Evolution has given rise to lifespans in extant species ranging from days to centuries. Given that mechanisms of ageing are highly conserved, studying long-lived lineages across the animal kingdom could yield insights relevant for healthy ageing in humans. However, typical models of extended lifespan often live for decades, making them impractical for longitudinal studies. Ideal model systems would be organisms that are naturally long-lived compared to their close relatives, but have lifespans on experimentally tractable scales. Here, we present the Neotropical butterfly genus Heliconius as a novel model system for the evolution of extended longevity. We collate data from 27 species across the Heliconiini tribe to reveal a 25-fold variation in lifespan within the group, with our 348-day maximum for Heliconius hewitsoni longer than any butterfly species previously recorded in the scientific literature. While previous work has attributed this lifespan extension to a plastic response to enhanced nutrition, we conduct detailed survival and functional senescence analyses on two species representative of shorter- and longer-lived clades to show evidence of evolved, heritable mechanisms of slowed ageing in Heliconius. Our results add a new case study to the canon of noteworthy agers, and provide valuable insights into the evolution of increased longevity.