How long a 60-year-old patient with CHD can live needs to be assessed according to the patient’s condition, treatment effect, the presence of other underlying diseases, etc., and the expected survival period ranges from a few months to a few years. If the patient’s congenital heart disease condition is mild, the impact on the patient’s cardiac function is not great, or after surgical treatment of cardiac function is maintained better, and there is no other serious underlying disease, the expected survival period is longer, may be between a few years to more than ten years. If the patient’s congenital heart disease is more severe, if the cardiac function is still poor with daily medication maintenance, or if the patient has not been treated surgically, or if the patient has a combination of other systemic underlying diseases, the patient’s survival will be more affected, and it may be only a few months to a few years. For 60-year-old patients with CHD, it is recommended that patients follow the doctor’s instructions to actively treat the disease, go to the hospital regularly for follow-up, live a reasonable life, use medication reasonably, and prevent infections, so as to prolong the patient’s survival as much as possible.