Nascido em 2019
Se você nasceu em 2019, tem 6 ou 7 anos
| Data de nascimento | Sua idade | dias |
|---|---|---|
| 1 janeiro 2019 | Você tem 7 anos, 3 meses e 22 dias | 2.669 |
| 1 fevereiro 2019 | Você tem 7 anos, 2 meses e 22 dias | 2.638 |
| 1 março 2019 | Você tem 7 anos, 1 meses e 22 dias | 2.610 |
| 1 abril 2019 | Você tem 7 anos, 0 meses e 22 dias | 2.579 |
| 1 maio 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 11 meses e 22 dias | 2.549 |
| 1 junho 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 10 meses e 22 dias | 2.518 |
| 1 julho 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 9 meses e 22 dias | 2.488 |
| 1 agosto 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 8 meses e 22 dias | 2.457 |
| 1 setembro 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 7 meses e 22 dias | 2.426 |
| 1 outubro 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 6 meses e 22 dias | 2.396 |
| 1 novembro 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 5 meses e 22 dias | 2.365 |
| 1 dezembro 2019 | Você tem 6 anos, 4 meses e 22 dias | 2.335 |
Generation: Generation Alpha
People born in 2019 belong to the Generation Alpha (2013–2030).
The first generation born entirely in the 21st century. Named by social researcher Mark McCrindle. Growing up with AI assistants, tablets from birth, and a world shaped by climate awareness and the aftermath of a global pandemic.
Read more about generational differences in our complete generation guide.
The world in 2019
Here is what was happening in the world around the time people born in 2019 arrived:
- The United Kingdom voted to leave the European Union (Brexit)
- Donald Trump was elected President of the United States
- Leonardo DiCaprio finally won his first Oscar
Life expectancy for people born in 2019
According to global statistics, a person born in 2019 could expect to live approximately 72.7 years at the time of their birth. Someone born in 2019 who is still alive today is 6–7 years old, which means they have lived roughly 10% of their originally expected lifespan.
Note that these figures represent global averages at birth. Actual life expectancy varies significantly by country, gender, and socioeconomic factors. Modern medicine and improved living conditions mean that people who survived childhood often outlive their birth-year estimates. Learn more in our life expectancy trends article.