How Many Calories Does My Dog Need?
The number every dog owner eventually needs. Underfeeding slows growth in puppies and creates weight loss in adults; overfeeding is the single most common dietary problem in pet dogs and the root of widespread canine obesity. Roughly 50-60% of pet dogs in the UK and US are now overweight or obese (WSAVA / German et al.), and a calorie target you can actually hit is the starting point of weight management.
This calculator uses the WSAVA / NRC 2006 equations — the same ones taught in veterinary nutrition courses — to give you a daily calorie target and translate it into cups and grams of dry food.
The Equations
Two pieces of maths drive the calculator:
- Resting Energy Requirement (RER) — the calories needed just to keep a dog alive at rest, with no activity, no growth, and no temperature stress. The standard equation is:
$$\text{RER} = 70 \times \text{BW(kg)}^{0.75}$$
This is a form of Kleiber’s law (Kleiber 1932), which holds across most mammals.
- Daily Energy Requirement (DER) — the calories needed to maintain stable body condition under real life conditions. DER is RER multiplied by a life-stage and activity factor:
| Life stage / activity | Factor (x RER) |
|---|---|
| Puppy < 4 months | 3.0 |
| Puppy 4 months to maturity | 2.0 |
| Adult, intact | 1.8 |
| Adult, neutered (most pet dogs) | 1.6 |
| Inactive / obese-prone | 1.2-1.4 |
| Weight loss (at TARGET weight) | 1.0 |
| Active working dog | 2.0-5.0 |
| Endurance / sled / racing | 4.0-8.0 |
| Pregnancy (weeks 1-5) | 1.8 |
| Pregnancy (weeks 6-9) | 2.0 |
| Lactation (peak, week 3-4) | 4.0-8.0 (scales with litter) |
Why Most Pet Dogs Need Less Than the Bag Suggests
The number most owners overlook: neutered dogs require about 25-30% fewer calories than intact dogs of the same weight. Most pet dogs are neutered — and most dog-food bags print feeding guides aimed at intact dogs. The result: chronic overfeeding.
This calculator’s default of 1.6 x RER for a neutered adult dog matches the NRC and WSAVA published factors. If your dog is gaining weight on the calculated amount, drop one step (to 1.4 x RER) and re-check after 2-4 weeks.
Cups and Grams – Translating Calories Into Food
A calorie target is useful; a portion of food is what you actually need. The calculator multiplies the daily kcal by:
- Your food’s kcal per cup (defaults to 380, which is typical for adult dry foods; check your bag’s small print for the exact figure)
- Approximate kibble density (110 g per cup) to give grams
If you use a kitchen scale, grams is more accurate than cups — kibble shape, density and packing vary, so a “cup” of one food may be 20-30% different from a “cup” of another. A digital scale costing GBP 10 / USD 10 is one of the best small investments in dog health.
Special Situations
Puppies
- Under 4 months: 3.0 x RER, fed across 3 meals/day.
- 4 months to skeletal maturity: 2.0 x RER, fed across 2 meals/day.
- Large and giant breeds need a large-breed puppy food (controlled calcium / phosphorus to encourage steady lean growth) until 12-18 months. The Puppy Weight Predictor on PuppaDogs can give you a sense of when your puppy reaches 95% adult weight.
Weight Loss
- Target 1-2% body-weight loss per week (Laflamme 1997, WSAVA consensus).
- Feed RER at TARGET weight (i.e. enter the target weight in the calculator, set life stage to “Weight loss”).
- Re-weigh every 2-4 weeks; if loss is too slow, drop calories by 10-15%; if too fast, raise them.
- See the PuppaDogs Ideal Weight & Weight-Loss Calculator for full programming.
Pregnancy
- Calories rise modestly through weeks 1-5, then more steeply in weeks 6-9.
- Most reproductive nutritionists transition the dam to a growth (puppy) food by week 5-6 of pregnancy.
Lactation
- Calorie needs explode and peak around week 3-4 of lactation at 4-8 x RER depending on litter size.
- Free-feeding is often easier than measured meals during peak lactation.
- The lactation factor in this calculator adds +25% per puppy, on top of the week-of-lactation base factor.
Working Dogs
- Activity factor varies dramatically. A weekend hiking companion is barely different from a regular pet dog; a working sheepdog may need 2.5-3.0 x RER; sled and endurance dogs in heavy work can need 5-8 x RER for short periods.
Senior Adjustment
Past the breed’s senior threshold (about 6 years for giant breeds, 9-10 for toys and smalls), most dogs need 10-20% fewer calories because of reduced lean body mass and activity. The calculator applies a -15% adjustment automatically when you enter age and breed.
Honest Caveats
- Individual variation is real — published studies find a normal range of about ±20-40% around the calculated DER. Use the result as a starting point, then adjust based on the scale and body-condition score.
- The equations assume a healthy thyroid and normal metabolism. Hypothyroidism, Cushing’s and several other conditions change calorie needs.
- Treats count. Treats should be no more than 10% of daily calories (WSAVA), and the kibble portion needs to drop to make room.
- This is not a substitute for veterinary nutritional advice in a dog with significant weight, health, growth or reproductive issues.
Conclusion
A reliable daily calorie target is the foundation of dog feeding. This calculator implements the WSAVA / NRC 2006 standard equations (RER = 70 x BWkg^0.75; DER = RER x life-stage factor) and translates the result to cups and grams. Use it to set a starting portion, check the body-condition score every few weeks, and adjust by 10-15% in either direction until your dog is holding steady at a lean, healthy condition.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I calculate how many calories my dog needs?
Use the WSAVA/NRC equation: Resting Energy Requirement (RER) = 70 x body weight in kg ^ 0.75. Then multiply by a life-stage factor: 1.6 x RER for most neutered adult pet dogs, 1.8 x for intact adults, 1.2-1.4 x for inactive or obese-prone dogs, 1.0 x at TARGET weight for weight loss, 2.0-3.0 x for puppies, more for working dogs and lactating dams. This calculator does the maths for you.
How much should I feed my dog per day?
Take the daily calorie target from the calculator and divide by your food’s kcal per cup (printed on the bag). Most adult dry foods are 350-450 kcal per cup. Convert to grams with a kitchen scale for accuracy – cups vary by 20-30% between foods. Feed adult dogs twice a day, puppies under 4 months three times a day.
Why are dog food bag guidelines often too generous?
Most bag guides are calibrated for intact dogs, but most pet dogs are neutered and need about 25-30% fewer calories. Bag guidelines also tend to use the upper end of normal activity. If your dog is gaining weight on the bag’s guideline, the calculator’s calculated amount will usually be lower – trust the calculation and the body-condition score, not the bag.
How do I feed a dog for weight loss?
Set the life stage to ‘Weight loss’ in the calculator and enter the TARGET weight (not current weight). The calculator uses 1.0 x RER at target weight, which produces safe loss of about 1-2% body weight per week. Re-weigh every 2-4 weeks and adjust by 10-15% in either direction. PuppaDogs has a separate Ideal Weight & Weight-Loss Calculator that programmes the full transition.
How many calories does a lactating dog need?
Far more than maintenance. Calorie needs ramp from 2.0 x RER in week 1 of lactation to 4.0+ x RER from week 3 onward, plus an additional ~25% per puppy. A medium-sized dam with 6 puppies in week 3 may need 6-8 x maintenance. Free-feeding during peak lactation is usually easier than measured meals, and most dams do best on a growth (puppy) food during this period.
Are dog food kcal per cup figures reliable?
Yes – manufacturers calculate metabolisable energy using the modified Atwater factors required by AAFCO and WSAVA. The kcal/cup printed on the bag is what you should use. Cup size matters too: a standard measuring cup is 8 fluid ounces (~240 mL); use a kitchen scale for precision.
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.
- National Research Council (NRC). Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press, 2006.
- WSAVA Global Nutrition Toolkit and Nutritional Assessment Guidelines. wsava.org.
- Kleiber M. Body size and metabolism. Hilgardia, 1932 – foundation of the RER equation.
- Laflamme DP. Development and validation of a body condition score system for dogs. Canine Practice, 1997.
- German AJ et al. Long-term follow-up after weight management in obese dogs – the role of diet. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 2012.
- Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO). Dog and Cat Nutrient Profiles. aafco.org.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – canine nutrition tables.









