Estimate your date of birth from a known age in years, months, and days. Reverse-calculate an approximate birth date from any reference date.
The Date of Birth from Age Calculator estimates a birth date given a known age in years, months, and days, and a reference date. This is the reverse of a standard age calculator—instead of computing age from a birthday, it computes the approximate birthday from an age.
This is useful when you know someone's age (from a document, record, or statement) and the date on which that age was recorded, and you need to determine or verify their approximate date of birth. Genealogists use this technique frequently with census records, where a person's age at a specific date is recorded but their exact birthday is not.
The calculation subtracts the given years, months, and days from the reference date to arrive at the approximate birth date. Due to the complexity of month lengths and leap years, the result may be approximate by a day or two, but it provides an excellent estimate for practical purposes.
When a document records someone's age on a specific date but not their birthday, this calculator reverse-engineers the approximate birth date. It's invaluable for genealogists, records researchers, and anyone who needs a DOB from an age. Data-driven tracking enables proactive schedule management, helping professionals protect focused work time and reduce the cognitive overhead of constant task-switching throughout the day.
Estimated DOB ≈ Reference Date − Years − Months − Days Subtract years first, then months, then days, adjusting for month boundaries and leap years.
Result: Approximately June 15, 1990
Reference: February 8, 2026. Subtract 35 years: February 8, 1991. Subtract 7 months: July 8, 1990. Subtract 24 days: June 14–15, 1990 (approx). The estimate suggests a birth date around June 15, 1990.
Historical records frequently list age rather than birth date. Census records, military muster rolls, immigration manifests, and gravestones often provide age at a specific date. Converting these ages to approximate birth dates is a core genealogical technique that helps connect individuals across multiple records.
Historical ages were not always accurately reported. Self-reported ages could be approximate (especially for illiterate individuals), and recording errors were common. Ages might be systematically rounded to the nearest 5 or 10. These factors mean that an estimated birth date from a historical record should be treated as a range rather than an exact date.
The best practice is to estimate birth dates from several independent records and look for convergence. If a census, a marriage record, and a death certificate all suggest birth dates within a few months of each other, you can be more confident in the estimate.
If the age is known precisely in years, months, and days, the estimate is accurate within 1–2 days due to varying month lengths. If only years and months are known, the estimate could be off by up to a month. If only years are known, the birth date could be anywhere in a 12-month window.
Historical census records often list a person's age but not their birthday. By combining the census date with the recorded age, genealogists can estimate the birth date, which helps locate birth records and match individuals across different document sets.
If you only know the age in years (not months or days), set months and days to 0. The result will be the reference date minus the given years. The actual birthday could be anywhere in the preceding year from that result.
This calculator uses the Gregorian calendar. If ages were recorded using the Julian calendar (before 1752 in English-speaking countries) or another system, conversion to the Gregorian system may be needed before using this tool.
The calculation correctly handles leap years when subtracting months and days. If subtraction crosses a February 29 boundary, the result adjusts to the appropriate date in non-leap years.
Yes. When a clinical note records a patient's age at a visit date, this calculator can estimate the birth date for record verification. However, official records should always use documented birth dates from identification documents.