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Age Calculator (Japan)

Enter your birth date to automatically calculate mannenrei (満年齢, Japan's legal age), kazoedoshi (数え年, Japan's traditional age), and year age. Since the Act on the Manner of Counting Age (enacted 1902, amended 1950), Japan uses mannenrei as the official age.

Age Calculation Results
Mannenrei (満年齢)
Japan's legal age
Kazoedoshi (数え年)
Japan's traditional age
Year Age
Current year - Birth year
Days Lived
Since birth

Detailed Information

Birth Date
Day of Birth
Life Period
Weeks Lived
Months Lived
Next Birthday
Until Birthday

Japan's Age Calculation Methods

Mannenrei (満年齢) — Legal age in Japan:
• Age increases on your birthday
• Made official by law enacted 1902, amended 1950
• Used for all official purposes: school, government, contracts

Kazoedoshi (数え年) — Traditional Japanese age:
• Born at age 1
• Everyone ages one year on New Year's Day (Jan 1)
• No longer used officially, but still referenced for Shichi-Go-San, yakudoshi (unlucky-age rites), and longevity celebrations like kanreki

Year Age:
• Current year - Birth year
• Calculated regardless of birthday

Since April 1, 2022:
Japan's age of majority (seinen) was lowered from 20 to 18 under a Civil Code amendment. Drinking, smoking, and public gambling remain restricted to age 20+.

GUIDE

Learn more

01

Japan's Two Age Systems: Mannenrei and Kazoedoshi

Japan has two traditional ways of counting age: mannenrei (満年齢), the international standard where you start at 0 and gain a year on each birthday, and kazoedoshi (数え年), the older method where a baby is considered 1 year old at birth and everyone gains a year together on New Year's Day. Kazoedoshi was the everyday standard through the Meiji era, but the Act on the Manner of Counting Age, enacted in 1902 and amended in 1950, formally introduced and then firmly established mannenrei as the official standard used across Japanese society. Today, when Japanese speak of someone's age without qualification, they almost always mean mannenrei.

02

How Mannenrei Is Calculated and Used

Mannenrei starts at 0 on the day of birth and increases by one on each birthday, calculated by subtracting birth year from the current year and adjusting for whether the birthday has passed. In Japan, mannenrei is the basis for school enrollment, driver's licensing, employment, pension eligibility, and virtually all contracts. A regular driver's license can be obtained from age 18, and the national pension (kokumin nenkin) is normally payable from age 65, with early claims from 60 or deferred claims up to 75. Knowing your precise mannenrei matters for financial planning and paperwork.

03

Kazoedoshi vs. Year Age

Kazoedoshi counts a newborn as 1 year old and adds a year to everyone on New Year's Day, regardless of individual birthdays. Year age is simply the current year minus the birth year, ignoring birthdays entirely — the simplest method of the three. Mannenrei represents legal/administrative age, kazoedoshi represents traditional/ceremonial age, and year age represents a purely statistical age. Kazoedoshi has no official use today, but it is still consulted for events like Shichi-Go-San (a children's rite of passage), yakudoshi (traditionally unlucky ages), and longevity celebrations such as kanreki (60th) and kiju (77th).

04

Birthday-Related Date Calculations

Calculating birthday-related dates is a useful companion to age calculation. Days until your next birthday helps with planning. Days lived is the exact count from birth to today — for example, turning 30 means roughly 10,950 days lived. Calculating weeks or months lived is handy too, especially for tracking a baby's health-checkup schedule by months. Knowing which day of the week you were born on is a fun fact, and marking milestones like your 10,000th day alive can be a meaningful occasion.

05

Age Standards in Japanese Law and Systems

Age underpins many Japanese laws and systems. Since the Civil Code amendment effective April 1, 2022, the age of adulthood (seinen) dropped from 20 to 18, granting 18-year-olds the right to sign contracts without parental consent and to obtain a 10-year passport, among other things. However, drinking and smoking remain restricted to age 20 and above under separate special laws, as does participation in public gambling such as horse and boat racing. A regular driver's license can be obtained from 18, and the national pension normally starts payment at 65 (with a 60–75 flexible range).

06

The Relationship Between Education and Age

In Japan's education system, elementary school (shōgakkō) enrollment begins on April 1st of the school year in which a child turns 6, with the cutoff meaning children born from April 2 of one year through April 1 of the next belong to the same school grade. Children born in January–March are called 'hayaumare,' entering school relatively younger than same-grade peers born later in the calendar year. Compulsory education spans 6 years of elementary and 3 of junior high school. University admission has no explicit age limit, though most students enroll at 18. Distance-learning universities and graduate schools for working adults have grown in importance as lifelong learning gains prominence.

Frequently asked questions

How is mannenrei (満年齢) calculated?
You start at age 0 at birth and add one year on each birthday. This has been Japan's official legal age since a law enacted in 1902 and amended in 1950.
What is kazoedoshi (数え年)?
A traditional Japanese method starting at 1 at birth and adding one year on every New Year's Day. It's no longer used officially but is still referenced for Shichi-Go-San, yakudoshi, and kanreki celebrations.