LivingTo100.com
🇯🇵 JP LocalizedDescription
Living to 100 Life Expectancy Calculator was designed by Dr Thomas Perls, and uses the most current and carefully researched medical and scientific data in order to estimate how old you will live to be. Thomas Perls MD, MPH is the founder and director of the New England Centenarian Study, the largest study of centenarians and their families in the world. More can be learned about the study at www.bumc.bu.edu/centenarian.
What's New
Restyled app that is much easier to use and find your life expectancy
Details
- Developer
- Michael Isman
- Main Category
- Health & Fitness
- Version
- 1.0
- Version Release
- 2026-01-21
- Initial Release
- 2013-12-08
- Size
- 30 MB
- Age Rating
- 12+
- Price
- USD 4.99
- Languages
- EN
- Bundle ID
- com.livingto100
- Version Rating
- ★ 1.00 (1)
- First Seen
- 2026-05-28
Metadata updated 2026-06-12
Rank History
Free · Max 90 days · Top 5 categories shown (Y-axis: rank, lower is better)
No rank history data
Free Rankings
No rankings
Paid Rankings
No rankings
User Reviews
Only ten questions asked. Not on question on alcohol consumption, past medical issues, past surgery, are you a diabetic? Do you have heart conditions, etc. a total scam.
Without asking for health history I don’t see the value in this app. Sorry I paid for it.
Age, height, weight, smoking history and how long did your family live. There is nothing helpful here.
This is advertised as one of the best calculators, asking 50 questions. It’s no longer free, which I get. But to pay for this abbreviated version is insulting. What happened to the supposedly robust set of questions?
Too few or detailed questions. How about never smoked or quit 30 years ago. Do you have any diseases like cancer, diabetes or genetic things. I think this is useless.
Doesn’t ask any questions about current health problems or concerns. Useless
Can only use 2 time after purchase
Expected a more detailed assessment. I should have noted that this is 10 years old BEFORE I started.
Good, but didn’t seem to ask enough detailed questions to provide a decent response.
It only asked about 10 questions instead of the 40 I read about in AARP magazine which mentioned the app. It also wouldn’t allow you to retake the questionnaire?
Reviews are collected only for apps with detected changes (new entries or sharp risers).