Tomiko Itooka, 116-year-old Guinness World Records winner, dies

A woman that Guinness World Records previously named as the world’s oldest person has died, the organization announced Saturday.

The world’s oldest person, Tomiko Itooka of Japan, died the night of Dec. 29. She died from natural causes and lived to be 116 years and 220 days old.

She died at a nursing home in Ashiya, Hyōgo Prefecture in Japan, Guinness said in a news release, citing LongeviQuest, an organization that manages a database on the world’s oldest people.

Tomiko was named the oldest living woman and oldest living person in August 2024 after the previous titleholder, 117-year-old Maria Branyas Morera, died. 

Tomiko Itooka (right) on Sept. 16, 2024 in Ashiya City, Japan.

LongeviQuest representatives visited her on her 116th birthday, then again in August 2024 to present her the World’s Oldest Person trophy. Guinness representatives also visited her in September to present her with an official certificate.

Who was Tomiko Itooka, the late record-setter?

Tomiko was born in Osaka on May 23, 1908. She was the second of three children and the family’s oldest daughter, Guinness and LongeviQuest reported. She went to an all-girls high school.

She got married at 20 years old and had two daughters and two sons, Guinness said. She was 32 years old when Japan joined World War II and during that time, she managed the office at her husband’s textile factory while taking care of the couple’s children.



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