GeraClinic / Life expectancy by area / Newry, Mourne and Down
Life Expectancy in Newry, Mourne and Down
In Newry, Mourne and Down (Northern Ireland), life expectancy at birth is 79.2 years for men and 83.3 years for women, from official Office for National Statistics estimates for the 2017-19 reference period.
Quick answer
In Newry, Mourne and Down, a baby boy could expect to live 79.2 years and a baby girl 83.3 years, under 2017-19 mortality rates (ONS). Healthy life expectancy at birth β years lived in good general health β is 63.2 years for men and 63.3 years for women (2022-24). These are population period estimates, not predictions for any one person.
Life expectancy at birth in Newry, Mourne and Down
| Measure | Value | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Male life expectancy at birth | 79.2 years | ONS period estimate, 2017-19 |
| Female life expectancy at birth | 83.3 years | ONS period estimate, 2017-19 |
| Male healthy life expectancy at birth | 63.2 years | Years in good general health, ONS, 2022-24 |
| Female healthy life expectancy at birth | 63.3 years | Years in good general health, ONS, 2022-24 |
ONS area code: N09000010. Reference period: life expectancy 2017-19, healthy life expectancy 2022-24.
Life expectancy in Newry, Mourne and Down: frequently asked questions
What is the life expectancy in Newry, Mourne and Down?
In Newry, Mourne and Down, life expectancy at birth is 79.2 years for men and 83.3 years for women, based on Office for National Statistics period estimates for 2017-19.
What does "life expectancy at birth" mean?
Life expectancy at birth is the average number of years a baby born in the area could expect to live if 2017-19 mortality rates stayed the same throughout its life. It is a period estimate for the whole population, not a prediction for any individual.
What is healthy life expectancy in Newry, Mourne and Down?
Healthy life expectancy at birth in Newry, Mourne and Down is 63.2 years for men and 63.3 years for women (ONS, 2022-24) β the number of years a person can expect to live in "good" general health. Because life expectancy (2017-19) and healthy life expectancy (2022-24) come from different ONS releases and reference periods, the two figures are not directly subtractable.
Where does this life-expectancy data come from?
All figures come directly from the Office for National Statistics β life expectancy at birth from the "Life expectancy by local authority" dataset (2017-19) and healthy life expectancy from the "Health state life expectancies (Healthy life expectancy), UK" release (2022-24). No value is estimated or altered. The data is published under the Open Government Licence v3.0.
Life expectancy in other Northern Ireland areas
- Life expectancy in Antrim and Newtownabbey
- Life expectancy in Ards and North Down
- Life expectancy in Armagh City, Banbridge and Craigavon
- Life expectancy in Belfast
- Life expectancy in Causeway Coast and Glens
- Life expectancy in Derry City and Strabane
- Life expectancy in Fermanagh and Omagh
- Life expectancy in Lisburn and Castlereagh
- Life expectancy in Mid and East Antrim
- Life expectancy in Mid Ulster
- Life expectancy in Northern Ireland
- All UK areas β
Methodology
Male and female life expectancy at birth are the ONS period estimates for the 2017-19 reference period, from the ONS βLife expectancy by local authorityβ dataset. Healthy life expectancy at birth is from the ONS βHealth state life expectancies (Healthy life expectancy), UKβ release for 2022-24. The two measures use different reference periods and partially different geographies, so they are not directly subtractable. Every figure is taken directly from the ONS files; no value is estimated, fabricated or altered.
Contains public sector information published by the Office for National Statistics and licensed under the Open Government Licence v3.0. Figures are sourced from the Office for National Statistics at www.ons.gov.uk. Life expectancy at birth and healthy life expectancy at birth are period estimates and may have been revised in later ONS releases. This directory is not affiliated with the ONS.