Methodology

How we define generation years.

Generation names are useful search and cultural shorthand, but they are not exact scientific identities. This page explains the ranges used on whatismygeneration.com and links the sources behind the editorial choices.

Last reviewed: May 4, 2026.

Generation range table

The site keeps ranges continuous so every birth year from 1883 to 2039 maps to one answer page.

Generation names and birth year ranges
Generation Birth years
Lost Generation 1883-1900
Greatest Generation 1901-1927
Silent Generation 1928-1945
Baby Boomers 1946-1964
Generation X 1965-1980
Millennials 1981-1996
Generation Z 1997-2012
Generation Alpha 2013-2024
Generation Beta 2025-2039

Editorial rules

How cutoff years are handled

For commonly used modern cohorts, this site follows Pew-style cutoffs where practical: Silent Generation 1928-1945, Baby Boomers 1946-1964, Generation X 1965-1980, Millennials 1981-1996, and Generation Z beginning in 1997.

For older and future cohorts, the ranges are editorially normalized so the lookup works continuously. The Lost Generation and Greatest Generation are split before the Silent Generation. Generation Alpha and Generation Beta are treated as newer or projected labels, so their boundaries may change as sources converge.

When a user is born near a cutoff year, the page gives the range used here and avoids implying that the label is a legal, medical, or scientific identity.

Long-tail answers

Birth-year answer pages

Every supported year has a direct answer page for queries like "what generation is 1990?" and "what generation am I if I was born in 2001?"