Data InsightsThe median age in China has rapidly caught up with the United Kingdom

The median age in China has rapidly caught up with the United Kingdom

The median age in China has rapidly caught up with the United Kingdom.

Line chart of median age for China and the United Kingdom from 1950 to 2025, with the vertical axis in years from 0 to 40 and the horizontal axis showing years 1950 to 2025. A line labeled United Kingdom stays around mid-30s in 1950, dips slightly to about 33 by the mid-1970s, then gradually rises to about 40 by 2025. A line labeled China starts around 22 in 1950, falls to about 18 to 19 in the mid-1960s and 1970s, then climbs steadily to meet the UK at about 40 in 2025. Annotated note: in the mid-1960s China’s median age was just under half that of the UK; another note states that today the median age in both countries is 40 years. Data source: UN, World Population Prospects (2024). License: CC BY.

In 1965, the median age in the United Kingdom was almost twice that of China. Half of the people in the UK were younger than 34 years, and half were older. In China, this midpoint was just 18 years.

Within just a few generations, that age gap has closed.

As you can see in the chart, the median age in both countries is now 40 years. Both populations have aged, but the increase was far faster in China.

In the 1950s and early 1960s, China’s median age fell partly because of a fall in child mortality: birth rates remained high, and more children survived.

After that, the rapid increase is largely explained by a steep fall in fertility, and therefore in births. Before then, high birth rates meant that large cohorts of children were continually entering the population, keeping it young. When births fell, fewer children were added each year, and the large, earlier generations grew older.

China’s median age is expected to continue rising quickly: under the UN’s medium projections, it will be 10 years older than the UK's by 2050.

Explore more data on how the age structure of populations is changing across the world.

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