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Rising or Falling?

U.S. life expectancy saw a slight increase in 2022 — the latest data available — following a concerning two-year decline, according to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. Life expectancy for U.S.-born children is now 77.5 years, up from 76.5 in 2021 and 77 in 2020. Deaths caused by drug overdoses and COVID-19 infections were key contributors to the decline, the CDC data showed. COVID-19 took nearly 417,000 lives in 2021 — more than in 2020 — and for the second year was the third leading cause of death.


If you're wondering what life expectancy was the year you were born and how it’s changed, the numbers going back to 1940 tell the tale.


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1940

Overall life expectancy: 62.9

Women: 65.2

Men: 60.8

The United States began the ’40s on an upswing, with life expectancy up sharply from 58.5 years in 1936, when the nation was still struggling with the economic devastation of the Great Depression. The ’40s would also bring significant public-health landmarks, including the mass production of penicillin and the DTP shot, which combined the pertussis, diphtheria, and tetanus vaccines. 



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1941

Overall life expectancy:64.8

Women: 66.8

Men: 63.1

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1942

Overall life expectancy:66.2

Women: 67.9

Men: 64.7

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1944

Overall life expectancy:65.2

Women: 66.8

Men: 63.6

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1945

Overall life expectancy: 65.9

Women:67.9

Men: 63.6

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1946

Overall life expectancy: 66.7

Women: 69.4

Men: 64.4

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1947

Overall life expectancy: 66.8

Women:69.7

Men: 64.4

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1948

Overall life expectancy: 67.2

Women: 69.9

Men: 64.6

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1949

Overall life expectancy: 68

Women: 70.7

Men: 65.2

1949 marked the first year women’s life expectancy eclipsed 70 — a milestone men would not reach for another three decades. Experts have long documented that women tend to outlive men, attributing the difference to several factors. Among them: Men take more risks, are less likely to seek medical care, and are more likely to die of heart disease and suicide. 1949 was also the last time the U.S. saw an outbreak of smallpox.

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1950

Overall life expectancy: 68.2

Women: 71.1

Men: 65.6


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1951

Overall life expectancy: 68.4

Women: 71.4

Men: 65.6


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1952

Overall life expectancy: 68.6

Women: 71.6

Men: 65.8


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1953

Overall life expectancy:68.8

Women: 72

Men: 66

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1954

Overall life expectancy:69.6

Women: 72.8

Men: 66.7

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1955

Overall life expectancy:69.6

Women: 72.8

Men: 66.7

In 1955, a nationwide push to inoculate children against polio began after trials found Dr. Jonas Salk’s vaccine was safe and effective. New polio cases dropped to less than 6,000 in 1957 from 58,000 in 1952.

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1956

Overall life expectancy:69.7

Women: 72.9

Men: 66.7

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1957

Overall life expectancy:69.5

Women: 72.7

Men: 66.4

Though it was nowhere near as devastating as the 1918 pandemic that killed 50 million worldwide, the flu killed more than 116,000 in the United States and 1.1 million worldwide in 1957-58.

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1958

Overall life expectancy: 69.6

Women: 72.9

Men: 66.6

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1959

Overall life expectancy: 69.9

Women: 73.2

Men: 66.8

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1960

Overall life expectancy: 69.7

Women: 73.1

Men: 66.6

By 1960, life expectancy numbers settled into a long-term pattern of slow but steady growth compared with more dramatic jumps at the beginning of the century. From 1950 to 1960, life expectancy grew 1.5 years, compared with a jump of more than five years from 1940 to 1950, more than three years from 1930 to 1940, and more than five years from 1920 to 1930.

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1961

Overall life expectancy: 70.2

Women: 73.6

Men: 67.1

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1962

Overall life expectancy: 70.1

Women: 73.5

Men: 66.9

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1963

Overall life expectancy: 69.9

Women: 73.4

Men: 66.6

Wikimedia Commons

1964

Overall life expectancy: 70.2

Women: 73.7

Men: 66.8

The U.S. government made waves in 1964 when the surgeon general released a landmark reportthat said cigarettes caused lung and throat cancer in men, and likely caused lung cancer in women.

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1965

Overall life expectancy: 70.2

Women: 73.8

Men: 66.8

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1966

Overall life expectancy: 70.2

Women: 73.9

Men: 66.7

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1967

Overall life expectancy: 70.5

Women: 74.3

Men: 67

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1968

Overall life expectancy:70.2

Women: 74.1

Men: 66.6

About a decade after the 1957-58 pandemic, yet another flu pandemic killed about 100,000 people in the U.S. and more than 1 million worldwide. 


Hulton Archive/Getty

1969

Overall life expectancy: 70.5

Women: 74.4

Men: 66.8

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1970

Overall life expectancy: 70.8

Women: 74.7

Men: 67.1

Life expectancy was relatively flat in the ’60s, rising less than a year from 1960 to 1970. Women added about 18 months to their lifespans, while men added only half a year. The ’60s also brought three significant vaccines against measles, mumps, and rubella, which were eventually combined into the MMR shot in 1971


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1971

Overall life expectancy: 71.1

Women:75

Men: 67.4

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1972

Overall life expectancy: 71.2

Women: 75.1

Men: 67.4

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1973

Overall life expectancy: 71.4

Women: 75.3

Men: 67.6


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1974

Overall life expectancy: 72

Women: 75.9

Men:68.2


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1975

Overall life expectancy: 72.6

Women: 76.6

Men: 68.8

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1976

Overall life expectancy:72.9

Women:76.8

Men: 69.1

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1977

Overall life expectancy:73.3

Women: 77.2

Men: 69.5

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1978

Overall life expectancy: 73.5

Women: 77.3

Men: 69.6

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1979

Overall life expectancy: 73.9

Women: 77.8

Men: 70

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1980

Overall life expectancy: 73.7

Women:77.4

Men: 70

A particularly deadly flu season again was to blame for the drop in life expectancy in 1980, the nation’s first since 1968.

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1981

Overall life expectancy:74.1

Women: 77.8

Men: 70.4 

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1982

Overall life expectancy: 74.5

Women: 78.1

Men: 70.8

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1983

Overall life expectancy: 74.6

Women: 78.1

Men: 71

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1984

Overall life expectancy: 74.7

Women: 78.2

Men: 71.1

Three years after the CDC identified the first-known cluster of AIDS cases in the U.S. in 1981, researchers determined the cause of the disease: HIV. The first commercially available HIV test would become available in 1985, and the first antiretroviral to fight HIV followed in 1987. 

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1985

Overall life expectancy: 74.7

Women: 78.2

Men: 71.1

In 1985, New York became the first state to require drivers to wear seat belts or risk a fine. Every state but New Hampshire eventually followed suit. In the early ’80s, seat belt use was only about 14%; today, it’s about 90%. 


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1986

Overall life expectancy: 74.7

Women: 78.2

Men: 71.2

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1987

Overall life expectancy: 74.9

Women: 78.3

Men: 71.4

This year marked a major milestone for the fight against heart disease, when lovastatin became the first such cholesterol-lowering drug approved for commercial use in the U.S. Several other statins followed, including familiar names such as atorvastatin (perhaps better known as Lipitor).

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1988

Overall life expectancy: 74.9

Women: 78.3

Men: 71.4

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1989

Overall life expectancy: 75.1

Women: 78.5

Men:71.7

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1990

Overall life expectancy:75.4

Women: 78.8

Men: 71.8

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1991

Overall life expectancy:75.5

Women:78.9 

Men: 72

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1992

Overall life expectancy: 75.8

Women: 79.1 

Men: 72.3

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1993

Overall life expectancy:75.5

Women:78.8

Men: 72.2

In 1993, the U.S. notched its first significant decline in life expectancy since 1980, a blip that experts attributed to several factors: AIDS, a deadly flu season, and high accidental-death and murder rates for the year.

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1994

Overall life expectancy:75.7

Women: 79 

Men: 72.4

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1995

Overall life expectancy: 75.8

Women: 78.9 

Men: 72.5

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1996

Overall life expectancy:76.1

Women: 79.1 

Men: 73.1

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1997

Overall life expectancy:76.5

Women:79.4 

Men: 73.6

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1998

Overall life expectancy: 76.7

Women: 79.5

Men:73.8

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1999

Overall life expectancy:76.7

Women: 79.4 

Men: 73.9

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2000

Overall life expectancy: 76.8

Women: 79.7 

Men: 74.3

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2001

Overall life expectancy:77

Women: 79.5 

Men: 74.3

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2002

Overall life expectancy: 77

Women: 79.6

Men:74.4

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2003

Overall life expectancy: 77.6

Women: 79.7

Men: 74.5

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2004

Overall life expectancy: 77.5

Women: 80.1 

Men: 75

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2005

Overall life expectancy: 77.6

Women: 80.1

Men: 75

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2006

Overall life expectancy:77.8

Women:80.3 

Men: 75.2

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2007

Overall life expectancy: 78.1

Women: 80.6

Men: 75.5

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2008

Overall life expectancy: 78.2

Women: 80.6 

Men: 75.6

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2009

Overall life expectancy: 78.5

Women: 80.9 

Men: 76

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2010

Overall life expectancy: 78.7

Women: 81 

Men:76.2

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2011

Overall life expectancy: 78.7

Women: 81.1

Men: 76.3

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2012

Overall life expectancy:78.8

Women:81.2

Men:76.4

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2013

Overall life expectancy: 78.8

Women:81.2

Men: 76.4

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2014

Overall life expectancy:78.9

Women: 81.3

Men: 76.5

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2015

Overall life expectancy:78.7

Women: 81.1

Men: 76.3

In 2015, life expectancy backed off from its 2014 peak of 78.9. Several factors were at play, researchers say, including an increasing number of midlife deaths from the opioid crisis. 


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2016

Overall life expectancy: 78.7

Women:81.1

Men:76.2

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2017

Overall life expectancy: 78.6

Women:81.1

Men: 76.1

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2018

Overall life expectancy: 78.7

Women:81.2

Men: 76.2

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2019

Overall life expectancy: 78.8

Women:81.4

Men: 76.3

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2020

Overall life expectancy:77

Women: 79.9

Men:74.2

The U.S. recorded a more than one-year drop in life expectancy after the coronavirus outbreak evolved into a pandemic in early 2020. Researchers express optimism that the number would rebound, but noted that deaths disproportionately affected communities of color.

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2021

Overall life expectancy: 76.4

Women: 79.3

Men: 73.5

On average in 2021, life expectancy for men fell quicker than women, widening a gap that had been growing over the past decade. The CDC also noted that white people saw more deaths from COVID-19 in the second year of the pandemic than any other racial or ethnic group in the U.S. The increased mortality rate resulted in white people experiencing the second-biggest decline in life expectancy. 

Caiaimage/Paul Bradbury/istockphoto

2022

Overall life expectancy: 77.5

Women:80.2

Men: 74.8
In 2022, there was a slight increase in life expectancy for men and women, following a two-year decline. Heart disease and cancer remained the top two leading causes of death. However, unintentional injuries overtook COVID-19 as the third leading cause.