AARP Hearing Center

If you’re a man and you’re reading this, you’re expected to die several years earlier than a woman.
That may not come as a big shock. After all, women have historically lived longer than men, something that’s true in nearly every place in the world. But in recent years, the longevity gap between the sexes has only grown.
Data published in 2023 in JAMA Internal Medicine found that in 2021, women were expected to live nearly six years longer than men in the U.S. — the largest gap in life expectancy between the sexes in nearly three decades. In 2022, the difference narrowed some. Still, the life expectancy for a woman in the U.S. was 80.2 years; for men, it was 74.8, the latest federal data shows.
What gives? Doctors and researchers point to several reasons women usually outlive men.
5 reasons women tend to live longer
1. COVID-19
The coronavirus is partly to blame for the recent growth in the gap, says Brandon Yan, M.D., a physician at the University of California, San Francisco, and lead researcher on the JAMA paper. Men are more likely to have chronic diseases, such as diabetes or COPD, which increases the odds of severe infection. They also face social norms for masculinity that may have contributed to masking and vaccine hesitancy during the height of the pandemic, Yan adds, “and more risky behaviors in general.”
Yan remains “cautiously optimistic” that the gap will start to shrink now that we’re in a better place with COVID-19. The virus is still circulating, but most people have some sort of immunity through vaccines and prior infections, and treatments can curb serious complications if you do catch it. Still, COVID’s taper doesn’t mean a man’s vulnerabilities will go away completely.
2. Biological differences
Estrogen, the levels of which plummet at menopause, is a hormone that’s health-protective, says Dawn Carr, director of the Claude Pepper Center at Florida State University and a faculty affiliate with the Institute for Successful Longevity.
According to the Cleveland Clinic, estrogen can help protect the heart and the brain, and it can lower inflammation and improve muscle mass and bone density. In fact, estrogen is believed to be the reason women develop heart disease — the leading killer in the U.S. — a decade later than men.
More From AARP
5 Ways Your Neighborhood Affects Your Health
Your surroundings can have a significant impact on your physical and mental well-being
How to Choose a Top-Notch Doctor as You Age
Physician Sharon Malone, author of ‘Grown Woman Talk,’ tells us what to consider when looking for the best care
Medical Advancements in Men’s Health
Breakthroughs in prostate cancer treatment and more
Recommended for You