- In the United States, women are expected to outlive men by 5.3
years. Women born in 2023 were expected to live to be 81.1 years old.
Men had a life expectancy of 75.8 years.
- That longevity gap has changed over time. It was 2 years in 1900 and peaked at nearly 8 years around 1980.
- Life expectancy fell in 2020 due to COVID-19 but has largely
rebounded. Men lost an average of 2.8 years and recovered 2.3. Women
lost an average of 2.1 years and regained 1.8.
- The longevity gap also narrows at older ages, in part because more
men die before age 65. A 65-year-old man in 2023 was expected to live
another 18.2 years to age 83.2, while a woman the same age could expect
another 20.7 years. (If you’re feeling morbidly curious, try the Social
Security Administration’s life expectancy calculator to forecast how much longer a person might live based on birth date and gender.)
- Causes of death also differ between men and women. In 2023, heart disease, cancer, and accidents killed men at higher rates than women: 457 of every 100,000 men died from these, compared to 289 women.
Online report of the Progressive Review. Since 1964, the news while there's still time to do something about it.
April 22, 2025
Life exspectancy of men and women in America
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