Why do some people live into their $90$s or past $100$, while others in the same country, even the same city, die much earlier? For years, the common wisdom has been that lifestyle and environment do most of the heavy lifting: what you eat, how active you are, and the kind of medical care you receive.
A major new study published in the journal Science suggests something surprising: your genes may play a much bigger role in how long you live than scientists once thought. According to this research, genetics may explain a little more than $50\%$ of the differences in how long people live — roughly twice as much as earlier estimates.
That doesn’t mean your fate is sealed at birth. It means you likely have a genetic “potential” lifespan, and your choices and circumstances still have a powerful influence on how close you get to that potential.
Genes vs. Lifestyle: A New Look at Longevity
For decades, most aging experts believed that lifespan was driven mainly by lifestyle and environment, with genetics contributing only about $20\%$–$30\%$. This new study, led by researchers including Dr. Uri Alon at the Weizmann Institute of Science in Israel, challenges that view.
By reanalyzing historical data in a more careful way, the researchers found that:
- Genetics accounts for about $55\%$ of differences in lifespan.
- The remaining $45\%$ is shaped by environment, lifestyle, and chance.
In other words, longevity looks a lot like other complex health traits — such as cholesterol levels, bone density, or risk of osteoporosis — which are strongly influenced by many genes but still highly responsive to how and where you live.
Key takeaways: nature vs. nurture in longevity
- Your genes set a range for how long you might live, not a fixed number.
- Lifestyle and environment help determine where you land within that range.
- Even with “average” genes, you can add meaningful years of healthy life by focusing on habits you can control.
Why Earlier Studies Underrated the Power of Genes
Older research often relied on data from people born before the late $19$th century. Back then, many lives were cut short by problems that had little to do with genetics, such as:
- Infectious diseases (before vaccines and antibiotics)
- Unsafe drinking water and poor sanitation
- Lack of basic medical care
- Workplace and transportation accidents (before modern safety standards)
These powerful non-genetic forces “drowned out” the genetic signal. As lead author Uri Alon explains, once researchers removed the noise created by infections and accidents, the impact of genetics became much clearer — the “genes shine out to their full effect.”
That doesn’t mean the environment is unimportant. It means that in a modern setting — with vaccines, cleaner water, and safer working conditions — your genetic wiring plays a more visible role in how long you live.
What Does It Mean That About $55\%$ of Lifespan Is Genetic?
Saying that about $55\%$ of lifespan is “genetic” does not mean that $55\%$ of your personal lifespan is already pre-written and untouchable. It means that, when you look at big populations:
- About $55\%$ of the differences in how long people live can be traced to genetic variation.
- About $45\%$ of those differences are due to lifestyle, environment, and chance.
Think of it this way: your genes help define your starting blueprint, but your daily choices, your healthcare, your social connections, and a bit of luck all help determine what actually gets built.
Many people notice this anecdotally: “Everyone in my family lives into their $90$s,” or, “Heart disease shows up early on my dad’s side.” This new research suggests those family patterns are not just coincidence — they often reflect a significant genetic component.
How Much Control Do You Still Have?

According to the study, roughly $45\%$ of lifespan is influenced by factors beyond your genes. Some of that is random chance — accidents, unexpected illnesses — but a meaningful portion is tied to your decisions and surroundings.
Dr. Alon estimates that healthy lifestyle choices can shift your genetically influenced lifespan by about $5$ years in either direction. For example:
- Someone with genes pointing toward a lifespan of around $80$ years might reach about $85$ with consistently healthy habits.
- The same person could see that expectancy drop toward $75$ years with unhealthy habits.
So while you likely cannot turn a genetically driven $80$-year potential into $100$ just with lifestyle, you can still meaningfully extend — or shorten — your life within that genetic window.
What lifestyle factors matter most?
- Regular physical activity
Aim to move your body most days of the week — walking, strength training, and activities you enjoy all count. - Nutritious eating patterns
Emphasize vegetables, fruits, whole grains, lean proteins, and healthy fats; limit ultra-processed foods, added sugars, and excessive sodium. - Not smoking (or quitting)
Smoking remains one of the most powerful ways to shorten lifespan; quitting at any age can add years. - Moderation with alcohol
Many guidelines recommend limiting or avoiding alcohol to reduce long-term health risks. - Quality sleep
Most adults do best with around $7$–$9$ hours of good-quality sleep per night. - Social connection
Strong relationships and community involvement are consistently linked with longer, healthier lives. - Preventive healthcare
Staying up to date on screenings, vaccines, and regular checkups can catch issues early and prevent complications.
Longevity Is About More Than a Few “Longevity Genes”
Researchers have identified some genes that seem to protect against aging-related damage or increase risk for certain age-related diseases. But experts emphasize that lifespan is not controlled by a single “longevity gene.”
As Dr. Deborah Kado, co-director of the Stanford Longevity Center, has noted, biology is extremely complex. Longevity is likely influenced by:
- Many genes working together (and sometimes against each other)
- How those genes are turned on or off over a lifetime
- Interactions between genes and your environment (diet, toxins, stress, infections, etc.)
We are only beginning to understand the full “genetic architecture” of aging.
Could we someday “treat” aging itself?
One of the long-term goals in aging research is to identify the key biological pathways that drive aging, rather than just targeting one disease at a time (such as heart disease, cancer, or osteoporosis).
As Dr. Alon points out: if we understand the genes and mechanisms that influence biological aging, we may eventually be able to:
- Develop drugs that slow multiple age-related diseases at once
- Design more personalized prevention plans based on genetic risk
- Improve not just how long we live, but how long we stay healthy
This kind of “aging-directed” therapy is still likely decades away, and it raises ethical and safety questions. But studies like this one help map the pathways scientists may one day target.
Can Genetic Tests Tell You How Long You’ll Live?
Right now, there is no reliable test that can tell you your “genetic age” or your precise genetically determined lifespan. Modern genetic testing can:
- Identify inherited risks for specific conditions (such as some cancers, heart rhythm disorders, or kidney disease)
- Help doctors tailor treatments or medications
- Sometimes clarify why certain diseases run in families
But it cannot yet accurately predict how long an individual person will live. Developing a tool that can measure genetic lifespan potential would be a major milestone in aging research, and scientists say we are not there yet.
Thinking about genetic testing? Questions to ask
- What exactly is this test looking for?
- How accurate and clinically useful are the results?
- Will the results change how I manage my health right now?
- How will my genetic information be stored and protected?
- Should I meet with a genetic counselor first?
If you are considering genetic testing, it is wise to discuss it with your healthcare provider or a genetic counselor who can help interpret results in context.
Life Expectancy in the U.S.: Where We Stand
According to recent data from the U.S. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC), life expectancy in the United States reached around $79$ years in $2024$. It had been climbing for decades before dropping during the COVID-$19$ pandemic, then partially recovering.
Those averages blend together people with very different genetic backgrounds, lifestyles, and levels of access to care. Within the U.S., life expectancy still varies significantly by:
- Race and ethnicity
- Income and education
- Neighborhood and region
- Access to healthcare, healthy food, and safe places to be active
Even with strong genetics, growing up or living in an environment with fewer resources, more pollution, higher stress, or limited healthcare can shorten lifespan. That is why public health efforts — not just personal habits — remain critical.
Healthspan vs. Lifespan: Is It About Years Lived or Years Lived Well?
The new study also feeds into a larger debate among aging researchers: is the goal to maximize how long we live, or how long we live in good health?
Many experts argue that healthspan — the number of years we live without major disability or serious chronic illness — is just as important, if not more important, than total lifespan.
Dan Arking, a scientist who studies aging at Johns Hopkins University, has pointed out that:
- Reducing the risk of age-related diseases (like osteoporosis, heart disease, or dementia) can add more healthy years.
- Extending total lifespan is much harder, especially near the extreme upper limit of human life.
So far, the record for the longest confirmed human lifespan is about $122$ years. Even as average life expectancy has roughly doubled over the last $150$ years, the maximum human lifespan has barely changed. Dr. Alon notes that mortality among people who reach their $100$s has not improved much in recent decades.
Once we approach ages near $100$ and beyond, the human body may hit a kind of “biological wall” near $120$ years. Pushing that limit significantly higher could require radical, and potentially risky, interventions.
Practical Ways to Support a Longer, Healthier Life
You cannot change your genes, but you can change how they play out. Whether your genetic deck is stacked for a longer or shorter lifespan, the same core strategies tend to support both longevity and healthspan:
- Move regularly.
Aim for a mix of aerobic activity (like walking, biking, or swimming) and strength training. Even light, frequent movement is better than long periods of sitting. - Build a balanced, mostly unprocessed diet.
Emphasize whole foods — vegetables, fruits, beans, nuts, seeds, whole grains, and lean proteins. Limit ultra-processed snacks, sugary drinks, and excessive fast food. - Protect your heart and blood vessels.
Manage blood pressure, cholesterol, and blood sugar through lifestyle and medication when needed. Heart disease and stroke are leading causes of death in the U.S. - Do not smoke; if you do, seek help to quit.
Quitting smoking can add years back to your life at almost any age. - Use alcohol cautiously, if at all.
Follow current medical guidance on safe limits, and talk with your doctor if you are unsure what is right for you. - Prioritize sleep and stress management.
Chronic sleep deprivation and unmanaged stress can raise the risk of many age-related diseases. - Stay connected.
Strong social ties — family, friends, community, faith groups, volunteering — are consistently linked to better health and longer life. - Keep up with preventive care.
Screenings for cancers, blood pressure checks, cholesterol tests, vaccines, and regular dental and eye exams all help catch problems early.
A simple framework to remember
You can think of longevity support in three pillars:
- Protect what you have — avoid clear harms (smoking, heavy drinking, reckless driving, ignoring medical advice for serious conditions).
- Build resilience — move often, eat well, sleep, manage stress, and stay socially engaged.
- Plan ahead — use preventive health services, know your family history, and make adjustments as your body and life circumstances change.
What This Study Really Means for You
This new research does not say, “You are stuck with whatever your DNA decides.” Instead, it offers a more balanced view:
- Your genes matter more than we used to think — roughly half of the differences in lifespan may come from genetics.
- Your decisions and environment still matter a lot — and they are the part you can actually influence.
- Focusing on what you can control — especially staying active, eating well, maintaining social ties, and using preventive healthcare — can likely add years of better health, even if it does not guarantee extreme old age.
As Dr. Alon puts it, genetics is not “a done deal.” You may not be able to turn a genetically $80$-year lifespan into $120$, but you may be able to turn $75$ into $82$, or $82$ into $87$, and, just as important, spend more of those years feeling well.
Bottom Line
Longevity is not purely a matter of clean living, and it is not purely a matter of luck or DNA. It appears to be closer to a $50$–$50$ partnership between your genes and your environment.
You cannot rewrite your genetic code, but you can absolutely influence how that code plays out in real life — starting today, with the habits you choose and the care you receive.
Important: This article is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Always talk with your healthcare provider about your personal health risks and before making major changes to your lifestyle, medications, or medical care.
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