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Dog Omega-3 / Fish Oil Dosage Calculator

Suyash Dhoot by Suyash Dhoot
23 May 2026
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Bauer 2011 / Roush 2010-based
Dog Omega-3 / Fish Oil Dosage Calculator
Combined EPA+DHA mg/day, by indication, breed-aware
Omega-3 (EPA + DHA) is one of the better-evidenced canine supplements – with documented benefit in osteoarthritis (Roush 2010 RCT), skin disease, cardiac disease and CKD. This calculator gives an evidence-based daily target and converts it to capsules or mL of your specific product.
Check label – typical fish oil capsule has 180-300 mg EPA.
Typical capsule has 120-200 mg DHA.
Evidence-based dose range, not a prescription. Discuss high-dose or therapeutic indications with your vet, especially in dogs with bleeding disorders, on anticoagulants, or scheduled for surgery. Cod liver oil is NOT appropriate as a primary omega-3 source (vitamin A toxicity risk).

Why Omega-3 Is The Best-Evidenced Supplement For Dogs

Among the dozens of “supplements” marketed for dogs, omega-3 (EPA + DHA) has the strongest evidence base. Multiple randomised controlled trials and large systematic reviews support its use across several conditions:

  • Osteoarthritis — Roush et al 2010 JAVMA: high-EPA diet improved weight-bearing and reduced NSAID requirement in arthritic Labradors
  • Atopic dermatitis and inflammatory skin disease — Bauer 2011 review confirmed measurable benefit
  • Dilated cardiomyopathy and atrial fibrillation — Freeman et al consistent benefit on arrhythmia frequency
  • Chronic kidney disease — multiple studies show slowed disease progression
  • Cognitive decline in seniors — emerging evidence for DHA in canine cognitive dysfunction
  • Inflammatory bowel disease — adjunct evidence base

The mechanism is consistent: EPA and DHA shift eicosanoid production from pro-inflammatory (arachidonic acid → series-2 prostaglandins, series-4 leukotrienes) toward less inflammatory (EPA → series-3 prostaglandins, series-5 leukotrienes). Across many tissues, the result is measurable anti-inflammatory effect.

This calculator gives the evidence-based dose range for your dog’s weight and indication.

The Dosing Framework – Combined EPA + DHA Per kg

The published canine literature reports doses as combined EPA + DHA in mg per kg body weight per day:

IndicationCombined EPA+DHA mg/kg/dayEvidence
Maintenance / wellness50-75Standard healthy-dog supplementation
Skin / mild allergy75-100Bauer 2011 review
Joint / osteoarthritis100-150Roush 2010 RCT range
Cardiac (DCM, AF)65-100Freeman et al
Chronic kidney disease75-100Multiple RCTs
High anti-inflammatory (severe allergy, IBD)150-200Upper therapeutic range
NRC maximum safe~370NRC 2006 ceiling

For a 20 kg dog with osteoarthritis: 20 × 100-150 = 2,000-3,000 mg combined EPA+DHA per day.

Reading Product Labels Properly

This is the single most-missed step. “Fish oil 1000 mg” on the front of a bottle is meaningless. The relevant numbers are:

  • EPA mg per capsule / per mL / per pump
  • DHA mg per capsule / per mL / per pump

Typical fish-oil products contain 30-40% EPA+DHA by weight, so a “1000 mg fish oil” capsule often delivers only 300-400 mg combined EPA+DHA. Higher-concentration products (60-70% combined EPA+DHA) deliver more per capsule but cost more.

Always look on the label for the specific EPA and DHA figures.

Product Choice – Capsules vs Liquid vs Krill

Capsules

  • Easy to dose precisely
  • Higher cost per mg
  • Better for small dogs and travel
  • Look for enteric-coated to reduce fishy burps

Liquid (pump bottles)

  • Cheaper per mg for larger dogs
  • One pump usually = standard dose for ~10 kg dog
  • Must be refrigerated after opening; use within 60-90 days
  • Easy to over- or under-dose without a measuring syringe

Krill oil

  • Phospholipid-bound EPA+DHA (theoretically better-absorbed)
  • Lower environmental impact than sardine / anchovy oil
  • More expensive per mg
  • Contains astaxanthin (antioxidant)

Algae oil

  • Sustainable – no fishing required
  • Mainly DHA; EPA content varies by product
  • Suitable for owners who prefer plant-derived sources

Rancidity – Probably The Biggest Practical Problem

Omega-3 oxidises rapidly. Rancid fish oil delivers pro-inflammatory effects — the opposite of what you want. Practical rules:

  • Refrigerate after opening (capsules and liquid both)
  • Use within 60-90 days of opening
  • Discard if it smells like rotten fish rather than a clean ocean smell
  • Buy smaller bottles if your dog uses it slowly
  • Choose products with added vitamin E as an antioxidant – reputable brands include this routinely

Cod Liver Oil Warning

Do NOT use cod liver oil as a primary omega-3 source. Cod liver oil is high in vitamin A and vitamin D — at therapeutic omega-3 doses, vitamin A toxicity becomes a real risk. Use dedicated fish oil (sardine, anchovy, salmon) or algae oil instead.

Bleeding and Surgery

At high doses, omega-3 prolongs bleeding times via effects on platelet function. Practical implications:

  • Stop omega-3 7-10 days before any planned surgery
  • Use lower doses in dogs on anticoagulants (clopidogrel, aspirin, warfarin)
  • Discuss with your vet if your dog has a known bleeding tendency

The effect is dose-dependent — maintenance dosing rarely causes problems; high anti-inflammatory dosing does.

GI Upset

Loose stool and occasional vomiting are the most common side effects, especially when starting. Practical management:

  • Start at 25-30% of target dose
  • Increase over 2-3 weeks as the gut adapts
  • Give with food rather than alone
  • Split daily dose across two meals rather than one large dose

If the dog cannot tolerate fish oil even at low doses, krill oil or algae oil are gentler alternatives for some dogs.

Indication-Specific Notes

Osteoarthritis

The single best-evidenced indication. Use the higher end of the 100-150 mg/kg/day range for established arthritis. Combine with the foundation OA programme (lean body condition, NSAID where appropriate, controlled exercise) for full effect. Track response with the PuppaDogs Arthritis & Mobility Score Calculator.

Skin / Allergy

Omega-3 takes 6-12 weeks to show full benefit in skin disease – much longer than owners often expect. Use as adjunct, not sole therapy – hypoallergenic diet trial, appropriate flea control, and identification/avoidance of triggering allergens drive the bigger response. Apoquel and Cytopoint give faster relief; omega-3 supports the longer-term picture.

Cardiac (DCM, atrial fibrillation)

The Freeman protocol targets about 40 mg/kg EPA + 25 mg/kg DHA — a roughly 1.6:1 EPA:DHA ratio. Evidence strongest in Cocker Spaniels with DCM and Boxers with arrhythmogenic right ventricular cardiomyopathy. Combine with vet-directed pimobendan, ACE inhibitor, and other cardiac therapy.

Chronic Kidney Disease

Omega-3 supplementation lowers glomerular blood pressure and slows CKD progression in dogs. Most veterinary renal diets already contain therapeutic levels – check the label before adding supplement.

How To Tell If It’s Working

Realistic timelines:

  • Skin and coat improvement: 6-12 weeks
  • Arthritis benefit: 8-12 weeks
  • Cardiac arrhythmia frequency: 4-8 weeks
  • CKD progression markers: months
  • Acute inflammation markers: 2-4 weeks

Re-score using a structured tool (Arthritis & Mobility Score, Quality of Life, Pain Score) before starting and after 6-12 weeks to capture meaningful change. Without before-and-after measurement, owners often can’t tell whether subtle improvement is real.

Honest Caveats

  • The dose ranges above are starting points – individual response varies.
  • Maximum safe dose (NRC 2006: ~370 mg/kg/day) is rarely needed and approaches the level at which bleeding effects become clinically relevant.
  • The published evidence is strongest for osteoarthritis, atopic dermatitis and DCM. Other indications (cognitive, IBD, behavioural) have lower-quality evidence.
  • Product quality varies enormously. Cheap fish-oil capsules often have poor EPA+DHA content and high rancidity rates. Brand matters.
  • This calculator is a planning tool, not a substitute for veterinary input for a sick dog. Cardiac, renal and serious inflammatory disease should always involve a vet.

Conclusion

Omega-3 (EPA + DHA) is the best-evidenced canine supplement and one of the cheapest ways to materially improve quality of life in older dogs, arthritic dogs, dogs with skin disease and dogs with cardiac or kidney disease. The dose ranges above (50-200 mg/kg/day combined EPA+DHA by indication) are based on published canine clinical trials and reviews. Read the label carefully (not “fish oil” but the EPA + DHA mg), store properly to avoid rancidity, and re-score with structured tools after 6-12 weeks to confirm response.

Frequently Asked Questions

How much fish oil should I give my dog?

Combined EPA + DHA dose depends on indication: maintenance 50-75 mg/kg/day; skin or allergy 75-100; joint or arthritis 100-150 (Roush 2010 RCT range); cardiac 65-100; chronic kidney disease 75-100; high anti-inflammatory 150-200. For a 20 kg dog with osteoarthritis, that’s 2000-3000 mg combined EPA+DHA per day. Read your product label for the specific EPA and DHA mg – ‘fish oil 1000mg’ is not the same as ‘EPA+DHA 1000mg’.

What is the best omega-3 supplement for dogs?

Choose a product that reports EPA and DHA in mg separately (not just ‘fish oil mg’). Reputable brands include Nordic Naturals Pet, Welactin (Nutramax), Grizzly, and many veterinary-brand options. Liquid pump bottles are cost-effective for larger dogs; capsules suit small dogs and travel. Look for added vitamin E (antioxidant) and an MSC sustainability certification. Avoid cod liver oil as a primary omega-3 source (vitamin A toxicity risk at therapeutic doses).

Can I give my dog fish oil for arthritis?

Yes – this is one of the best-evidenced uses. The Roush 2010 JAVMA RCT showed a high-EPA diet significantly improved weight-bearing in arthritic Labradors. Target the higher end of 100-150 mg/kg/day combined EPA+DHA. Combine with foundation arthritis management (lean body condition, NSAID where appropriate, controlled exercise) and re-score with a mobility tool after 6-12 weeks – omega-3 takes that long to show full effect.

Are there side effects from fish oil in dogs?

Most common: GI upset (loose stool, occasional vomiting) – start at 25-30% of target dose and increase over 2-3 weeks. Bleeding times can prolong at high doses (stop 7-10 days before any planned surgery; use lower doses in dogs on anticoagulants). Rancid fish oil is pro-inflammatory rather than anti-inflammatory – refrigerate after opening, use within 60-90 days, discard if smells fishy rather than oceanic.

Why shouldn’t I give my dog cod liver oil?

Cod liver oil is high in vitamin A and vitamin D – at therapeutic omega-3 doses for dogs, this becomes a real toxicity risk. Vitamin A toxicity causes bone deformities, joint problems and other issues; vitamin D toxicity causes hypercalcaemia and renal damage. Use a dedicated fish oil (sardine, anchovy, salmon), krill oil, or algae oil instead – all deliver EPA+DHA without the fat-soluble vitamin load.

How long does it take for fish oil to work in dogs?

Realistic timelines: skin and coat improvement 6-12 weeks; arthritis benefit 8-12 weeks; cardiac arrhythmia frequency 4-8 weeks; CKD progression markers months. Re-score with a structured tool (mobility, pain, quality of life) before starting and after 6-12 weeks to confirm meaningful change – subtle improvement often gets missed without before-and-after measurement.

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.

  1. Bauer JE. Therapeutic use of fish oils in companion animals. JAVMA, 2011 – landmark canine omega-3 review.
  2. Roush JK, Cross AR, Renberg WC, et al. Evaluation of the effects of dietary supplementation with fish oil omega-3 fatty acids on weight bearing in dogs with osteoarthritis. JAVMA, 2010 – the canine OA RCT.
  3. Freeman LM, Rush JE, Kehayias JJ, et al. Nutritional alterations and the effect of fish oil supplementation in dogs with heart failure. Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine, 1998.
  4. Hall JA, Henry LR, Jha S, Skinner MM, Jewell DE. Effects of dietary n-6 and n-3 fatty acids and vitamin E on the immune response of healthy geriatric dogs. American Journal of Veterinary Research, 2010.
  5. National Research Council (NRC). Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats – omega-3 maximum safe levels.
  6. WSAVA Global Nutrition Toolkit. wsava.org.
  7. PuppaDogs. Arthritis & Mobility Score Calculator and Galliprant Dosage Calculator. puppadogs.com.
Suyash Dhoot
Suyash Dhoot
Tags: dog joint supplementdog omega 3 dosageEPA DHA dogfish oil dog calculatorRoush canine omega-3
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