This is a pretty tough question to answer. For certain older kits (the Paraglow especially), things run really hot under the hood and capacitor lifetime suffers. The last pair of Paraglows I rebuilt had one electrolytic cap that wasn't visually painful to look at out of both amps.
When you move into the newer/bigger kits, temperatures are lower, airflow is better, and ultimately we have been using really good caps for quite a while now. Provided they are available, the electrolytic caps that we put in the Crack are 12,000 hours at 105C with a generous ripple current rating. If we assume that your equipment averages 50C over the 12 hours you operate it, it's completely possible that you'll see 50 years of reliable operation in that position.
For other caps, like the 10,000uF caps in our filament and heater supplies, ripple current is fairly high, but still even our 10,000uF/10V cap is 10,000 hours at 105C and 4A of ripple current.
Ultimately I think this will be kinda like the synthetic vs. conventional oil situation with cars, where I would definitely change caps that are 15+ years old in vintage components, but if I see a Panasonic TS-ED or Nichicon UCS2 in 20 years, I will be far more hesitant to just throw them away because of how old they are.
There are also some 20,000 hour electrolytic caps appearing on the market, so at some point these components will live longer than their owners. For example, something like
this installed in the SEX amp in place of the 22uF/450V cap that's there is going to last for a century or two.