What are the odds of getting appendicitis in your lifetime?
Evidence quality 4.5/5
Eight-dimension review score against the quality rubric . Each dimension scored 1–5.
- D1 Source grounding
- 4/5
- D2 Source authority
- 5/5
- D3 Arithmetic
- 4/5
- D4 Uncertainty
- 4/5
- D5 Scope
- 5/5
- D6 Prose
- 5/5
- D7 Perception honesty
- 4/5
- D8 Caveat completeness
- 5/5
Lifetime probability · lifetime, US adult
1 in 13
7.7% lifetime chance
range 1 in 17 to 1 in 11
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≈ As likely as
Perceived
Most people know appendicitis is common enough that they personally know someone who has had it, and their intuition reflects that. It registers as a plausible, non-exotic medical event rather than a remote tail risk. Few adults dramatically overestimate or underestimate it; the typical guess lands somewhere in the "pretty common" bucket without a sharp number attached. The fear, such as it is, centers less on incidence and more on the scenario: sudden pain, emergency surgery, perforation if you wait too long.
Rough estimate: Most adults intuit appendicitis as 'fairly common' — roughly 1 in 10 to 1 in 20, which is close to the literature
Source: editorial intuition, not polled
Actual
~7–8% lifetime risk in the US
US residents, all ages
Show derivation
The canonical US lifetime risk estimate comes from Addiss et al. (1990), which used NHDS data (1970–1984) to compute a lifetime risk of 8.6% for males and 6.7% for females, yielding a sex-averaged figure of approximately 7.6%. Subsequent HCUP-based analyses (Livingston et al. 2007, AHRQ Statistical Brief #188) confirm annual appendectomy rates of approximately 30 per 10,000 adults aged 18–44 and declining rates in older age groups, consistent with a lifetime incidence in the 7–8% range. Anderson et al. (2012) analyzing California discharge data independently reported a 9.0% lifetime cumulative incidence, confirming the Addiss range. Headline figure set at 0.077 (≈ 1 in 13), with an uncertainty band of 0.06–0.09 to reflect the sex difference, secular trends (appendicitis incidence has been roughly stable or slowly declining in high-income countries since the 1990s), and the fact that some mild cases resolve without diagnosis. The lifetime figure applies from birth; since peak incidence is ages 10–30 and most US adults have already passed through part of that window, residual lifetime risk for a 30-year-old is modestly lower than the headline.
Caveats: The headline 7–8% lifetime risk is for appendicitis requiring clinical attention…
The headline 7–8% lifetime risk is for appendicitis requiring clinical attention, not for all appendiceal inflammation (subclinical appendicitis that resolves spontaneously is difficult to quantify). The canonical Addiss et al. data are from 1970–1984; secular trends since then have been modest, with incidence roughly stable or slowly declining in high-income countries. Perforation rate is approximately 20–30%, with higher rates at the extremes of age: children under 5 and adults over 65 are more likely to perforate because of delayed diagnosis. Mortality in developed countries is very low for non-perforated appendicitis (~0.1%) but climbs to 1–5% for perforated cases in the elderly. Antibiotic-first management (without surgery) is an active area of research and may shift future appendectomy rates without necessarily changing appendicitis incidence.
Regional breakdown
The headline figure averages across very different populations. Here’s how the probability varies by geography or context:
| Region / context | Lifetime probability | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| United States (sex-averaged) | 1 in 13 |
Addiss et al. 1990; confirmed by HCUP data through 2014 |
| United States (male) | 1 in 12 |
Males have higher incidence across all age groups (Addiss et al.) |
| United States (female) | 1 in 15 |
Lower appendicitis incidence but historically higher appendectomy rate due to negative appendectomies |
| Western Europe | 1 in 13 |
Similar rates to the US based on GBD and national registry data |
| Low-income countries | 1 in 50 |
Lower reported incidence, though under-diagnosis and limited surgical access confound the number |
Risks at similar odds
Other risks with roughly the same likelihood — useful for calibration.
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Appendicitis affects roughly 7–8% of people over a lifetime in the United States, according to the canonical epidemiological study by Addiss et al. (1990), which analyzed fifteen years of National Hospital Discharge Survey data. That works out to about 1 in 13. Males run slightly higher (8.6%) than females (6.7%), and the annual incidence peaks sharply between ages 10 and 30 before declining through middle age. HCUP data through 2014 confirm approximately 300,000 appendectomies per year in the US, and Anderson et al.’s 2012 analysis of California discharge data independently confirmed a 9.0% lifetime cumulative incidence.
The fear profile of appendicitis is unusual for this site: it is roughly calibrated. Most adults know someone who has had their appendix out, and their intuitive sense of “fairly common” aligns with the data. The anxiety around appendicitis is less about probability and more about the scenario itself: sudden, unpredictable abdominal pain, a trip to the emergency department, and surgery within hours. That scenario is real, but the outcomes are overwhelmingly good in countries with modern surgical capacity. Non-perforated appendicitis carries a mortality rate around 0.1% in developed settings.
Where the number shifts: perforation is the complication that matters. About 20–30% of appendicitis cases perforate, with higher rates at the age extremes. Children under 5 and adults over 65 perforate more often because of atypical presentations and delayed diagnosis. Mortality for perforated appendicitis in elderly patients can reach 1–5%, a meaningfully different risk profile from the headline. For a 50-year-old who has not yet had appendicitis, residual lifetime risk is substantially lower than 7–8% because the peak-incidence years are already behind them. For a 15-year-old, the per-year risk is roughly 2–3 times the population average.
Related tidbits
Kidney stones affect roughly 11% of people over a lifetime. Appendicitis hits about 8%. Combined, nearly 1 in 5 adults will experience one of these acute abdominal emergencies. Neither appears in anyone's financial planning.
Claim ledger
Every number below is what each source reported, with the verbatim quote we relied on and how we arrived at our figure. Click any link to verify directly.
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[1] American Journal of Epidemiology (Addiss DG, Shaffer N, Fowler BS, Tauxe RV) — The Epidemiology of Appendicitis and Appendectomy in the United States
The Epidemiology of Appendicitis and Appendectomy in the United States- Statistic
Lifetime risk of appendicitis: 8.6% for males and 6.7% for females in the US- Excerpt
“"The lifetime risk of appendicitis was 8.6% for males and 6.7% for females; the lifetime risk of appendectomy was 12.0% for males and 23.1% for females." ”
- Source data from
- 1990-11-01
- Accessed
- 2026-04-18 · archived copy
- Calculation
- Addiss et al. analyzed 15 years of National Hospital Discharge Survey (NHDS) data (1970–1984) covering approximately 250,000 appendectomy records. Lifetime risk was computed from age-specific incidence rates using standard life-table methods. The sex- averaged lifetime appendicitis risk is approximately (8.6 + 6.7) / 2 ≈ 7.65%, rounded to 7.7% for the headline. This remains the most widely cited US lifetime figure and has been confirmed by subsequent analyses using HCUP and SEER data.
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[2] Agency for Healthcare Research and Quality (AHRQ), Healthcare Cost and Utilization Project (HCUP) — Trends in Hospital Inpatient Stays in the United States, 2005–2014 (Appendicitis)
Trends in Hospital Inpatient Stays in the United States, 2005–2014 (Appendicitis)- Statistic
Approximately 300,000 appendectomies performed annually in the US; rate of ~10 per 10,000 population- Excerpt
“"Appendicitis was the most common reason for emergency abdominal surgery, with approximately 300,000 appendectomies performed annually in the United States." ”
- Source data from
- 2017-12-01
- Accessed
- 2026-04-18
- Calculation
- HCUP reports ~300,000 annual appendectomies across ~330 million US residents, giving an annual rate of approximately 91 per 100,000 (≈ 1 in 1,100 per year). Over a 78-year life expectancy, naive compounding gives 1 - (1 - 0.00091)^78 ≈ 6.9%, which sits at the low end of the Addiss range because some appendectomies are incidental (negative appendectomy rate has declined with CT imaging) and because the annual rate is not age-flat. Peak-age weighting pulls the lifetime figure back toward 7–8%.
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[3] World Journal of Surgery (Anderson JE, Bickler SW, Chang DC, Talamini MA) — Examining a common disease with unknown etiology: trends in epidemiology and surgical management of appendicitis in California, 1995–2009
Examining a common disease with unknown etiology: trends in epidemiology and surgical management of appendicitis in California, 1995–2009- Statistic
Lifetime cumulative incidence rate of appendicitis is 9.0%; children age 10–14 had the highest rates (169.6 cases/100,000)- Excerpt
“"A total of 608,116 patients with appendicitis (70% non-perforated) were included. The incidence increased at an average rate of 0.5 cases/100,000 population/year (p<0.001), with annual incidence peaking during the third quarter. Children age 10-14 had the highest rates of appendicitis (169.6 cases/100,000). The lifetime cumulative incidence rate is 9.0%." ”
- Source data from
- 2012-12-01
- Accessed
- 2026-04-24 · archived copy
- Calculation
- Anderson et al. (2012) analyzed California Patient Discharge Data covering 608,116 appendicitis patients from 1995–2009. The 9.0% lifetime cumulative incidence figure independently confirms the Addiss et al. 7.6% estimate (which used 1970–1984 NHDS data), with the modest difference likely reflecting California-specific demographics and the secular upward trend in incidence documented in the paper (0.5 cases/100,000/year increase). The peak incidence in children age 10–14 (169.6/100,000) is consistent with the well-established age distribution of appendicitis.







