At first glance, this puzzle seems completely impossible. How can a person be 15 years old in 1990, but somehow be only 10 years old just five years later in 1995? It goes against everything we understand about time and aging.
Naturally, most people try to solve it using normal logic. Maybe it’s a mistake? Maybe it’s a trick question? Some even assume time travel or some kind of paradox.
But the answer is actually much simpler—and that’s what makes it so clever.
The key is realizing that the years mentioned don’t necessarily move forward in time the way we usually think. Instead of thinking of 1990 and 1995 as increasing years, you have to flip your perspective.
What if time is being counted in reverse?
If the person lived before year 0 (BC), then the years count downward. That means 1995 BC comes before 1990 BC. So in 1995 BC, the person could be 10 years old, and five years later in 1990 BC, they would be 15.
Suddenly, it all makes perfect sense.
This puzzle tricks your brain by making you assume time always moves forward—but once you change that assumption, the answer becomes clear.