Most people’s height growth ends in the mid-to-late teen years when growth plates fuse, with many girls finishing earlier than boys.
If you’re asking this, you’re usually trying to pin down one thing: “Am I still getting taller, or is that done?” The honest answer is that bones don’t all “finish” on one birthday. It’s a staged process driven by puberty and the closure of growth plates.
So the most useful way to think about it is: long bones grow in length only while growth plates are open. Once a plate fuses, that bone won’t get longer. Your skeleton still changes after that, but it changes by remodeling, not by adding height.
What “bones stop growing” means in plain terms
Your bones are living tissue. In childhood and the teen years, many bones can grow longer because they have a strip of cartilage near the ends called a growth plate (also called a physis). That cartilage makes new tissue, then the body turns it into bone.
When puberty hormones rise, the growth plates start to thin and then fuse into solid bone. After that, the “lengthening engine” is gone for that bone. This is the moment most people mean when they say bones stop growing.
Growth plates are the real “height switch”
Height increases mainly from long bones in the legs (femur and tibia) and from the spine. A teen can still be in puberty and still have open plates, or be past the main growth spurt and have plates that are already closing. The timing varies a lot.
Doctors talk about this because open growth plates can be injured. If you want a clean medical explanation of what growth plates are and why they matter, this page is a solid starting point: NIAMS growth plate injuries overview.
At What Age Do Your Bones Stop Growing? For girls and boys
For many girls, most height growth is done somewhere in the mid-teen years. For many boys, it often runs a bit later into the teen years. That’s the headline.
But there are two details that change what this means for you:
- Puberty timing runs the show. Early puberty often lines up with earlier growth plate fusion. Late puberty can push growth later.
- Different bones finish at different times. Some plates close earlier in the hands and feet, while plates around the knee can stay active longer.
Clinicians also talk about this in the context of injury care, since a growth plate injury is a different problem than an adult fracture. Mayo Clinic’s overview explains the basics and why timing matters: Mayo Clinic growth plate fractures.
Why there isn’t one single age
Even two teens who are the same age can be in totally different stages of puberty. One may be done growing, while the other still has open plates and another burst of height left.
That’s why you’ll see age ranges instead of one number. In day-to-day life, it’s fair to say height growth is usually tapering off by the late teens, with plenty of normal variation on both sides.
How doctors estimate remaining growth
If you want more than a guess, clinicians use a mix of trend data and imaging.
Height pattern over time
A single height measurement doesn’t tell much. A consistent growth pattern does. A steady slowdown over 12–24 months after a teen’s peak growth spurt often hints that growth plates are nearing closure.
Bone age imaging
A “bone age” X-ray (often of the hand and wrist) can show how far skeletal maturity has progressed. It doesn’t predict your final height with certainty, but it can help estimate how much growth is left when paired with growth charts and pubertal stage.
Duke Health has a clear explanation of how growth plates relate to growth timing and how clinicians think about remaining growth: Duke Health on growth plates.
What changes after height growth ends
When growth plates fuse, your bones stop getting longer. Your body still changes in other ways.
Bone remodeling continues for life
Your skeleton is always renewing itself. Old bone gets broken down and replaced with new bone. This is how your body repairs micro-damage from daily life and adjusts to loads from sports, work, and strength training.
Posture and spinal discs can shift your measured height
Many adults notice they can measure a bit taller in the morning than at night. That’s tied to spinal discs compressing and rehydrating, not new bone length.
Jaw and facial bones keep maturing
Even after height growth ends, the face and jaw can keep maturing through late teens and into early adulthood. This is part of normal skeletal maturation, and it’s one reason orthodontic planning can depend on timing.
Common timelines by area of the body
Instead of chasing one “magic age,” it helps to see how closure tends to move from smaller bones toward larger long bones, with a lot of overlap. This table is a practical mental map, not a personal diagnosis.
| Bone or region | Closure pattern | Common timing window |
|---|---|---|
| Hands (finger bones) | Often earlier than legs | Mid-teens for many teens |
| Wrists | Often used in bone age checks | Mid-to-late teens for many teens |
| Forearm (radius/ulna) | Often follows wrist timing | Mid-to-late teens for many teens |
| Upper arm (humerus) | Often closes after hands | Mid-to-late teens for many teens |
| Knee region (distal femur/proximal tibia) | Among the later long-bone plates | Late teens for many teens |
| Hip region | Late teen years are common | Mid-to-late teens, sometimes later |
| Spine | Can keep maturing into early adulthood | Late teens into early twenties for some |
| Collarbone (clavicle) | One of the later-maturing areas | Late teens into early twenties for some |
Why some people grow later than friends
It’s easy to feel “behind” when classmates shoot up and you don’t. Late growth can still be normal. The reasons usually fall into a few buckets.
Puberty starts later
If puberty starts later, the big growth spurt tends to start later too. In that case, a teen can still have open plates and room to grow when friends have already slowed down.
Family pattern
Ask parents or older siblings when they hit their growth spurts. Family timing often repeats. It’s not a promise, but it’s a decent clue.
Sleep, nutrition, and training load
Growth is a body-wide project. Consistent sleep and solid nutrition help teens hit their personal growth potential. Heavy sports training can be fine, but overtraining and repeated pain around growth areas is a reason to check in with a clinician.
Signs you may be nearing the end of height growth
You can’t confirm growth plate fusion by feel. Still, you can spot patterns that often line up with growth slowing down.
- Your shoe size hasn’t changed in a long stretch.
- Your height measurements have been flat across multiple checks.
- The rapid teen growth spurt has clearly ended.
- Puberty changes have mostly settled, and you’re well past peak growth timing.
These clues can point in the right direction, but they can also mislead. A teen can stop gaining height for a while, then pick up a bit more later. That’s why trends matter more than a single moment.
When to get a medical check
Most people never need a special workup. Still, there are times when it’s smart to talk with a pediatric clinician.
Growth stalls early
If a child stops gaining height far earlier than peers and family pattern suggests, it’s worth checking. Clinicians can review growth charts, pubertal stage, and health history, then decide if testing makes sense.
Repeated pain near joints during sports
Open growth plates can be vulnerable. Pain that keeps coming back near the knee, heel, or elbow during training can be a sign to get evaluated, especially if it changes how you move.
After a suspected growth plate injury
If a child takes a hard fall and has joint pain, swelling, or trouble using a limb, prompt care matters because growth plate injuries can change how a bone develops. If you want a concise reference on how growth plates relate to growth timing in boys, Cleveland Clinic’s explainer is useful: Cleveland Clinic on when men stop growing.
| What you notice | What it may mean | What to do next |
|---|---|---|
| Height hasn’t changed across several checks | Growth is slowing or paused | Track height monthly, same time of day |
| Shoe size flat for a long stretch | Foot growth may be tapering | Pair with height trend, not alone |
| Late puberty pattern in family | Later growth may be normal | Compare growth curve with clinician |
| Joint pain after impact or fall | Possible growth plate injury | Seek medical care for exam and imaging |
| Ongoing pain with sports that keeps returning | Overuse around growth areas | Rest, adjust training, get evaluated if it persists |
| Growth stops much earlier than expected | Needs a closer look at growth pattern | Bring growth records to a pediatric visit |
Myths that waste time
“You can restart bone length growth with stretches”
Stretching can help posture and mobility. It won’t reopen fused growth plates or lengthen long bones.
“Lifting weights stunts growth”
Strength training done with solid coaching and age-appropriate loads is widely used in youth sports. The bigger risk is poor form, too much load, or ignoring pain, not the concept of strength work itself.
“If you grew late once, you’ll always keep growing”
Late growth can happen, then stop. Growth plates still fuse when puberty-driven maturation finishes.
Simple tracking checklist you can use at home
If you want a grounded answer without guessing, use a short tracking routine for 8–12 weeks. It won’t replace medical imaging, but it can clean up noisy measurements.
- Measure height once a month at the same time of day, without shoes, with a flat object on the head.
- Write it down with the date and time.
- Note sleep and training load for that week if you’re an athlete.
- Watch the trend across at least three measurements before you decide anything.
If the numbers are flat across multiple checks and puberty changes have settled, you’re likely near the end of height growth. If the pattern looks odd for your age and family history, bring your notes to a pediatric visit. It makes the appointment faster and more useful.
References & Sources
- National Institute of Arthritis and Musculoskeletal and Skin Diseases (NIAMS).“Growth Plate Injuries.”Explains what growth plates are and why open plates affect injury risk and bone growth.
- Mayo Clinic.“Growth Plate Fractures: Symptoms and Causes.”Outlines growth plate function and why injuries can affect how bones grow.
- Duke Health.“Growth Plates: What You Need to Know.”Provides clinician-oriented context on growth plate timing and how remaining growth is estimated.
- Cleveland Clinic.“Here’s the Age Men Stop Growing.”Summarizes typical timing for male growth plate closure and late-teen height changes.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.