BCBetter Calculators

Cat Age Calculator

Convert your cat's age to the equivalent human age.

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Enter your values and click Calculate

How It Works

The conversion uses the AAHA Feline Life Stage Guidelines' three-phase model. Phase 1 (0–1 year): each cat year equals 15 human years, so a 1-year-old cat is equivalent to a 15-year-old human adolescent. Phase 2 (1–2 years): the second year adds 9 human years, bringing the total to 24 human years at age 2. Phase 3 (2+ years): each additional cat year after age 2 is equivalent to approximately 4 human years. So a 5-year-old cat is 24 + (3 × 4) = 36 human years, and a 12-year-old is 24 + (10 × 4) = 64 human years. Fractional ages are supported — a 1.5-year-old cat would be calculated as 15 + (0.5 × 9) = 19.5 human years, since 1.5 falls in Phase 2. The result is rounded to the nearest whole year for display.

Examples

Young Adult Cat
A 3-year-old cat in the early adult life stage.
Result: Equivalent to approximately 28 human years — a young adult.
Mature Adult Cat
A 7-year-old cat entering the mature adult phase.
Result: Equivalent to approximately 44 human years.
Senior Cat
A 12-year-old cat entering senior status.
Result: Equivalent to approximately 64 human years — deserving more frequent vet checkups.

Frequently Asked Questions

Why do cats age so fast in year 1?
During their first year, cats undergo extremely rapid physical and cognitive development. They reach sexual maturity at approximately 6 months, achieve nearly full adult body size, and develop complex behavioral capabilities — all within about 12 months. This compressed development is why the first cat year equates to roughly 15 human years rather than the often-cited seven.
What is a senior cat?
The AAHA Feline Life Stage Guidelines classify cats as 'senior' from age 11 to 14 (equivalent to 60–72 human years) and 'geriatric' from age 15 onward (equivalent to 76+ human years). Senior and geriatric cats benefit from twice-yearly veterinary visits rather than the annual exam typical for younger adults, as age-related conditions like hyperthyroidism, kidney disease, hypertension, and dental disease become increasingly common. Early detection through more frequent checkups significantly improves treatment outcomes.
Do indoor vs outdoor cats age differently?
The biological aging rate is the same regardless of lifestyle — the AAHA conversion applies equally to both. However, outdoor cats have a significantly shorter average lifespan (typically 2–5 years) compared to indoor cats (12–18 years), primarily due to trauma from vehicles, predation, and exposure to infectious diseases. This means an outdoor cat may not live long enough to reach the same human-age milestones as an indoor counterpart, even though their per-year biological aging rate is identical.

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