In the Harry Potter series is it clear that magically-inclined individuals (witches/wizards) will live to be considerably older than their Muggle counterparts? From the question Dumbledore's Age, it is given that Dumbledore was roughly 115 years old when he died, and at that age he hardly seemed ready to kick the bucket naturally.
With that in mind, how old will a wizard typically live to be, barring accidents or murder?
Answer
As per @ykombinator's explanation, I think life expectancy should be around 100, considering that the human body decays a lot after that age, even when the person has been reasonably healthy.
In fact, since life expectancy in developed countries is around 80, and the oldest of muggles reach 115 to 120 (=80+35~40), it seems reasonable to assume that a healthy average wizard will live 15~25 more years than a muggle, which gives 100 as a possible value for life expectancy in the wizarding world, with a maximum of 145 to 150 (100+45~50).
Note that, even if Dumbledore was "around 150" instead of 115, these numbers are still possible.
To wrap up, a wizard who is over 100 is just old. McGonnagall wasn't young anymore, but she wasn't too old yet. 80 to 90 seems a good number for "average".
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