Tree Age Estimator

Estimate tree age from trunk diameter using ISA growth factors

You can estimate a living tree’s age without coring it or counting rings. Measure the trunk’s diameter at breast height (4.5 ft above the ground), pick the species, and the growth-factor method used by the International Society of Arboriculture will return the tree’s approximate age, along with its remaining lifespan and how much carbon it has locked away since it sprouted.

Pro tip: Don’t have a diameter tape? Wrap a regular tape measure around the trunk at 4.5 ft to get the circumference, then divide by 3.14. A trunk with a 31.4-inch circumference has a 10-inch diameter. The growth factor method is accurate to within ±20% for healthy forest-grown trees but can underestimate age for stressed or drought-prone urban trees by 10–30%.

in
Measure the trunk at 4.5 feet (breast height) above the ground.
Estimated Age
0 yrs
Annual Growth
0”/yr
Typical Lifespan
Stored CO₂
0 lbs
Life Stage
Young Mature Senior
Choose a species above
Pick from the dropdown to see species-specific growth rate, typical lifespan, and longevity notes.
Pro Feature
Tree Age Inventory
No trees added yet. Click Add Tree to start cataloging the trees on your property.
Multi-tree inventory & carbon totals require Pro
Save requires subscription

How the Growth Factor Method Works

The International Society of Arboriculture publishes a table of growth factors for common tree species. Each factor is a multiplier that converts a tree’s diameter at breast height (DBH, measured in inches) into an estimated age in years. The formula is simply:

Age (years) = DBH (inches) × Growth Factor

An American beech has a growth factor of 6.0, so a beech with a 15-inch trunk is roughly 90 years old. A fast-growing cottonwood has a growth factor of 2.0, so a cottonwood the same size is only about 30 years old. A dogwood has a growth factor of 7.0 — slow-growing species accumulate diameter far more slowly than fast growers, so a given diameter corresponds to much greater age.

Measuring DBH the Right Way

The standard measurement point for tree diameter is 4.5 feet above ground level, measured from the uphill side if the tree is on a slope. Use either a specialized diameter tape (which reads diameter directly) or a regular tape measure wrapped around the trunk for circumference, then divide by π (3.14159) to get the diameter.

Why the Estimate Is Only Approximate

Growth factors assume average conditions: forest-grown trees with reasonable sun, water, soil, and no major disturbances. In the real world, individual trees deviate from these averages in every direction. A tree growing in a parking lot island with compacted soil and heat stress grows slowly and will appear younger than it really is. A tree in a rich bottom land with abundant water can grow faster than its species average and appear older than it is.

Research comparing growth-factor age estimates to tree-ring counts finds that the method is typically accurate within ±20% for healthy open-grown urban trees. That’s close enough for most purposes — planning removal timelines, documenting old trees for historic listings, estimating carbon storage, or satisfying a curious homeowner. For legal or scientific work where precise age matters, a trained arborist can take an increment core: a pencil-thin cylinder drilled from bark to pith that reveals the actual ring count.

Tree Lifespan Ranges

Species lifespans vary wildly. Understanding where your tree sits on its species curve helps you plan:

Carbon Storage in Trees

Trees sequester carbon dioxide from the atmosphere and store the carbon in their woody tissue as long as that wood exists. The amount stored is proportional to the tree’s biomass, which in turn depends on its diameter, height, and wood density. The calculator above uses the USDA Forest Service allometric approximation: biomass scales roughly with DBH raised to the 2.4 power, and CO₂ stored equals biomass × 0.5 (the carbon fraction of dry wood) × 3.67 (the ratio of CO₂ to carbon by molecular weight).

A 20-inch DBH oak stores roughly 2,500 pounds of CO₂ across its lifetime — more than a typical car emits in a month of daily commuting. A mature 30-inch tree stores over 5,000 pounds. These numbers explain why urban forestry programs treat mature tree preservation as a climate strategy: cutting down a 30-inch oak and replacing it with a sapling releases decades of stored carbon that won’t be recaptured for 50–100 years, no matter how many saplings you plant.

When the Method Fails

Growth-factor estimation is most unreliable for these situations:

Now that you know how old your tree is, figure out how to care for it. The Tree Watering Calculator tells you exactly how much water it needs based on its diameter, and the Tree Pruning Calendar shows the best months to prune for your species.

EvvyTools Open full tool →