Exercise Needs Vary Enormously By Breed
A Border Collie needs 120 minutes of intense daily exercise. A Bulldog needs 30 minutes of light activity. Getting this wrong creates serious problems:
- Under-exercised high-energy breed → destructive behaviour, hyperactivity, anxiety, reactivity
- Over-exercised brachycephalic → heat stroke, respiratory crisis
- Over-exercised puppy → orthopaedic damage from growth plate stress
- Under-exercised obese dog → continued weight gain, joint disease, shortened lifespan
This calculator provides breed-specific, age-adjusted, condition-aware exercise prescriptions with activity suggestions.
The Breed Exercise Spectrum
Very High Exercise Need (120+ min/day, high intensity)
Working / herding / sporting breeds bred for sustained work:
- Border Collie
- Australian Shepherd / Australian Kelpie
- Belgian Malinois
- Siberian Husky / Alaskan Malamute
- Vizsla / Weimaraner
- German Shorthaired Pointer
- English Pointer / English Setter / Irish Setter
- Jack Russell Terrier / Fox Terrier
- Dalmatian
These breeds NEED a job — long walks alone are insufficient.
High Exercise Need (90 min/day)
Athletic working / sporting / large breeds:
- Labrador Retriever
- Golden Retriever
- German Shepherd Dog
- Boxer
- Standard Poodle
- Brittany Spaniel
- Portuguese Water Dog
- Airedale Terrier
Moderate Exercise Need (60 min/day)
Most companion / family breeds:
- Beagle
- Cocker Spaniel
- Boston Terrier (moderate component)
- Whippet (sprints + rest)
- Miniature Schnauzer
- Cairn / Westie
Low Exercise Need (30-45 min/day)
Brachycephalic / giant / low-drive breeds:
- English Bulldog / French Bulldog
- Pug / Pekingese / Shih Tzu
- Boston Terrier (BOAS-affected)
- Cavalier King Charles Spaniel
- Basset Hound
- Saint Bernard / Newfoundland
- Great Dane (low-impact)
- English Mastiff
Age Adjustments
Puppies Under 6 Months
5-MINUTE RULE: 5 minutes of forced exercise per month of age, twice daily.
- 3-month puppy: 15 min × 2 = 30 min total
- 5-month puppy: 25 min × 2 = 50 min total
WHY: Growth plates are open. Forced repetitive exercise (jogging on lead, hard stairs, jumping) damages growth plates and causes lifelong orthopaedic problems.
OK: free walking at puppy’s own pace, gentle play, training sessions.
AVOID: jogging on lead, agility jumps, repetitive stair use, long hikes.
Puppies 6-12 Months
Growth plates closing. Avoid high-impact activities still:
- No jumping competitions
- No jogging on lead
- No long stair use
- Free walking and gentle off-lead play OK
Adolescent Large/Giant Breeds (1-2 Years)
Large breed growth plates close 18 months; giants 24 months. Continue avoiding high-impact until fully mature.
Adult Dogs (Maturity to Senior)
Full exercise per breed need.
Senior Dogs
~65% of adult exercise — multiple shorter sessions preferred. Low-impact emphasized (swimming, gentle walks). Watch for arthritis signs (see PuppaDogs LOAD Tracker).
Senior age threshold by size:
- Toy/small: 10 years
- Medium: 9 years
- Large: 7 years
- Giant: 6 years
Health Condition Adjustments
| Condition | Multiplier | Approach |
|---|---|---|
| Arthritis / joint disease | 0.7× | Low-impact (swimming, walking); avoid jumping |
| Heart disease (CHF) | 0.5× | Discuss with cardiology vet; monitor RRR |
| Respiratory disease (BOAS) | 0.5× | Avoid heat; harness not collar; rest breaks |
| Recovering from surgery | 0.3× | Per vet rehab protocol; gradual return |
| Overweight | 0.85× | Start lower; build up; protect joints |
Weather Adjustments
| Weather | Multiplier | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Very cold (<-10°C/14°F) | 0.5× | Frostbite risk; coat for short-haired breeds; arctic breeds tolerate but limit |
| Cold (<5°C/41°F) | 0.85× | Coat for short-coated; paw protection from salt/ice |
| Mild (5-25°C/41-77°F) | 1.0× | Optimal range |
| Hot (25-30°C/77-86°F) | 0.65× | Reduce intensity; carry water; morning/evening |
| Very hot (≥30°C/86°F) | 0.4× | Dawn/dusk only; check pavement temp; brachys very limited |
Brachycephalic Heat Safety
Critical: brachycephalic dogs (Bulldog, Pug, Frenchie, Pekingese, Boston, Shih Tzu) cannot cool effectively through panting due to upper airway obstruction.
Heat stroke develops rapidly at modest temperatures (20-25°C/68-77°F).
Brachy exercise rules:
- Never leave in cars
- Avoid midday exercise even in mild weather
- Carry water
- Cooling vest in warmth
- Harness not collar (collar compresses already-narrow airway)
- Recognize early signs of heat stress (excessive panting, red gums, distressed posture)
See PuppaDogs BOAS Severity Calculator and Heatstroke Risk Calculator.
Pavement Temperature
Critical safety: asphalt and concrete absorb heat dramatically:
- At 25°C/77°F air → pavement ~40°C/104°F
- At 31°C/87°F air → pavement 52°C/125°F (hot enough to cook an egg)
- Paw pad burns occur at pavement >50°C/120°F
Test: place your palm flat on pavement for 7 seconds. If too hot for you, too hot for your dog’s paws.
Safe alternatives: grass, dirt, sand, very early morning or late evening pavement.
Mental Enrichment Counts
Mental stimulation supplements physical exercise — particularly important for high-drive breeds:
| Activity | Mental effort | Best for |
|---|---|---|
| Sniff walks (allowing investigation) | High | All breeds |
| Puzzle toys (KONG, snuffle mat) | High | Reactive/anxious dogs |
| Training sessions (5-10 min focused) | Very high | Working breeds |
| Scent work / nose games | Very high | Hounds, working dogs |
| Trick training | High | Companion breeds |
| Herding-style games (treibball) | Very high | Herding breeds |
5-10 minutes of focused training equals roughly 30 minutes of walking in mental fatigue.
Activity Suggestions By Energy Level
Very High / High Energy (Border Collie, Husky, Vizsla, etc.)
- Long off-lead walks/runs
- Fetch games (ball, frisbee)
- Agility / dog sports
- Swimming (low impact, full body)
- Hiking
- Scent work / nose games
- Lure coursing
- Bikejoring (mature dogs only)
Moderate Energy (Beagle, Cocker, Whippet, etc.)
- Daily walks 30-60 min
- Fetch sessions
- Tug-of-war
- Sniff walks
- Swimming
- Basic dog park play
- Hiking moderate distance
- Trick training
Low Energy / Brachycephalic (Bulldog, Pug, Cavalier, etc.)
- Short leashed walks (multiple per day)
- Indoor play with puzzle toys
- Sniff walks (mental over physical)
- Gentle fetch
- Hide and seek
- Trick training
- Swimming (low impact, watch breathing)
- Short fetch indoors
Exercise Safety
Warm-Up / Cool-Down
- 5 min light walking before intensity
- 5 min cool-down after intense exercise
Hydration
- Fresh water access throughout
- Carry water for longer walks
- Avoid drinking lake/stream water in some areas (giardia, leptospirosis)
Post-Meal
- Wait 1-2 hours after eating before vigorous exercise
- GDV / bloat risk in deep-chested breeds (Great Dane, Standard Poodle, Weimaraner, Doberman, Boxer, Setter, German Shepherd)
Monitoring
- Breathing — excessive panting beyond expected
- Gum colour — pink normal; red/blue concerning
- Energy — stop if dog struggles
- Paw pads — check for wear/burns/injury after off-lead runs
Exercise + Behaviour
Inadequate exercise is one of the most common causes of behaviour problems:
- Hyperactivity (especially adolescent dogs)
- Destructive chewing (anxious release)
- Excessive barking (frustration)
- Separation anxiety (under-stimulation)
- Reactivity (pent-up energy)
- House-soiling (sometimes)
“A tired dog is a good dog” — meeting exercise needs prevents many behavioural issues.
Conversely: too little exercise + too much food = obesity + behaviour problems.
Aim for exercise level that leaves dog satisfied but not exhausted.
Honest Caveats
- Individual dogs vary even within breed — observe yours and adjust
- Some “low energy” breeds (e.g. Cavalier) can be surprisingly active
- Some “high energy” breeds (e.g. some Labs) prefer couch life
- Health conditions trump breed defaults — vet guidance overrides
- Mental + physical is the right combination, not just physical
- Quality over quantity — engaged exercise beats grudging treadmill time
Conclusion
Daily exercise is one of the most important determinants of your dog’s physical and mental health. Breed dictates baseline (Border Collie 120 min vs Bulldog 30 min). Age adjustments are critical (5-minute rule for puppies; reduced intensity for seniors). Health conditions require veterinary guidance. Weather demands adjustment (very hot/cold reduces safely-achievable exercise). Brachycephalic dogs need special heat safety. Mental enrichment counts toward exercise needs and is particularly important for high-drive breeds. Match exercise to your dog’s specific needs — under-exercise causes behavioural problems; over-exercise causes injury and exhaustion. With a thoughtful exercise plan, your dog stays physically fit, mentally satisfied, and behaviourally calm.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much exercise does my dog need daily?
Depends on BREED, AGE, HEALTH. VERY HIGH (120 min): Border Collie, Australian Shepherd, Husky, Vizsla, Weimaraner, German Shorthaired Pointer, Malinois, Pointers, Setters. HIGH (90 min): Labrador, Golden, German Shepherd, Boxer, Standard Poodle. MODERATE (60 min): Beagle, Cocker, most companion breeds. LOW (30-45 min): English Bulldog, French Bulldog, Pug, Pekingese, Shih Tzu, Cavalier, Basset, Saint Bernard. PUPPIES UNDER 6 MONTHS: 5 minutes per month of age twice daily (5-month puppy = 25 min × 2). SENIOR DOGS: about 65% of adult exercise, multiple shorter sessions. HEALTH CONDITIONS: arthritis 0.7×, heart 0.5×, respiratory 0.5×, recovering 0.3×. WEATHER: very hot 0.4×, hot 0.65×.
Why is my dog hyperactive/destructive?
INADEQUATE EXERCISE is one of the most common causes. ‘A tired dog is a good dog.’ HIGH-ENERGY BREEDS (Border Collie, Australian Shepherd, Husky, Vizsla, Labrador) commonly develop destructive behaviour, hyperactivity, anxiety, reactivity when under-exercised. SOLUTION: meet breed-specific exercise need (120 min/day for working breeds) WITH MENTAL STIMULATION (sniff walks, puzzle toys, training sessions, scent work, dog sports). Adolescent dogs (1-3 years) particularly need substantial exercise. PHYSICAL + MENTAL combination – long walk alone insufficient for working breeds. Many high-energy dogs in standard households experience behaviour problems from frustration of unfulfilled work drive.
Can I jog with my dog?
DEPENDS ON BREED, AGE, FITNESS. YES jogging-suitable breeds: Labrador, Golden, German Shepherd, Boxer, Vizsla, Weimaraner, Pointers, Setters, Standard Poodle, Australian Shepherd, Border Collie – all athletic dogs with adequate respiratory capacity. NO jogging: BRACHYCEPHALIC (English Bulldog, French Bulldog, Pug, Pekingese, Shih Tzu, Boston) – respiratory limitations + heat intolerance; SHORT-LEGGED chondrodystrophic (Dachshund, Corgi, Basset) – structural strain; GIANT BREEDS until fully mature (24 months); PUPPIES under 12-18 months (growth plate damage). START GRADUALLY: build up distance over weeks; carry water; check pavement temperature; consider time of day. STOP IF DOG STRUGGLES.
Is too much exercise bad for my dog?
YES – over-exercise risks. PUPPIES under 6 months: 5-minute rule (5 min per month of age, twice daily); forced repetitive exercise damages growth plates causing lifelong orthopaedic problems. GIANT BREED PUPPIES even more sensitive (growth plates close 24 months). BRACHYCEPHALIC: heat stroke develops rapidly even at modest temperatures. CARDIAC/RESPIRATORY DISEASE: exercise exacerbates symptoms. OVERWEIGHT DOGS: joint injury risk. UNTRAINED DOGS suddenly active: muscle/tendon injury. ADULT HEALTHY DOGS: difficult to over-exercise if gradually built up; more common problem is UNDER-exercise. Signs of over-exercise: persistent lameness, excessive panting beyond normal, reluctance to exercise, lethargy, behavioural changes.
How do I exercise my Bulldog safely?
BRACHYCEPHALIC SAFETY ESSENTIAL. Bulldogs (English/French) cannot cool through panting effectively due to airway obstruction. RULES: (1) AVOID HEAT – even modest 20-25C/68-77F can cause heat stroke; only EARLY MORNING/EVENING in summer; (2) SHORT WALKS – 15-30 min total daily, multiple short sessions better than one long; (3) WATER ACCESS – carry water bottle; (4) HARNESS NOT COLLAR – collar compresses already-narrow airway; (5) COOLING VEST in warmth; (6) MONITOR breathing – if excessive panting/distress, STOP and rest; (7) NEVER LEAVE IN CARS even briefly; (8) AVOID HOT PAVEMENT – paw burns; (9) CONSIDER POOL/SWIMMING (low-impact, body cooling); (10) MENTAL ENRICHMENT (puzzle toys, scent games, training) is essential as low physical needs. See PuppaDogs BOAS Severity Calculator.
Why does my high-energy breed misbehave?
WORKING/HERDING BREEDS (Border Collie, Australian Shepherd, Belgian Malinois, German Shepherd, Husky, Jack Russell, Vizsla) were SELECTIVELY BRED for sustained intelligent work – hours of running, problem-solving, complex tasks daily. Modern pet life rarely meets this need. UNDER-STIMULATED = behavioural problems: hyperactivity, destruction, excessive barking, reactivity, anxiety, neurotic behaviours (light/shadow chasing, tail spinning). SOLUTION isn’t just MORE walks – it’s PROVIDING A JOB. (1) DOG SPORTS – agility, flyball, herding, dock diving, scent work; (2) MENTAL CHALLENGES – puzzle toys, scent games, trick training; (3) HERDING-STYLE games – treibball, frisbee; (4) STRUCTURED TRAINING DAILY 15-30 minutes formal training; (5) APPROPRIATE COMPANIONSHIP – many high-drive breeds do better with active families or other dogs. If lifestyle can’t meet breed needs, consider rehoming to working home or choosing different breed for future.
Exercise & Walking Gear
Quality gear makes daily exercise safer and more enjoyable. From no-pull harnesses to long lines for off-lead training, these products support your dog’s daily exercise needs.
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.
- American College of Veterinary Sports Medicine and Rehabilitation – acvsmr.org.
- RVC VetCompass Exercise and Behaviour studies.
- AAHA Canine Life Stage Guidelines.
- Stilwell V. Train Your Dog Positively. Ten Speed Press.
- Bowen J, Heath S. Behaviour Problems in Small Animals: Practical Advice for the Veterinary Team. Saunders.
- Mills DS, Westgarth C. Dog Bites: a multidisciplinary perspective. 5M Publishing – exercise and behaviour chapter.
- PuppaDogs. BOAS Severity Calculator, Heatstroke Risk Calculator, LOAD Tracker, Quality of Life Calculator. puppadogs.com.
















