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INFO: “Dog Years” Don’t Work Like We Thought . . . Here’s a More Accurate Look at Your Dog’s Age in Human Years

You’ve probably heard the old rule-of-thumb that dog years are like human years times seven.  So when your dog is one, that’s like being a seven-year-old person . . . at two, it’s like being 14, and so on.

But a new study out of the University of California, San Diego found that system isn’t REALLY accurate.  The researchers say, quote, “A nine-month-old dog can have puppies, so we already knew the one-to-seven [age] ratio wasn’t accurate.”

They studied the age of the cells in a dog’s body to figure out what they really are in human years.  And here’s what they found . . .

  1. Dogs make a HUGE leap in their first year, and by the time a dog is one year old, they’re basically like a 30-year-old person.
  1. Then their aging slows down. At age two, they’re around 40 in human years.  By the time a dog is four, that’s like being 52 in human years.
  1. And their aging really tails off after that. When a dog is 10 years old or older, they’re like a 70-year-old person and they start aging at about one human year for every dog year.  (UCSD)

(Here’s a chart showing dog versus human years.)

Image by Alain Audet from Pixabay

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