Three White Leghorn strains, their two-way crosses, and two commercial lines were used to evaluate the effects of aging on mean heterosis, reciprocal, additive, Z-chromosome, and heterotic effects and their variances in two egg production traits during the first laying cycle. Egg number of the survivors (EPF) and egg number including mortality and morbidity (EPM) were evaluated from hens housed one per cage in a randomized block design. For analyses, egg number was divided into 12 periods of 28 d each. Synchronization of the records was achieved by starting recording at age at first egg. The mean heterosis was significant over time and increased with age for both traits (P<0.05). Reciprocal effects were not significant across periods but increased in magnitude with age for EPF. The pattern of age changes in additive, Z-chromosome, and heterotic effects varied among strains, indicating genotypic differences in response to aging. These differences increased, on average, with age. The additive, heterotic, environmental, and phenotypic variances increased with age for both traits. A decline with physiological age was observed in heritabilities, which was due to a faster increase in environmental variance than to an increase in additive variance. Genetic variance of egg production increased with age, indicating that improvement of lifetime performance of layers is possible. This improvement could be achieved by selecting animals at older ages or by favoring individuals with better DNA repair or those who had more genes turned on or off during the course of aging.