"My child is 15 — will they still grow?" It's the single most-asked question in pediatric practice. The answer can be summed up in two words: look at bone age. What stops height growth isn't your chronological age, it's the closure of growth plates (epiphyses) at the ends of long bones.
What are growth plates and why do they close?
Throughout childhood, long bones have active cartilage zones at their ends. In these plates, cartilage cells proliferate and ossify — and the bone lengthens. During puberty, rising estrogen (in both sexes) sustains cartilage activity, but past a threshold the same estrogen triggers closure. This paradox explains the final phase of the adolescent peak and the growth arrest that follows.
Typical closure ages by sex
| Bone | Girls | Boys |
|---|---|---|
| Distal femur epiphysis | 14-16 yrs | 16-18 yrs |
| Proximal tibia | 14-16 yrs | 16-18 yrs |
| Distal humerus | 13-15 yrs | 15-17 yrs |
| Medial clavicle (last to close) | 22-25 yrs | 22-25 yrs |
For the femur and tibia epiphyses that contribute 95% of height growth, the adult-height attainment age is:
- Girls: average 15-16, at latest 17
- Boys: average 17-18, at latest 19-20
The clavicle closes later but contributes minimally to height.
Chronological age can mislead — bone age (BA) is the key
Imagine two 14-year-old boys, both 165 cm tall:
- Child A: BA 15.5 years (1.5 years advanced). Predicted adult height ≈ 170-172 cm.
- Child B: BA 12.0 years (2 years delayed). Predicted adult height ≈ 178-182 cm.
Same chronological age, same height, very different adult-height projections. Why? Child B still has immature growth plates with room to grow. Clinical methods like Bayley-Pinneau, Roche-Wainer-Thissen, and BoneXpert AHP all work on BA, not chronological age.
"Am I still growing?" — practical test
Rule of thumb: if you've grown less than 2 cm in the last 12 months and you're a girl over 14 or a boy over 16, growth is likely in its final phase. For a definitive answer: pediatric endocrinology consult plus a hand-wrist x-ray.
"Miracle" growth foods and supplements — what does science say?
Children with calcium, vitamin D, or zinc deficiencies do benefit from correction. But in healthy children with adequate intake, extra dosing does not increase height. The same is true for collagen, "height-boosting syrups," and arginine supplements — beyond placebo, evidence is thin.
What does work:
- Balanced protein (1.0-1.2 g/kg/day), especially during adolescence
- Regular sleep (girls 8-10 h, boys 9-11 h) — growth hormone (GH) peaks during sleep onset
- Moderate non-resistance exercise — excessive loading can damage epiphyses
- Treatment of hypothyroidism / GH deficiency when indicated
When to seek specialist evaluation
- Height below the 3rd percentile for age and sex
- Less than 4 cm/year in mid-childhood (4-10 yrs)
- Puberty starting before age 8 (early) or after 13 (delayed)
- Hand-wrist x-ray + thyroid panel + IGF-1 + pediatric endocrinology workup
FAQ
Do late-maturing children end up taller?
Often, yes. Their growth plates stay open longer, so adult height potential is preserved. If it's familial (constitutional delay), it's benign. If pathological, endocrinology must rule out underlying causes.
Can men grow taller after age 20?
Statistically, about 5% continue gaining 1-2 cm between 19-21. After 22, real bone growth is rare; most apparent height changes reflect postural improvements.
Does basketball or swimming make children taller?
No — there's no scientific evidence. Height is determined by genetics and endocrine factors. Tall children get selected into these sports — pure selection bias.
Bottom line and next step
What stops height growth is the closure of bone growth plates, not your chronological age. To estimate how much more your child may grow, try our Mid-Parental Height calculator for the genetic expectation. With Premium, our Khamis-Roche or Bayley-Pinneau tools give you more precise projections.
If your child is in the pubertal peak, a hand-wrist x-ray plus endocrinology consult delivers the most accurate clinical data.