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Elephant Lifespan: How Long Do Elephants Live?

Elephants are one of the longest-lived land mammals on earth. They grow up slowly, breed slowly, and live long enough to develop the kind of memory, social structure, and cultural knowledge that only a few species ever do. But how long do elephants actually live – and why does captivity so often cut their lifespan short?

Wild elephants live around 60 to 70 years on average, with some individuals reaching their late 70s. African bush elephants and Asian elephants have broadly similar lifespans in the wild. Elephants in captivity typically live shorter lives – usually 15 to 40 years – though sanctuary conditions are significantly better than zoo or circus environments. The oldest documented elephant lived to around 86 years old.

This guide breaks down elephant lifespan by species, by environment (wild vs zoo vs sanctuary), by life stage, and by the threats and health issues that shorten their lives. It also covers how scientists actually measure an elephant’s age, the oldest elephants on record, and what elephant lifespan looks like compared to other animals.


Elephant Lifespan at a Glance

Species / EnvironmentTypical lifespanMaximum recorded
African bush elephant (wild)60 to 70 years~74 years
African forest elephant (wild)50 to 65 yearsEstimated ~70 years
Asian elephant (wild)55 to 70 years~86 years (Lin Wang, Taipei Zoo, captive)
Asian elephant (zoo)Median around 19 yearsVaries widely
African elephant (zoo)Median around 17 yearsVaries widely
Elephant (accredited sanctuary)40 to 60 yearsApproaching wild figures
Elephant lifespan ranges vary widely by species and environment. Figures based on peer-reviewed longevity research and sanctuary records.

Lifespan of Wild Elephants

In the wild, elephants are marathon lifers. A female African bush elephant that makes it past the vulnerable first decade has a realistic shot at 60, 70, or even 75 years of life. Male elephants typically live slightly shorter lives, not because of genetics but because bulls take more risks – they fight for mates during musth, they roam further, and they’re more likely to be targeted by poachers.

How long do African elephants live?

African bush elephants (Loxodonta africana) typically live 60 to 70 years in the wild. A 2008 Science study tracking elephants in Amboseli National Park in Kenya put median wild lifespan at around 56 years for females and 31 years for males, with the top 10 percent of females reaching into their late 60s.

African forest elephants (Loxodonta cyclotis) are less studied because their rainforest habitats make them harder to track, but their lifespan appears similar – in the 50 to 65 year range. Forest elephants reach sexual maturity later than bush elephants (around age 23 versus 11), which partly offsets their shorter typical life.

Our guide to African bush elephants vs forest elephants covers the full species differences.

How long do Asian elephants live?

Asian elephants (Elephas maximus) typically live 55 to 70 years in the wild. They follow a similar aging curve to African elephants – slow maturity, long reproductive life, and a natural decline tied more to tooth wear than to organ failure.

Long-term studies of working Asian elephants in Myanmar’s timber camps (where elephants live semi-wild lives) have documented females reaching their 70s and rare individuals pushing past 80. These numbers are close to the upper limit of what an elephant body can physiologically support.

Why elephants live so long

Three biological factors explain elephant longevity:

  • Large body size. Large mammals tend to live longer. Lower surface-area-to-volume ratio means slower metabolism per cell.
  • Low cancer rates. Elephants have 20 copies of the TP53 tumor-suppressor gene (humans have 1). This “Peto’s paradox” buffer means cellular damage is much less likely to become cancer.
  • Slow reproduction. A 22-month pregnancy and 4 to 5 year gap between calves means elephants invest heavily in each offspring rather than reproducing fast.

Lifespan of Elephants in Captivity

Captive elephants live dramatically shorter lives than their wild counterparts. A landmark 2008 Science study by Ros Clubb and colleagues at the University of Oxford analyzed more than 4,500 female elephants across European zoos and Asian timber camps. The results were stark:

  • Median lifespan of zoo-born African elephants: 16.9 years
  • Median lifespan of wild African elephants in Amboseli: 56 years
  • Median lifespan of zoo-born Asian elephants: 18.9 years
  • Median lifespan of Asian elephants in Myanmar timber camps: 41.7 years

In short, zoo elephants live about a third as long as their wild counterparts. The situation in accredited sanctuaries is much better – sanctuary elephants routinely reach their 50s and 60s – but classic zoo environments and circus work are hard on the species.

Why captive elephants face shorter lives

  • Obesity and joint disease. Zoo enclosures can be 10,000 times smaller than the ranges wild elephants cover daily. The result is osteoarthritis, foot abscesses, and obesity-driven cardiovascular problems.
  • Chronic stress. Elephants in zoos show elevated cortisol, stereotypic behaviours (swaying, head-bobbing), and higher infant mortality – all markers of chronic stress.
  • Social isolation. Elephants live in matrilineal herds of 10 to 30 related females. Small zoo groups of 2 to 4 unrelated individuals don’t provide the same structure.
  • Foot and skin infections. Concrete and compact dirt flooring cause foot problems that are extremely rare in wild populations.
  • Tuberculosis. Captive Asian elephants have a documented risk of TB, often contracted from humans.
  • Dental issues. Hard zoo diets wear teeth differently than natural browsing, sometimes causing tooth loss before the elephant is actually biologically aged.

Sanctuaries do better

Accredited elephant sanctuaries – large-acreage facilities designed for elephants’ physical and social needs – produce much better lifespan outcomes than traditional zoos. Elephants at the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee, Performing Animal Welfare Society (PAWS) in California, and Elephant Refuge North America in Georgia have routinely lived into their 50s and 60s, closing much of the gap with the wild.

If you’re looking for where to see elephants responsibly in the US, our guide on where to see elephants in the US covers every accredited sanctuary and AZA zoo with elephants.


Elephant Life Stages

Elephant life follows clear stages, each with its own milestones, vulnerabilities, and roles in the herd.

StageAge rangeWhat’s happening
Calf0 to 2 yearsNursing, learning social structure, highly dependent on mother and allomothers
Juvenile2 to 8 yearsWeaning, playing, learning feeding and navigation from the herd
Sub-adult8 to 15 yearsMales begin to leave the herd; females stay with mothers
Adult female15 to 50+ yearsReproducing, caring for calves, taking on leadership roles
Adult male15 to 50+ yearsRoaming, entering musth, competing for mates
Matriarch30 to 70+ yearsLeading the family group, holding memory of water sources and migration routes
Elderly60+ yearsTooth wear limiting feeding, slowed movement, often dying of starvation related to dental wear
Elephant life stages from calf to elderly.

How Scientists Measure an Elephant’s Age

Researchers use several methods to estimate elephant age in the wild, since you obviously can’t ask an elephant for its birth certificate.

  • Tooth wear and replacement. Elephants go through 6 sets of molars in their lifetime. By examining molar wear and which set is in place, researchers can estimate age to within a few years.
  • Shoulder height. Elephants keep growing throughout life (slowly after maturity), so shoulder height gives a rough proxy.
  • Tusk size and wear. Tusks grow at about 17 cm per year, though wear complicates the measurement.
  • Long-term field studies. In populations like Amboseli that have been studied for decades, many elephants are individually known and their birthdates recorded.

Our guide on elephant tusks covers more on how tusks change with age.


What Affects Elephant Lifespan?

Natural threats

  • Drought and food scarcity. Long dry spells can starve elephants, especially the very young and very old.
  • Predation on calves. Lions, hyenas, and crocodiles occasionally take calves. Adults are effectively immune to predation.
  • Tooth wear. The final set of molars wears down around age 60 to 70. Without replacement teeth, feeding becomes impossible – this is the most common natural cause of death in very old wild elephants.
  • Disease. Elephant endotheliotropic herpesvirus (EEHV) is a significant killer of young Asian elephants in the wild and in captivity.

Human-caused threats

  • Poaching. The largest single threat. Ivory poaching dramatically shortens the lives of adults, and removes the experienced matriarchs who hold generational knowledge.
  • Habitat loss. Deforestation and agricultural expansion squeeze elephants into smaller areas, which increases conflict with humans.
  • Human-elephant conflict. Elephants killed in retaliation for crop raiding or infrastructure damage.
  • Captivity stress. Zoo elephants lose 30 to 40 years compared to wild conspecifics.

For the full picture on threats, see our guide on why elephants are endangered.


The Oldest Known Elephant

The oldest documented elephant was Lin Wang (林旺), an Asian bull who lived at the Taipei Zoo in Taiwan. Lin Wang was born around 1917 in Myanmar, served as a pack animal for the Chinese Expeditionary Force in World War II, and eventually retired to Taipei Zoo in 1952. He died in 2003 at an estimated 86 years old, making him the oldest elephant on record.

Other notable long-lived elephants include:

  • Vatsala (India) – An Asian elephant reported to have lived 85+ years at the Panna Tiger Reserve before dying in 2020.
  • Shirley (USA, Tennessee) – An Asian elephant at the Elephant Sanctuary in Tennessee who reached 72 before dying in 2021.
  • Ahmed (Kenya) – The famous Big Tusker lived to roughly 55, which was a natural death for a bull in his habitat.

Elephants reaching their mid-80s is extremely rare. 70-75 is the realistic upper end for most individuals.


How Elephant Lifespan Compares to Other Animals

AnimalTypical wild lifespanMaximum recorded
Elephant (African bush)60 to 70 years~74 years
Elephant (Asian)55 to 70 years~86 years (captive)
Human70 to 80 years122 years
Chimpanzee30 to 40 years~60 years
Giraffe20 to 25 years~38 years
Horse25 to 30 years~62 years
Cow15 to 20 years~48 years
Dog10 to 13 years~29 years
Bowhead whale150 to 200 years~211 years
Elephants are among the longest-lived land mammals, second only to humans.

How Can We Help Elephants Live Longer Lives?

  • Support anti-poaching work. Donations to organizations like Save the Elephants, Big Life Foundation, and the African Wildlife Foundation fund rangers and monitoring on the ground.
  • Avoid ivory products entirely. Demand drives poaching. A shrinking ivory market means fewer elephants killed for their tusks.
  • Choose responsible wildlife tourism. Support safaris that fund conservation, not circuses or riding camps.
  • Back sanctuary-based captive welfare. Accredited sanctuaries (Tennessee, PAWS, ERNA) provide dramatically better lives than traditional zoos.
  • Support habitat-connectivity projects. Wildlife corridors between protected areas reduce human-elephant conflict, one of the main drivers of shortened adult lifespans.

For more on conservation, see our guides on how many elephants are left in the world and how to adopt an elephant.


Frequently Asked Questions about Elephant Lifespan

How long do elephants live?

Wild elephants live around 60 to 70 years on average, with some individuals reaching their late 70s. African and Asian species have broadly similar lifespans. Elephants in zoos live much shorter lives – typically 15 to 20 years – while accredited sanctuaries achieve lifespans much closer to wild figures.

How long do African elephants live?

African bush elephants live around 60 to 70 years in the wild. The Amboseli long-term study has tracked females reaching their late 60s. African forest elephants live slightly shorter lives on average, in the 50 to 65 year range.

How long do Asian elephants live?

Asian elephants typically live 55 to 70 years in the wild. Long-term studies of semi-wild working elephants in Myanmar have documented individuals reaching their 70s and rare cases approaching 80. The oldest documented Asian elephant was Lin Wang, who died at 86 at the Taipei Zoo in 2003.

What is the oldest elephant ever recorded?

Lin Wang, an Asian bull elephant at the Taipei Zoo in Taiwan, is the oldest elephant on record. He was born around 1917 in Myanmar and died in 2003 at an estimated 86 years old. He lived through World War II as a military pack animal before retiring to Taipei Zoo in 1952.

Do elephants live longer in the wild or in captivity?

In the wild, by a large margin. A 2008 Science study found that zoo-born African elephants have a median lifespan of 17 years, versus 56 years in the wild. Zoo-born Asian elephants live to 19, versus 42 for working elephants in Myanmar timber camps. Accredited sanctuaries do considerably better than traditional zoos but still fall short of wild lifespans.

What do elephants die of?

In the wild, most elephants that reach old age die of tooth wear. Elephants go through six sets of molars in a lifetime, and when the last set wears down around age 60 to 70, they can no longer chew their food effectively and eventually starve. Younger adults are more often killed by poaching, human-elephant conflict, or disease (notably EEHV in young Asian elephants).

Do elephants sleep every night?

Wild elephants sleep very little – around 2 hours a night on average, often in short bursts while standing. Elephants in captivity sleep considerably more (4 to 6 hours), partly because they don’t need to stay alert for predators.

How can you tell how old an elephant is?

Researchers estimate elephant age from tooth wear (elephants go through six sets of molars in their lifetime), shoulder height (elephants keep growing slowly even as adults), tusk size and wear, and long-term population records where individual elephants are tracked from birth. Precise ages are usually only possible in long-studied populations like Amboseli.


By Ethan Smith

Ethan aka "The Elephant Man" is a huge fan of elephants. He lives in the US with his wife and three kids. Together they travel to Africa every year to go on safari and see the big 5.

Ethan worked many years covering the news about the endangered animal species of Africa and is even mentioned in the now world renowned documentary "Planet Earth".

Ethan is passionate about conservation and loves educating others about these amazing animals.

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