what age can you not eat meat during lent
Catholics are required to start not eating meat on certain days of Lent from age 14 and continue for the rest of their lives, unless they have a serious reason (like illness).
Quick Scoop: Age Rules in Lent
Core rule in one line
- From your 14th birthday onward, you are bound by the Church’s rule to abstain from meat on Ash Wednesday and all Fridays of Lent.
Do you ever “age out”?
- There is no upper age where you’re automatically allowed to eat meat again on Lenten Fridays; the 14+ abstinence rule stays for life.
- However, the Church always makes exceptions when health, age‑related frailty, or medical needs mean you need certain foods; in those cases, the obligation does not bind.
Fasting vs. not eating meat (different rules)
Sometimes people mix these up, so here’s the split:
- Abstinence (no meat):
- Required from age 14 and older on Ash Wednesday and all Fridays of Lent.
- Fasting (less food overall):
- Typically required between ages 18 and 59 on Ash Wednesday and Good Friday (one full meal, two small meals).
So if your question is “what age can you stop worrying about not eating meat during Lent?” the strict answer is: there isn’t a fixed “stop” age; it’s 14+ for life, but if age or health makes it too hard, you’re not obliged in the same way and can choose another form of penance instead.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.