• Upon leaving office, President Barack Obama seemed to be the latest victim of the expedited presidential aging process that has been known to plague presidents, causing them to appear to age faster because of the stress of the office.
  • Over the last 50 years, signs of aging have grown more noticeable as presidents are constantly photographed.
  • Side-by-side photographs capture presidents’ changing faces from inauguration to their last day in the White House.
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As President Barack Obama reflected on his time in office, he had a way of acknowledging his waning time in the position: a joke about his graying hair.

“Right now, we are waging war under authorities provided by Congress over 15 years ago – 15 years ago,” he said in December 2016.

“I had no gray hair 15 years ago.”

Indeed, despite his close-cut hairstyle, it was impossible not to notice the trademark presidential graying, as the president’s short black hair became more of a salt-and-pepper color.

In later appearances, like an endorsement video for his former Vice President Joe Biden on Tuesday, the former commander-in-chief was noticeably gray.

And though some dermatologists maintain that Obama is the latest victim of the expedited presidential aging process, appearing to age faster because of the stress of the office, others say that it's more attributable to natural aging than stress.

Other studies, including a comprehensive analysis of elections dating back to the 1700s, have found that heading a nation can take years off a leader's life. That analysis, from the Harvard Medical School, found that elected heads of government, on average, have lives almost three years shorter than those of the candidates they defeat.

Here's how past US presidents have looked near the beginnings and ends of their respective terms.


President Donald Trump was 70 when he took office, the oldest in history.

Foto: Source: Reuters/Jonathan Ernst

Source: AP


Now 73, he doesn't look much different.

Foto: President Donald Trump pumps his fist as he steps off Air Force One as he arrives Sunday, Feb. 16, 2020, at Andrews Air Force Base, Md. Source: AP Photo/Alex Brandon

Obama looked youthful when he took the oath of office on Inauguration Day, January 20, 2009.

Foto: Source: REUTERS/Jim Young

By his year-end 2016 news conference at the White House, he was weathered.

Foto: Source: AP

Here's George W. Bush making a phone call shortly after the 2000 election.

Foto: Source: Reuters

And here's Bush fielding questions during his final White House press briefing, on January 12, 2009.

Foto: Source: REUTERS/Jason Reed

Hillary Clinton and Bill Clinton looked energetic at a dinner in 1993 several days before his first inauguration.

Foto: Source: Reuters/Ira Schwarz

Here's Clinton giving a brief speech toward the end of his term in October 2000.

Foto: Source: WP/RCS via Reuters

Appearing without his trademark glasses, then-Vice President George H.W. Bush answered a question at the second presidential debate in October 1988.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Lennox McLendon

By June 1992, as Bush addressed a crowd of veterans during a ceremony at the Korean War Memorial, several months before losing the presidential election, he looked older.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Greg Gibson

Former President Ronald Reagan and first lady Nancy Reagan greeted fans lined up in Washington at his first inauguration in January 1981. Though he was 69, his movie star appearance held up.

Foto: Source: AP

When Reagan returned to Washington after his final trip as president to Camp David in January 1989, he looked quite different.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Doug Mills

Though the photo is black-and-white, you can see Jimmy Carter emerging from a Georgia voting booth on Election Day in November 1976.

Foto: Source: AP Photo

Here's Carter preparing for his farewell address to the nation in January 1981.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Wilson

President Richard Nixon gave a press conference in the East Room of the White House several weeks after being sworn in in 1969.

Foto: Source: AP Photo

Plagued by the Watergate scandal, a glassy-eyed Nixon delivered a final speech for White House staff and members of his Cabinet in 1974.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Charlie Harrity, File

President Lyndon Johnson proclaimed a day of mourning for deceased President John F. Kennedy shortly after being sworn in in 1963.

Foto: Source: AP Photo

Johnson, who didn't visibly age too much in his five-year tenure, joins Nixon shortly after Nixon is elected president in November 1968.

Foto: Source: AP Photo/Charles Tasnadi