How to Live to 90 or Even Longer

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Do you want to live to age 90 (or even longer)? You have far more control over your longevity and life expectancy than you may think.

Sure, your genetics and family history factor into how long you will live (and if your parents lived long, healthy lives, that increases your odds). But your lifestyle choices may be more important than your genes. In fact, your genes probably make up less than 30% of what determines how long you will live. The rest of your odds for longer life stems from your environment and your own lifestyle choices. And the good news is, you have lots more control over those.

This article discusses the odds of living to 90, as well as lifestyle choices you can make to maintain your health and live a longer life.

What Ore the odds of Living To Be 90?

According to J.P. Morgan's 2024 Guide to Retirement, the chance of living to 90 is 33% for a 65-year-old woman and 21% for a 65-year-old man.

Happy 97-year-old lady putting tulips in vase
Getty Images / Lucia Lambriex / Taxi

5 Behaviors That Can Get You to Age 90

Reaching age 90 in good health is a great longevity goal. Gender plays into this. Men have a harder time reaching age 90 than women. By studying men and their behaviors, researchers can try to figure out what really matters for healthy and successful aging. In 1981, researchers started to do just that by enrolling 2,300 healthy men with an average age of over 70 into a study on healthy aging. The men were given yearly surveys about their lifestyle and health.

By the end of the study some 16 years later, 970 men (41%) had made it to their 90s. Those 41% had different habits and behaviors that helped them live longer.

According to this study, the secret to living past 90 may involve making the following lifestyle choices:

  • Not smoking
  • Maintaining a healthy weight
  • Not having high blood pressure
  • Getting regular exercise
  • Preventing diabetes

How to Live Longer

Specifically, the study found that:

  • Non-smokers were twice as likely to see age 90 as smokers.
  • Diabetes increases your chance of death before age 90 by 86 percent.
  • Obese people had a 44 percent increase in the chance of death before age 90.
  • High blood pressure increased death risk before 90 by 28 percent.
  • Men who exercise reduced their death risk before 90 by 20 percent to 30 percent (depending on how much and how often they exercised).

These percentages were calculated after the researchers accounted for the health of the participants at the start of the study, education level and other factors known to impact life expectancy. A further review of studies found that these factors not only shorten life but when you have several of them together, you greatly decrease your chance of survival.

How Can This Work for You?

You may be able to live a longer life by:

  • Quitting smoking
  • Maintaining a healthy weight
  • Moving more
  • Eating a healthy diet
  • Maintaining good blood pressure and blood sugar control

You can get started on living longer by working on one of them each month. For example, you can quit smoking this month, lose weight next month, and get your blood pressure under control the following month.

For some of these factors, like high blood pressure and diabetes, you may need the help of your healthcare provider to get your condition under control. For the other factors, you may need information and the support of your friends and family.

Here's a list of resources to get you started:

Summary

More people than ever before are reaching age 90, and if you take steps to preserve your health, you can be one of them. If you have any of the major risk factors, you can reduce those risks starting today.

4 Sources
Verywell Health uses only high-quality sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the facts within our articles. Read our editorial process to learn more about how we fact-check and keep our content accurate, reliable, and trustworthy.
  1. Ruby JG, Wright KM, Rand KA, et al. Estimates of the heritability of human longevity are substantially inflated due to assortative mating. Genetics. 2018;210(3):1109-1124. doi:10.1534/genetics.118.301613

  2. J.P. Morgan Asset Management. Guide to Retirement 2024.

  3. Yates LB, Djoussé L, Kurth T, Buring JE, Gaziano JM. Exceptional longevity in men: modifiable factors associated with survival and function to age 90 years. Arch Intern Med. 2008;168(3):284-90. doi:10.1001/archinternmed.2007.77

  4. Rizzuto D, Fratiglioni L. Lifestyle factors related to mortality and survival: a mini-review. Gerontology. 2014;60(4):327-35. doi:10.1159/000356771

By Mark Stibich, PhD
Mark Stibich, PhD, FIDSA, is a behavior change expert with experience helping individuals make lasting lifestyle improvements.