Why Daily Weighing Saves Puppies
The first three weeks of life are the highest-mortality period in a dog’s entire lifespan. Published canine neonatal mortality rates run 10-30% depending on breed, with some toy and brachycephalic breeds at the upper end (Indrebo 2007, Norwegian breed-club data; Lawler 2008; Mila 2014). The causes cluster — hypothermia, hypoglycaemia, infection, failure of milk transfer — and they cascade. A cold puppy cannot digest milk; a puppy that has not digested milk has low blood sugar; low blood sugar makes the puppy weaker, less able to seek warmth, less able to nurse.
Daily weighing is the single best home tool for catching the cascade early. A puppy that loses 4% of body weight in 24 hours has crossed an established emergency threshold long before it looks visibly sick. This calculator translates a daily weighing into a tiered status with action steps.
The Healthy Neonatal Growth Curve
Published canine data show consistent patterns:
| Age | Expected weight (% of birth weight) |
|---|---|
| Day 0 (birth) | 100% |
| Days 0-2 | 100-103% (mild loss in first 24-48 h is acceptable) |
| Day 3 | 105-115% (birth weight regained) |
| Day 7 | 150-180% |
| Day 10 | 200-220% (weight DOUBLES) |
| Day 14 | 250-275% |
| Day 21 | 300-400% (weight TRIPLES) |
| Day 28 | 400-475% |
| Day 42 | ~600-700% |
| Day 56 | ~800-900% |
Daily gain in the first two weeks should be 5-10% of body weight per day. This is the single most useful number — a puppy gaining 5+ g/day from a 100 g birth weight is on track; one losing weight is in trouble.
The Emergency Thresholds
Three thresholds drive the calculator’s tiered output:
- Any 24-hour weight loss of >4% = emergency. Call vet today.
- Any 24-hour weight loss of >10% = critical. Same-hour vet contact.
- Significantly below the expected growth curve for age (under 85% of expected) = watch closely, intervene if not recovering within 12-24 hours.
The first 24-48 hours are slightly different — mild loss as the puppy adjusts is acceptable, and birth weight should be regained by day 2-3 at latest.
What To Do If A Puppy Is Failing
When a puppy meets any of the emergency criteria above, the standard intervention sequence:
- Warmth first. A chilled puppy cannot digest milk and cannot use supplemental calories. Warm to a body temperature of about 36-37 °C using a heating pad with a safe temperature controller, hot-water bottles wrapped in towels, or skin-to-skin with the dam. Ambient temperature should be 30-32 °C (86-90 °F) for the first week.
- Glucose. Hypoglycaemia is common in failing neonates. A few drops of corn syrup or oral glucose solution rubbed on the gums can buy time as you head to the vet.
- Supplemental feeding with a quality puppy milk replacer (Royal Canin Babydog Milk, Esbilac, Welpenmilch) – not cow milk, which is inappropriate (wrong lactose, wrong protein, often causes diarrhoea). Bottle, syringe or tube-feed depending on the puppy’s strength.
- Veterinary care — same-hour for >4% loss, same-day for static weight, same-week for “behind the curve but stable”. Many small interventions (tube feeding, warming, sub-Q dextrose, fluid therapy, antibiotics for suspected infection) can save fading puppies.
Fading Puppy Syndrome
“Fading puppy syndrome” is a catch-all term for the cascade that kills puppies in the first three weeks. The contributors:
- Low birth weight — under-sized at birth predicts mortality
- Failure of colostrum intake in the first 24 hours
- Hypothermia
- Hypoglycaemia
- Dehydration
- Bacterial / viral infection (canine herpesvirus, sepsis)
- Congenital defects (cleft palate, cardiac anomaly, hydrocephalus)
- Dam rejection / inadequate milk
The combination is what kills. Daily weighing catches the trajectory; once the puppy is in active decline, intervention is harder but possible. Prevention by early detection is the strategy.
How To Weigh Properly
- Use a digital scale that reads in grams. A 1-2 kg-capacity kitchen scale works for the first few weeks; a baby scale becomes useful as the puppies grow.
- Weigh at the same time each day — typically morning, before nursing, to get the most consistent reading.
- Record each puppy’s weight in a litter chart with the date. Puppies are easy to mix up; mark them with non-toxic coloured ribbon collars or livestock-marker dots to track individuals.
- Note context — was the puppy nursing well that day, any diarrhoea, any concerns. The trend plus the notes give you the picture.
Breed Considerations
The calculator applies breed-specific notes:
- Toy breeds have the highest neonatal mortality. Norwegian data put some toy breeds at 20-30%. Smaller body, lower glycogen reserves, higher heat loss. Frequent weighing (every 8-12 hours in the first week) is reasonable.
- Giant breeds have larger litters with more variable birth weights. The “runt” of a giant litter often needs supplemental attention to keep up.
- Brachycephalic breeds (French Bulldogs, Bulldogs, Pugs) have higher rates of cleft palate, which prevents effective nursing. A flat-faced neonate that is not gaining despite apparent nursing needs a palate exam.
- Some breeds have known issues with canine herpesvirus, which causes catastrophic fading in early litters when introduced by an unexposed dam.
When To Be Aggressive
The lower the birth weight, the more aggressive monitoring needs to be:
- >400 g (large/giant): standard daily weighing
- 200-400 g (medium): standard daily weighing
- 100-200 g (small): weigh every 12-24 h
- <100 g (toy / runt): weigh every 8-12 h in the first week; consider supplemental feeding from day 1 if not gaining
The Whelping Kit Connection
This calculator complements the PuppaDogs Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator, which sets up the whelping kit. The single most important item in that kit is a digital scale that reads in grams, with a notebook to record daily weights. Many vets recommend laminated litter chart templates that hang on the whelping box.
Honest Caveats
- The growth curve in this calculator is a typical canine pattern based on published data. Individual variation is wide; very large litters often gain slightly more slowly than small ones.
- The 4% in 24h threshold is a published emergency criterion in canine neonatology — it is well-established but slightly conservative. A vet may treat 3% loss in the smallest neonates similarly.
- Weight is not the only sign — a cold, quiet, limp puppy is in trouble even if today’s weight has not yet dropped. Skin pinch (slow return = dehydration), gum colour (pale or grey = bad), vocalisation (loss of normal quiet nursing rhythm) all add signal.
- This calculator does not replace hands-on care from an experienced breeder, midwife, or reproduction vet for at-risk litters.
Conclusion
The first three weeks are the highest-mortality period in a dog’s life, and daily weighing is the single best home tool for catching neonatal emergencies before they become fatal. The published canine neonatal growth curve shows 5-10%/day gain in the first two weeks, weight doubled by ~10 days and tripled by ~21 days. Any 24-hour weight loss above 4% is an emergency; above 10% is critical. This calculator turns each daily weighing into a tiered status with practical action steps — and combined with attentive warmth, supplemental feeding when needed, and ready vet access, it makes a meaningful difference to litter survival.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much weight should a newborn puppy gain per day?
Healthy puppies gain 5-10% of body weight per day in the first two weeks. Birth weight is regained by day 2-3, doubled by ~day 10, and tripled by ~day 21. Mild weight loss (a few percent) in the first 24-48 hours is acceptable; failure to gain after day 3 is a problem; loss of more than 4% in any 24-hour period is a recognised neonatal emergency.
How much should a 7-day-old puppy weigh?
A typical 7-day-old puppy weighs about 150-180% of birth weight – so a puppy born at 300 g should weigh about 450-540 g at one week. The actual number depends on breed and litter size; the more useful question is whether the puppy is on a steady upward trajectory of 5-10% gain per day.
What is fading puppy syndrome?
Fading puppy syndrome is a catch-all term for the cascade of hypothermia, hypoglycaemia, dehydration, infection and failure of milk transfer that kills puppies in the first 1-3 weeks of life. Mortality rates of 10-30% across canine litters are well-documented. The earliest detectable sign is usually failure to gain weight or active weight loss – daily weighing is the single best home tool for catching the cascade early.
How can I tell if my newborn puppy is healthy?
Healthy neonates are plump, pink, warm to the touch, vocal when handled, and nurse competently when offered a teat. The objective measure is weight – a steady 5-10% per day gain in the first two weeks. Warning signs: cold or cool body, pale or grey gums, limpness, quiet (loss of normal vocal nursing), failure to nurse, weight loss, persistent crying. Any of these warrants intervention.
What should I feed a newborn puppy that’s not growing?
Use a quality canine puppy milk replacer (Royal Canin Babydog Milk, Esbilac, Welpenmilch) – NOT cow milk, which is inappropriate (wrong lactose, wrong protein, causes diarrhoea). Bottle-feed, syringe-feed or tube-feed depending on puppy strength. Always warm the puppy first – a cold neonate cannot digest milk. Veterinary input is essential for any actively failing puppy.
When should I call the vet about a newborn puppy?
Same-hour if: weight loss of more than 4% in 24 hours, persistent crying, refusal to nurse, cold/limp, pale or grey gums. Same-day if: failure to gain weight across 2 days, slightly behind the growth curve. Same-week if: smaller than littermates but currently stable and gaining at a slower pace. Early intervention with warming, supplemental feeding, sub-Q dextrose and antibiotics for suspected infection saves many puppies that would otherwise fade.
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.
- Indrebo A, Trangerud C, Moe L. Canine neonatal mortality in four large breeds. Acta Veterinaria Scandinavica, 2007 – the Norwegian breed-club data.
- Lawler DF. Neonatal and pediatric care of the puppy and kitten. Theriogenology, 2008.
- Mila H, Grellet A, Feugier A, Chastant-Maillard S. Differential impact of birth weight and early growth on neonatal mortality in puppies. Journal of Animal Science, 2015.
- Munnich A, Kuchenmeister U. Causes, diagnosis and therapy of common diseases in neonatal puppies in the first days of life: Cornerstones of practical approach. Reproduction in Domestic Animals, 2014.
- WSAVA Reproduction Control Committee and breeder guidelines. wsava.org.
- Root Kustritz MV. Pregnancy diagnosis and abnormalities of pregnancy in the dog. Theriogenology, 2005.
- PuppaDogs. Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator and Puppy Weight Predictor. puppadogs.com.









