The beginning of plate tectonics on Earth remains the subject of fundamental debate. Also, future evolution of plate tectonics has not yet been addressed adequately in the literature. Here I develop models to extrapolate secular trends of plate tectonics closely associated with mantle potential temperature; intensity of magmatic activities to estimate the lifetime of plate tectonics. First a fractal model is utilized to analyze global igneous and detrital zircon U-Pb age datasets to characterize nonlinear intensity and periodicity of peaks in magmatic activities associated with deep-seated avalanche-type events (slab break off, lithospheric root detachments and mantle plumes). The results show descending trends of both nonlinear intensity and duration of peaks in magmatism observed from 3 Ga to the present day, suggesting a general trend of mantle cooling. This relation when extrapolated yields 1.45 Gyr of time for when nonlinear intensity of major magmatic activity would vanish. Further it is demonstrated by an independent polynomial model fitted to the relation between mantle potential temperature and future age of the earth that this result conforms to the time estimated for when mantle potential temperature is reduced to mantle solidus temperature.