Age 100 and Counting (2024)

(April 2003) Reaching age 100 has long fascinated society. The century mark holds an almost mystical importance as a seal of hardiness and good health — the sign of a life well-lived. People who reach 100 are regularly feted in newspaper stories, television broadcasts, and family parties. Some get birthday greetings from the White House. As life expectancy increases, an increasing number of Americans are attaining this milestone.

Centenarians have a unique perspective on our recent history. Americans who reached age 100 in 2000 were born at the dawn of the 20th century. They were too young to participate in World War I and reached adulthood as the world was gripped by the 1918 influenza epidemic. This group was forming its families as the Great Depression started and had some of the highest rates of childlessness recorded in the United States. The advent of World War II found many of them too old to be called into service, but they were a vital force in stateside war efforts. Today’s centenarians reached retirement age as the United States entered the Vietnam War and social turmoil of the 1960s and 1970s. They witnessed remarkable and unprecedented technological and medical advances in their lifetimes.

Centenarians may hold the key to the limits of life and are a new and fascinating focus for medical and social research. Researchers are examining their physical and mental health, their genes, their families, and their lifestyles, trying to unlock the secrets of long life.

The growth in the number of centenarians in the world is remarkable. Accurate records are difficult to come by before the 20th century, although there have been claims of super longevity throughout history, such as the story of 969-year-old Methuselah in the Bible. Other examples of supercentenarian status are found in age claims of 122 years for St. Patrick of Ireland, 152 years for Englishman Thomas Parr (1483-1635), and groups of individuals in Bulgaria, Kashmir, and the Andes. Rigorous investigation of these claims, however, finds no evidence to support them. Some speculate that before 1900 the incidence of centenarians may have been as small as one per century. In small countries, like Denmark, researchers find little evidence of centenarians before the 19th century.1 Given the rarity of living to age 100, it is possible that few populations were large enough until recently to produce any centenarians.

Verification of age is very difficult, even today. Many centenarians do not have birth records or other documents to confirm their stated age. Verification of age entails collecting credible and corroborating evidence from a variety of sources, including interviews with the person when possible. Reported life events are checked for consistency with historical records and documents. Verification becomes more difficult the older the individual and after his or her death.

The oldest known age ever attained was by Jeanne Calment, a Frenchwoman who died in 1997 at the age of 122. Ms. Calment is also the only documented case of a person living past 120, which many scientists had pegged as the upper limit of the human lifespan. In April 2003, the oldest living woman appears to be 115-year-old Kamato Hongo of Japan, born in 1887. The oldest living American woman is Californian Mary Christian, age 113.

Oldest Living Men and Women, United States and the World, April 2003

WorldUnited States
Oldest ManYukichi Chuganji (Japan)Fred Harold Hale
Birth dateMarch 23, 1889Dec. 1, 1890
Age on April 1, 2003114112
Oldest WomanKamato Hongo (Japan)Mary Christian
Birth dateSept. 16, 1887June 12, 1889
Age on April 1, 2003115113

Source: Gerontology Research Group (www.grg.org, accessed April 2, 2003); and Guinness World Records (www.guinnessworldrecords.com, accessed April 2, 2003).

The oldest documented age for a man is believed to be a Danish immigrant to the United States, Christian Mortensen, who died in 1998 at age 115. One man, Shigechiyo Izumi, is often reported as having reached the age of 120 before his death in 1986 in Japan, but his age has not been verified. Yukichi Chuganji, reaching age 114 in 2003, is believed to be the oldest living man. Maine resident Fred Harold Hall is the oldest living American man — at 112 years of age.

Some 50,000 Americans were reported as centenarians in the 2000 U.S. Census (see figure). Centenarians account for less than 0.2 percent of the 35 million persons age 65 or older, and there is wide agreement that this is an overestimate because of chronic overreporting at the oldest ages.2 Reliable counts for 1990 by the Social Security Administration, for example, put the number of centenarians as closer to 28,000 than the 37,000 reported in the 1990 Census.

U.S. Centenarians by Sex, 2000

Age 100 and Counting (1)
Note: Components do not add to total because of rounding.
Source: U.S. Census Bureau, PCT3 Sex by Age (http://factfinder.census.gov/, accessed April 2, 2003).

As at all other older ages, women centenarians outnumber men. The 2000 Census recorded four women for every man age 100 or older. Detailed information on centenarians from the 1990 Census reveal that their racial composition is similar to that for all older Americans — 78 percent of centenarians were non-Hispanic white and 16 percent were black. But centenarians have lower levels of education than other elderly Americans, which is not surprising for Americans born before 1900. And women age 100 or older are more likely than men to be widowed. Only about 4 percent of female centenarians counted in 1990 were currently married, compared with nearly 25 percent of the men age 100 or older.

Centenarians are not necessarily in poor health or suffering from chronic disabilities. About 20 percent of the centenarians in the 1990 Census reported no disabilities, although they reported considerably more health problems than people in their 80s.3

What accounts for extreme longevity? It is likely that a combination of genetics, lifestyle, and luck4 are responsible for a long life. As public health measures advanced early in the 20th century, cleaner water, vaccination campaigns, and better personal hygiene allowed more people to live to older ages. More recently, treatments for heart disease, cancer, and other chronic diseases have extended life at the upper extremes. A wide-ranging study of the genetic, physical, mental, and emotional characteristics of centenarians by Harvard University’s Thomas Perls suggests that genetic factors play a large role in longevity, although Perls also acknowledges the importance of lifestyle and attitude.5

Christine L. Himes is associate professor of sociology and senior research analyst at the Center for Policy Research at Syracuse University.

References

  1. Bernard Jeune, “In Search of the First Centenarians,” in Exceptional Longevity: From Prehistory to the Present, ed. B. Jeune and J.W. Vaupel (Odense, Denmark: Odense University Press, 1995).
  2. Constance A. Krach and Victoria A. Velkoff, “Centenarians in the United States,” Current Population Reports P23-199RV (Washington, DC: U.S. Government Printing Office, 1999).
  3. Krach and Velkoff, “Centenarians in the United States.”
  4. “Luck” at avoiding fatal injuries or exposure to deadly contagious diseases, for example.
  5. Thomas T. Perls and Margery Hutter Silver, Living to 100 (New York: Basic Books, 1999); and Jeune, “In Search of the First Centenarians.”

Excerpted from PRB’s Population Bulletin “Elderly Americans,” by Christine L. Himes.

Age 100 and Counting (2024)

FAQs

How many people over the age of 100 are alive today? ›

Centenarian statistics across the world

In the US, 2021 records show that in a population of 336,996,624 people, there were 89,739 centenarians (a prevalence of 0.27%). This figure has almost doubled in the last 20 years and centenarians are projected to make up 0.1% of the population by 2054.

What are the odds of living to 100 years old? ›

Therefore centenarians, age 100-104 occurred at a rate of 1 per 2,200 in the population, semi-supercentenarians at a rate of 1 per 34,000 and supercentenarians at a rate of 1 per 871,600 in the population.

How rare is it to live to 110? ›

A supercentenarian, sometimes hyphenated as super-centenarian, is a person who is 110 years or older. This age is achieved by about one in 1,000 centenarians.

What percentage of 90 year olds live to 100? ›

Equivalent to 6.9% of those alive at 90 reaching the milestone age of 100.

Has anyone lived past 120 years old? ›

The oldest known age ever attained was by Jeanne Calment, a Frenchwoman who died in 1997 at the age of 122. Ms. Calment is also the only documented case of a person living past 120, which many scientists had pegged as the upper limit of the human lifespan.

How rare is it to live to 90? ›

At the end of the study, about 16% of the men and about 34% of the women survived to the age of 90. In fact, the authors found women who were taller than 5 feet 9 inches were 31% more likely to reach 90, compared to those who were under 5 feet 3 inches.

Is longevity inherited from mother or father? ›

Inheritance of lifespan may be also higher in the maternal than paternal line (15). Yet another explanation for the sex differences of associations between anthropometric traits of children and longevity of their parents might stem from different causes of death between the mothers and fathers of participants.

What will life expectancy be in 2050? ›

By 2050, life expectancy will be 80.5 years for women and 76 years for men, with gains concentrated in countries with the lowest current life expectancy, according to study results published in the Lancet.

How many 105 year olds are in the US? ›

One sign of how complicated income planning can be: In the United States, in 2020, 80,139 people were ages 100 or older, according to new Census Bureau data. The bureau found 10,946 people who were said to be age 105 or older, meaning that about 1 in every 30,000 U.S. residents is in that ultra-long-lived age group.

What is the rarest age to live to? ›

A supercentenarian, sometimes hyphenated as super-centenarian, is a person who has reached the age of 110 years. This age milestone is only achieved by about one in a thousand centenarians. Even rarer is a person who has lived to 115. There are 69 people in recorded history who have indisputably reached 115.

What are signs of longevity? ›

According to the research cited, the traits linked to a long life are: Maintenance of flexibility, balance and lower body strength to enable you to sit to the ground and stand-up without issue, muscular strength and the ability to express this with quality grip strength, maintaining a walking speed of at least 1.0 ...

What foods do centenarians eat? ›

They primarily eat a variety of in-season fresh vegetables and fruits, whole grains and beans. Eat animal foods sparingly – When they do eat animal-based foods, such as meat, eggs, fish and dairy, they are used to flavor dishes rather than being the main focus of the meal or are enjoyed as celebratory foods.

What is the most common age of death? ›

In the United States in 2020, the death rate was highest among those aged 85 and over, with about 16,354.9 men and 14,560 women per 100,000 of the population passing away. For all ages, the death rate was at 1,090.8 per 100,000 of the population for males, and 965.1 per 100,000 of the population for women.

What age is considered old for a woman in the USA? ›

"Old" for women today is about 73, which increased from the late 50s in the 1920s. And "very old" today is about 80, an increase from about 67 in the 1920s. But these are just numbers. How do today's boomers look and feel?

How many 110 year olds are there? ›

While researching, they learned that there are around 300 to 450 people in the world who are aged 110 and older. These people are often referred to as supercentenarians.

How many people are over 105 years old? ›

One sign of how complicated income planning can be: In the United States, in 2020, 80,139 people were ages 100 or older, according to new Census Bureau data. The bureau found 10,946 people who were said to be age 105 or older, meaning that about 1 in every 30,000 U.S. residents is in that ultra-long-lived age group.

How many people are over 110 years old? ›

It was estimated in 2015 that between 150 and 600 living people had reached the age of 110. The true number is uncertain, as not all supercentenarians are known to researchers at a given time, and some claims cannot be validated or are fraudulent.

How many people will be 100 years old in 2050? ›

And this growth is expected to accelerate: Projections suggest there will be 3.7 million centenarians across the globe in 2050. While centenarians make up a small share of the world's older population, their proportion is growing.

How old is the oldest American? ›

No.

Born in Louisiana on July 25, 1909, Elizabeth Francis is currently the oldest living American at 114 years old, 7 months and 3 days old. She's the last remaining American who was born in the first decade of the 1900s.

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