Several pet snake species typically have lifespans of less than 10 years, including the corn snake, which often lives around 6 to 8 years in captivity, and the garter snake, which has a lifespan of about 5 to 7 years. Additionally, some smaller species like the hognose snake may also fall within this range, averaging around 6 to 8 years. However, proper care can sometimes extend their lives beyond these averages.
Snakes usually live between 10-25 years, depending on the species of snakes. Large snakes usually live longer than small snakes. Some species of small snakes only live for 3 or 4 years, while larger snakes (such as Pythons) may live up to 35 or 40 years. Snakes survive longer in the wild than in captivity.
It depends on the species. Some snakes only live to about 10 years old - while some of the larger pythons can live for more than 40 years.
The lifespan of snakes varies depending on the species. On average, snakes can live between 10-30 years in the wild, with some species capable of living over 30 years in captivity. The oldest recorded snake lived to be over 50 years old.
10-25 yearsEDIT: It depends on the species - some snakes live less than 10 years, yet the larger Pythons (such as the Reticulated python or the Anaconda) can live more than 40 years !
snakes can be 2x the age in human years than they are in snake years.
less than 30 years
Common basilisks generally live less than six years.Emerald Basilisk: Average lifespan is less than seven years.Brown Basilisk: Brown basilisk lizards typically live for two years in the wild.
The average life span of a king cobra in the wild can be up to 20 years. They may live longer in captivity, away from stress and danger.
A fully-grown corn can be up to six foot long and live in excess of 30 years.
more than 20 years in captivity, less in the wild
500 years old
In captivity they may live 14 years or more. In the wild, probably less than 5.