How Long Do Organ Transplants Last? Plus 9 More Facts to Know About Transplantation

“For people who have end-stage organ failure, a transplant is the only option,” adds David Klassen, MD, the chief medical officer at UNOS in Richmond, Virginia.
But how long an organ transplant lasts depends on factors such as the type of organ and the recipient’s health status. Read on for more about the complexities of donation and transplantation — whether it’s a kidney or, more rarely, liver, heart, pancreas, or lung transplant.
How Long Do Organ Transplants Last?
Transplanting a healthy organ to replace a diseased or failed organ can prolong life, but transplants have limits. As medical technology and research advances, the longevity of organ transplants does increase.
Here are some graft half-lives for common organ transplants.
- Kidney transplants have a graft half-life of 10 to 13 years if the organ came from a living donor and 7 to 9 years if it was from a deceased donor.
- Liver transplants may last 5 or more years in 75 percent of recipients.
- Heart transplants typically last around 12.5 years.
- Pancreas transplants can last about 11 years when combined with a kidney transplant.
- Lungs have a graft half-life of 5 years on average, but this increases to 8 years if both lungs have been transplanted.
The end of the organ’s life doesn’t always mean the end of yours. While some organs do last a person’s lifetime, many don’t, and re-transplantation is an option for some recipients.
1. A Transplanted Organ Can Carry Hidden Disease
“Donors are screened rigorously and infections can be treated well,” says Dr. Klassen. “There’s a risk-reward tradeoff, and it’s a relatively small risk,” he adds.
West Nile virus and rabies are two examples of infectious diseases that have been transmitted via organ transplantation, and Klassen adds that rare cases of cancer from transplants have also been reported.
Doctors may have full knowledge of an infection, such as hepatitis C, in the organ before it’s transplanted. “Fortunately, hepatitis C has become a curable disease within the last five years, so we can still utilize the organ of a person with hepatitis C and then treat the recipient with hepatitis C medications,” Klassen says.
2. The Financial Cost of Donating an Organ May Be Higher Than You Think
What a living donor won’t have to pay for is anything connected to the actual transplantation surgery. The National Living Donor Assistance Program and other similar programs may help cover some donation-related expenses.
3. Being a Living Donor Could Impact Your Life Insurance
In those cases, the transplant center may reach out to the insurance company to inform them that as a living donor, you’re not at increased risk of death because of the donation.
4. Transplant Tourism Is Risky for Your Health and Unfair for Organ Donors
5. A Liver Transplant Won’t Cure an Infection Like Hepatitis C
6. If You Have Kidney Failure, Transplantation Could Be an Option
Even so, getting a preemptive transplant before dialysis isn’t easy to do, says Klassen, unless you have a living donor who wants to donate their kidney to you. “Usually, because of the need to wait for a donation, most people have to be on dialysis for a period of time before the transplant happens.”
7. Women Are Less Likely to Get Living-Donor Transplants
One reason for the discrepancy is biological: “With kidney transplants, a limiting factor for women is that after they’ve had children, their immune system is more sensitized, which makes it harder to find a match,” explains Klassen.
8. Weight Can Affect Whether You Receive a Transplant
Your transplant center or doctor may ask you to bring your body mass index (BMI) down to 35 or less. BMI isn’t an accurate measure of health for everyone. So what’s the reasoning? The surgical risk tends to go up for people with obesity, says Klassen, and it can be harder to do transplants in this group.
9. How Long You Wait May Depend on Where You Live
Where you live is also a critical factor. “For some parts of the country, such as California and dense urban areas, the waiting times are longer,” explains Klassen.
The Takeaway
- All organ transplants have a “graft half-life,” meaning that out of 100 transplants, half of the organs will stop working before that time and half will exceed it.
- Organs, such as kidneys, lungs, and livers, have different half-lives.
- Retransplantation may be an option when an organ transplant fails.
- Your BMI, sex, and whether you have any chronic infections, as well as where you live, can all affect whether you receive an organ transplant and how successful it is.
Resources We Trust
- Cleveland Clinic: Organ Donation and Transplantation
- Ohio State University: Do Transplanted Organs Last a Lifetime?
- United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS): How We Match Organs
- Donor Alliance: What Is the Time Frame for Transplanting Organs?
- UVA Health: Transplant Rejection
- Jiménez-Oliver KD. Overview of Organ Donation. Mexican Journal of Medical Research ICSa. May 2023.
- 2024: More Transplants Than Ever Before. United Network for Organ Sharing (UNOS).
- Diez A. Do Transplanted Organs Last a Lifetime? Ohio State Wexner Medical Center. April 30, 2024.
- About Transplant Safety. Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. February 26, 2024.
- Living Donor Finances and Insurance. National Kidney Foundation. October 4, 2024.
- Polireddy K et al. Eliminating Financial Disincentives to Living Kidney Donation — a Call to Action. Frontiers in Medicine. June 2023.
- Dix M. What You Need to Know About Life Insurance as a Living Kidney Donor. National Kidney Registry. August 18, 2025.
- 42 U.S. Code § 274e - Prohibition of organ purchases. Legal Information Institute.
- Cong LC et al. Transplant Tourism: A Literature Review on Development, Ethical and Law Issues. MedPharmRes. March 2023.
- Flaherty GT et al. Transplant Tourism and Organ Trafficking: Current Practices, Controversies and Solutions. International Journal of Travel Medicine and Global Health. June 2021.
- Liver Failure. Cleveland Clinic. June 16, 2024.
- Verna EC et al. Hepatitis C Virus Infection in Liver Transplant Candidates and Recipients. UpToDate. June 21, 2024.
- Hepatitis C. World Health Organization (WHO). July 25, 2025.
- Berns JS. Patient Education: Dialysis or Kidney Transplantation — Which Is Right for Me? (Beyond the Basics). UpToDate. November 13, 2024.
- Kurleto P et al. Knowledge and Attitudes of Dialysis Patients Toward Kidney Transplantation: Preliminary Report from a Pilot Study Preceding a Cross-Sectional Nationwide Evaluation. Transplantation Proceedings. May 2024.
- Harding JL. Advancing Equity in Living Donor Kidney Transplant. Kidney360. December 2024.
- Martin F et al. The Combinatorial Effect of Age and Biological Sex on Alloimmunity and Transplantation Outcome. Frontiers in Transplantation. January 2024.
- Shi B et al. Obesity Is Associated With Delayed Graft Function in Kidney Transplant Recipients: A Paired Kidney Analysis. Transplant International. May 2023.
- Kidney Transplant Program. Mayo Clinic. November 8, 2025.
- The Kidney Transplant Waitlist. National Kidney Foundation. April 3, 2024.
- DuBay DA et al. Association of High Burden of End-stage Kidney Disease With Decreased Kidney Transplant Rates With the Updated US Kidney Allocation Policy. JAMA Surgery. May 2021.

Michelle Seguin, MD
Medical Reviewer
Michelle Seguin, MD, is a board-certified family medicine, lifestyle medicine, and certified functional medicine physician (IFMCP). She is a practicing physician at Root Functional Medicine, a leading telemedicine practice specializing in personalized, root-cause care.
