unknown Birth Date
For a cat found on the street or adopted from a shelter, the exact birth date is usually unknown. A reasonable age estimate can be made in a veterinary examination by assessing several indicators together.
Dental Structure and Wear Condition
Dental examination is the most reliable age estimation method, especially for cats under 5.
| Period | Dental Condition |
|---|---|
| 0–4 weeks | Milk teeth emerging; age 0–4 weeks |
| 4–6 weeks | All milk teeth (26) in place |
| 3–6 months | Transition to permanent teeth; incisors and canines replacing |
| 6–12 months | All permanent teeth (30) complete, bright and sharp |
| 1–2 years | Slight yellowing may start; minimal tartar build-up |
| 3–5 years | Moderate tartar; small signs of wear |
| 5–10 years | Visible wear, gum recession, increased tartar |
| 10+ years | Advanced wear or tooth loss; significant deterioration possible |