What Is Enrofloxacin and What Does It Treat?
Enrofloxacin is a broad-spectrum antibiotic used in dogs to treat bacterial infections. It is best known by the brand name Baytril, is FDA-approved for dogs, and belongs to a class of antibiotics called the fluoroquinolones.
Enrofloxacin works by interfering with the enzymes bacteria need to copy and repair their DNA — specifically DNA gyrase and topoisomerase. Without functioning DNA machinery, the bacteria cannot multiply or survive. This gives enrofloxacin bactericidal (bacteria-killing) activity against a broad range of organisms, including many that cause stubborn infections.
Veterinarians commonly prescribe enrofloxacin for:
- Skin and soft-tissue infections, wounds and abscesses
- Urinary tract infections
- Respiratory infections
- Ear infections and other infections caused by susceptible bacteria
Because fluoroquinolones are a valuable class of antibiotic, they are often reserved for infections where a culture and sensitivity test shows they are needed, or where first-line antibiotics are not suitable — part of responsible antibiotic use.
Enrofloxacin is a prescription medicine, and it carries one safety issue that every owner should know about up front: it can damage developing joint cartilage and should not be used in growing puppies (see the safety section below). Use the calculator above to understand the typical dose, but the prescription must come from your veterinarian. For more, see PuppaDogs’ guide to Baytril for dogs.
How the Enrofloxacin Dosage Calculator Works
The calculator estimates a dose from your dog’s body weight and a chosen dose level within the label range. It then:
- Shows the once-daily dose in milligrams.
- Converts it into a number of 22.7 mg, 68 mg or 136 mg tablets.
- Blocks the dose with a clear warning if you indicate a growing puppy.
- Flags seizure history, kidney disease and the theophylline interaction.
Enter your dog’s weight, choose the dose level and tablet strength, select the age/growth stage, tick any health considerations, then press Calculate Dose.
How Enrofloxacin Doses Are Calculated for Dogs
The Dose Range
The approved label dose of enrofloxacin for dogs is a fairly wide range:
5–20 mg/kg of body weight, given by mouth once daily.
Within that range, the exact dose your veterinarian chooses depends on the type, site and severity of the infection, and on the bacteria involved. Many routine infections are managed in the lower-to-middle part of the range; more serious or resistant infections may need the higher end. The full daily dose is usually given once a day.
Factors Your Vet Considers
- The infection — type, location, severity and (ideally) culture results
- Kidney function — enrofloxacin is partly cleared by the kidneys
- Age and growth stage — see the critical warning below
- Other medications — particularly theophylline
Enrofloxacin Dosage Chart for Dogs
This chart shows the once-daily dose across the 5–20 mg/kg range. It is a reference only — your veterinarian’s prescription takes priority.
| Dog weight | Low (5 mg/kg) | High (20 mg/kg) |
|---|---|---|
| 5 kg (11 lb) | ~25 mg | ~100 mg |
| 10 kg (22 lb) | ~50 mg | ~200 mg |
| 20 kg (44 lb) | ~100 mg | ~400 mg |
| 30 kg (66 lb) | ~150 mg | ~600 mg |
| 40 kg (88 lb) | ~200 mg | ~800 mg |
The Most Important Safety Warning: Growing Puppies
Fluoroquinolone antibiotics, including enrofloxacin, can cause damage to the cartilage of developing joints in young, growing animals. For this reason:
- Enrofloxacin is contraindicated in small and medium-breed dogs during the rapid growth phase, generally between about 2 and 8 months of age.
- In large and giant breeds, the rapid growth phase lasts longer — potentially up to 12 months in large breeds and 18 months in giant breeds — and enrofloxacin should not be used during that period.
If your dog is a growing puppy, your veterinarian will choose a different antibiotic. The calculator above will stop and warn you rather than provide a dose if you select a growing puppy.
How to Give Enrofloxacin to Your Dog
- Once daily, at roughly the same time each day.
- Mind the timing with other things. Enrofloxacin binds to calcium, iron, magnesium, zinc and aluminium — so it should not be given at the same time as dairy products, antacids, or mineral supplements. Separate them by about 2 hours, or these will reduce how much antibiotic is absorbed.
- Hide the tablet in a small treat or pill pocket.
- Finish the entire course, even if your dog looks better after a few days.
- Missed dose: give it as soon as you remember, then continue on schedule; if it is nearly time for the next dose, skip the missed one — never double up.
Side Effects and Safety Warnings
Enrofloxacin is generally well tolerated. The most common side effects are mild and digestive: reduced appetite, vomiting or loose stool, often eased by giving the medication with a little food.
Contact your veterinarian promptly if you notice:
- Stumbling, agitation, tremors or seizures — fluoroquinolones can affect the nervous system
- Signs of an allergic reaction — facial swelling, hives, difficulty breathing
- Any change in vision or the eyes
- Severe or persistent vomiting or diarrhoea
When to Use Caution
- Growing puppies — see the warning above; enrofloxacin should not be used.
- Seizure history or epilepsy — fluoroquinolones can lower the seizure threshold; use only with veterinary caution.
- Kidney disease — the dose or interval may need adjusting.
- Theophylline — enrofloxacin can raise theophylline levels into the toxic range; this combination needs veterinary review.
- Pregnant or nursing dogs — use only if the vet judges the benefit outweighs the risk.
Why Finishing the Course Matters
It is tempting to stop an antibiotic once a dog looks better, but doing so is a common and serious mistake. Stopping early can leave the hardiest bacteria behind, causing a relapse that is harder to treat, and contributing to antibiotic resistance. Fluoroquinolones in particular are an antibiotic class worth protecting — give every dose, for the full length your veterinarian prescribed.
Conclusion
Enrofloxacin (Baytril) is an effective, broad-spectrum antibiotic for canine bacterial infections, dosed within a 5–20 mg/kg once-daily range that your veterinarian tailors to the specific infection. The calculator above gives you an estimate and converts it into tablets. The non-negotiable rules are clear: never use it in growing puppies (cartilage risk), keep it away from dairy and mineral supplements by a couple of hours, use caution in dogs with a seizure history, and always finish the full prescribed course. As with any antibiotic, the choice of drug, the dose and the course length belong with your veterinarian.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much enrofloxacin do I give my dog?
The approved dose of enrofloxacin (Baytril) for dogs is 5-20 mg/kg of body weight, given by mouth once daily. The exact dose within that range is chosen by your veterinarian based on the type and severity of the infection. As a guide, a 20 lb dog might receive somewhere between 50 and 200 mg once daily.
Can puppies take enrofloxacin?
Generally no. Enrofloxacin and other fluoroquinolones can damage developing joint cartilage in growing dogs. It is contraindicated in small and medium breeds during the rapid growth phase (about 2-8 months) and should not be used in large breeds up to around 12 months or giant breeds up to 18 months. Your vet will choose a different antibiotic for a growing puppy.
What is enrofloxacin used for in dogs?
Enrofloxacin is a broad-spectrum fluoroquinolone antibiotic used in dogs for skin and soft-tissue infections, wounds and abscesses, urinary tract infections, respiratory infections and ear infections caused by susceptible bacteria. It is often reserved for infections where a culture shows it is needed or first-line antibiotics are unsuitable.
Can enrofloxacin be given with food?
Enrofloxacin can be given with a little food, which can reduce mild stomach upset. However, it must not be given at the same time as dairy products, antacids, or supplements containing calcium, iron, magnesium or zinc, because these bind the antibiotic and reduce its absorption. Separate enrofloxacin from those by about 2 hours.
What are the side effects of enrofloxacin in dogs?
The most common side effects are mild digestive ones – reduced appetite, vomiting or loose stool. Less commonly, fluoroquinolones can affect the nervous system; contact your vet for any stumbling, agitation, tremors or seizures, any change in the eyes or vision, or signs of an allergic reaction.
How long should my dog take enrofloxacin?
The course length is set by your veterinarian based on the type and severity of the infection – it may range from about a week to several weeks. Always complete the entire prescribed course even if your dog seems better, because stopping early can cause the infection to relapse and promotes antibiotic resistance.
Related PuppaDogs Calculators
Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:
- Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
- Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
- Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
- Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)
References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- Baytril (enrofloxacin) – FDA-approved veterinary label and prescribing information, Elanco.
- Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook. 10th ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2023 – enrofloxacin monograph.
- Merck Veterinary Manual. Fluoroquinolones; antibacterial agents for use in animals. merckvetmanual.com.
- International Society for Companion Animal Infectious Diseases (ISCAID). Antimicrobial use guidelines for dogs and cats.
- PuppaDogs. Baytril for Dogs: Uses, Dosage, and Precautions. puppadogs.com.















