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Possible Duplicate:
How do I calculate someone’s age in C#?

I want to calculate basically the age of employees - So we have DOB for each employee, So on the C# Side I want to do something like this -

int age=Convert.Int32(DateTime.Now-DOB);

I can use days and manipulate then get the age...but I wanted to know if there something I can use directly to get the number of years.

0

6 Answers 6

91

Do you want calculate the age in years for an employee? Then you can use this snippet (from Calculate age in C#):

DateTime now = DateTime.Today;
int age = now.Year - bday.Year;
if (bday > now.AddYears(-age)) age--;

If not, then please specify. I'm having a hard time understanding what you want.

5
  • Ya this is what i want to do...sorry for not phrasing it well..
    – Vishal
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:10
  • Hi, why do you decrement the age in the 3rd line?
    – WTFZane
    Mar 14, 2017 at 2:57
  • @WTFZane Because if the date that year is greater than the date in the current year, then they aren't that age yet. e.g. DOB = 30/5/2000. Today = 30/4/2010. age = 10. Then adjust to 9 as they are only 9 years old.
    – Ian
    Jul 12, 2017 at 9:30
  • Note this fails, by 1 day, for anyone born on 29th Feb as their birthday in a non-leap year is 1 March (i.e. "the day after 28 Feb") in certain countries (e.g. UK). That is because AddYears() returns 28 Feb for any non-leap year (if the date of birth input is a valid 29 Feb date). An ideal solution would include the country as a parameter :) Sep 25, 2020 at 15:19
  • Do this to take into consider leap years also DateTime.Today.Year - DateOfBirth.Year +(DateTime.Today.DayOfYear < DateOfBirth.DayOfYear?-1:0)
    – Ravan
    Dec 16, 2021 at 6:28
20

Subtracting two DateTime gives you a TimeSpan back. Unfortunately, the largest unit it gives you back is Days.

While not exact, you can estimate it, like this:

int days = (DateTime.Today - DOB).Days;

//assume 365.25 days per year
decimal years = days / 365.25m;

Edit: Whoops, TotalDays is a double, Days is an int.

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  • Nice answer!I wonder about the division with 365.25. Why is not just 365.0. I found that in other topics too and wonder if you can enlighten me.
    – ppolyzos
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:17
  • 4
    .25 is due to leap years Jun 30, 2010 at 20:18
  • I also fixed it to use Days instead of TotalDays. TotalDays is a double, not an int. Since we don't care about partial days anyway...
    – Powerlord
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:25
  • 1
    this isn't entirely accurate. We don't always have a leap year every four years. Jun 6, 2016 at 15:38
  • 4
    @matt-dot-net Since the only time that will matter is for people over 115 years old, I'm sure it will work in most cases. Sep 8, 2016 at 17:02
13

On this site they have:

   public static int CalculateAge(DateTime BirthDate)
   {
        int YearsPassed = DateTime.Now.Year - BirthDate.Year;
        // Are we before the birth date this year? If so subtract one year from the mix
        if (DateTime.Now.Month < BirthDate.Month || (DateTime.Now.Month == BirthDate.Month && DateTime.Now.Day < BirthDate.Day))
        {
            YearsPassed--;
        }
        return YearsPassed;
  }
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  • This should be the accepted answer. Nice And Simple Apr 23, 2021 at 23:31
  • Note, that you can use DateTime.Now.Month <= BirthDate.Month instead of DateTime.Now.Month < BirthDate.Month || (DateTime.Now.Month == BirthDate.Month.
    – BBSLIMS
    Jan 23, 2022 at 20:33
4
    private static Int32 CalculateAge(DateTime DOB)
    {
        DateTime temp = DOB;
        Int32 age = 0;
        while ((temp = temp.AddYears(1)) < DateTime.Now)
            age++;
        return age;
    }
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  • dividing by 365 doesn't handle leap years and actually dividing by 365.25 doesn't actually handle leap years accurately either. Jul 1, 2010 at 4:56
  • This is actually closer, to a working solution, but it is out by a day. Should be <= DateTime.Now in your specific example. Born 28/1/1980 -> 28/1/1981 = 0 in your example Sep 25, 2020 at 15:13
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Math.Round(DateTime.Now.Subtract(DOB).TotalDays/365.0)

As pointed out, this won't work. You'd have to do this:

(Int32)Math.Round((span.TotalDays - (span.TotalDays % 365.0)) / 365.0);

and at that point the other solution is less complex and continues to be accurate over larger spans.

Edit 2, how about:

Math.Floor(DateTime.Now.Subtract(DOB).TotalDays/365.0)

Christ I suck at basic math these days...

3
  • This will only work for shorter spans, obviously, but if nobody's going to be more than 150 years old...
    – Kendrick
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:10
  • Yup, it doesn't work. Timespan needs a "TotalYears" property :-)
    – Kendrick
    Jun 30, 2010 at 20:16
  • Sorry to flog a dead horse here but this also doesn't take into account leap years, so it'll return incorrect results in a time span of as little as 1 year. Mar 12, 2015 at 21:25
-4
(DateTime.Now - DOB).TotalDays/365

Subtracting a DateTime struct from another DateTime struct will give you a TimeSpan struct which has the property TotalDays... then just divide by 365

1
  • 4
    Not every year has 365 days...
    – Rob
    Feb 5, 2015 at 16:08

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