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This calculator takes your birth date and a life expectancy estimate (default 80 years) and maps every week of your expected life onto a grid. Each row represents one year of your life, and each column represents one of the 52 weeks in that year.
The colored squares show weeks you have already lived, the highlighted square marks your current week, and the empty squares represent your potential future. It is a simple but striking way to appreciate the finite amount of time we each have.
A Life in Weeks chart is a visual representation of a human lifespan where each small square represents one week of life. With 52 weeks per row (one year) and rows spanning the expected lifespan, the entire chart typically contains around 4,000 to 4,700 squares, making the finite nature of time immediately visible.
Eighty years is close to the global average life expectancy in developed nations. According to the World Health Organization, global life expectancy at birth was approximately 73 years as of 2023, with many countries averaging between 78 and 84 years. You can adjust this value to match your own country or personal estimate.
A person who lives to 80 years old will experience approximately 4,160 weeks. Someone who reaches 90 will have lived about 4,680 weeks. These numbers feel surprisingly small when visualized on a single page, which is part of what makes this exercise so thought-provoking.
The concept was popularized by Tim Urban in his 2014 blog post 'Your Life in Weeks' on the website Wait But Why. The visual of a simple grid showing an entire human life resonated with millions of readers and has since inspired many similar tools and posters.
Yes, many people use life-in-weeks visualizations as a motivational tool. Seeing your remaining weeks laid out visually can inspire you to prioritize what matters most, set meaningful goals, and be more intentional with how you spend your time. It serves as a reminder that time is a limited and non-renewable resource.