The Dog Heat (Estrus) Cycle – Complete Guide
The canine reproductive cycle has four phases spanning ~6-12 months between heats. Understanding the phases helps with care, breeding decisions, and recognizing pyometra.
The Four Phases
| Phase | Days | Signs | Fertility |
|---|---|---|---|
| Proestrus | 1-9 (avg) | Bloody discharge, vulvar swelling, male attraction but female rejects | NOT fertile |
| Estrus | 9-18 (avg) | Lighter/straw discharge, vulva softens, female receptive (tail flagging), ovulation day 11-13 | FERTILE PHASE |
| Diestrus | 60-90 days | Vulva shrinks, discharge stops, progesterone elevated (whether pregnant or not) | Not fertile; pyometra risk window |
| Anestrus | 2-7 months | Quiet phase between cycles | Not fertile |
Individual variation is significant — some dogs ovulate as early as day 5 or as late as day 25.
Cycle Frequency by Body Size
| Size | Frequency | First Heat |
|---|---|---|
| Toy / Small (<10 kg) | Every 6-7 months | 6-12 months |
| Medium (10-25 kg) | Every 6-7 months | 6-15 months |
| Large (25-40 kg) | Every 7-8 months | 10-18 months |
| Giant (>40 kg) | Every 8-12 months | 12-24 months |
Some breeds cycle only once per year: Basenji, Tibetan Mastiff, Norwegian Elkhound, Saluki.
Fertile Window
Typical fertile days: 9-13 of heat (when female becomes receptive — “flagging” tail to side, allowing male to mount).
Optimal breeding: 2 days post-ovulation when oocytes mature (need 48-72h after ovulation to be fertilizable).
Gold standard timing: progesterone testing (serial samples track ovulation precisely):
- LH surge: progesterone ~2 ng/mL
- Ovulation: 5-10 ng/mL
- Fertile window: 5-20 ng/mL
Vaginal cytology alternative — cornified cells peak during estrus.
Pyometra – The Killer 4-8 Weeks After Heat
LIFE-THREATENING uterine infection developing in intact females typically 4-8 weeks AFTER heat.
25%+ lifetime incidence in unspayed females over 10 years.
Signs
- Excessive thirst + frequent urination (PU/PD)
- Lethargy / weakness
- Decreased appetite
- Vaginal discharge (open pyometra — safer, cervix open) OR NO discharge (closed pyometra — more dangerous, sepsis risk)
- Vomiting in some
- Fever
- Distended abdomen
Treatment
EMERGENCY OVARIOHYSTERECTOMY (spay). Mortality 5-15% with treatment; near 100% without.
Spaying eliminates pyometra risk completely.
Care During Heat
- Containment — secure fencing essential; intact males detect females from 3+ km away and will go to extraordinary lengths
- Leash always — no off-leash anywhere, even command-trained dogs
- Heat diapers / bitch pants for indoor management of bloody discharge; change frequently
- Behavior changes — clinginess, restlessness, sometimes mild irritability/aggression
- Reduce dog park / off-leash activities
- Other dogs in household — intact males will be aroused/distressed; intersex aggression between females possible
- Monitor for abnormal discharge color (yellow-green = pyometra concern) or excessive lethargy
Breeding Considerations
- First heat breeding NOT recommended — dog not fully mature, behavior immature, often poor mothers; wait until 2nd or 3rd heat
- Pre-breeding workup:
- Genetic testing per breed
- OFA hip/elbow/heart/eye clearances
- Brucellosis testing (mandatory for ethical breeding)
- Progesterone timing for precision
- Whelping due date: 63 ± 1 days from ovulation (see Whelping Watch Calculator)
- Brachycephalic C-section rates: Bulldog 60-80%, Frenchie 50-70%, Pug 30-50% — scheduled C-section with progesterone timing
Spay Timing – Breed-Specific per Hart (UC Davis)
Small Breeds (<20 kg)
Spay after first heat at 7-12 months often acceptable; many pre-first-heat OK. Mammary cancer risk dramatically reduced by spaying before 2nd heat.
Large / Giant Breeds
DELAY recommended for orthopedic considerations. Large-breed females spayed before 1 year have increased risk of CCL rupture and hip dysplasia (Hart 2014).
Optimal often 12-24 months for most large breeds. Consult breed-specific guidance in the Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator.
Risk Reduction with Spay
Mammary cancer risk (Schneider 1969):
- 0.5% if spayed before first heat
- 8% after first heat
- 26% after 2nd heat
- 50%+ if never spayed
- ~50% of mammary tumors are malignant
Pyometra: 25%+ lifetime incidence in unspayed females over 10 years; eliminated by spay.
Cycle Irregularities
- First few cycles often irregular — usually regularize after 2-3 heats
- Silent heat — no visible signs; vaginal cytology + progesterone diagnostic
- Split heat — short proestrus followed by gap, then resumed; often in young dogs
- Persistent heat (>21-30 days) — VET WORKUP for follicular cysts, ovarian neoplasia, exogenous hormones
Conclusion
Dog heat cycles are predictable but individual – 4 phases (proestrus, estrus, diestrus, anestrus), 6-12 month intervals depending on breed size. Fertile window typically days 9-13 but varies; progesterone testing is gold standard for breeding timing. PYOMETRA in 4-8 weeks post-heat is life-threatening – signs of PU/PD + lethargy + reduced appetite + vaginal discharge = EMERGENCY. Spay eliminates pyometra and dramatically reduces mammary cancer risk; timing follows breed-specific Hart recommendations.
Frequently Asked Questions
How long does a dog stay in heat?
AVERAGE HEAT DURATION 18-21 days but VARIES significantly. PROESTRUS phase (initial bloody discharge, vulvar swelling, NOT yet fertile, female rejects males): 7-10 days average (range 5-15 days). ESTRUS phase (fertile period, lighter discharge, female receptive, ovulation): 5-10 days average (range 3-15). The two phases together = visible heat cycle = average 18-21 days, range 14-30. CYCLE INTERVAL (between heats): toy/small/medium breeds every 6-7 months; large breeds every 7-8 months; giant breeds every 8-12 months; some breeds (Basenji, Tibetan Mastiff, Norwegian Elkhound, Saluki) only ONCE per year. FACTORS AFFECTING DURATION: 1) BREED VARIATION significant; 2) AGE – first few heats often more irregular and shorter; older dogs may have longer/irregular cycles; 3) INDIVIDUAL VARIATION – same dog can have different cycle lengths; 4) SEASON – some dogs have more predictable spring/fall cycles; 5) HOUSEHOLD – female dogs in same household often synchronize cycles (Whitten effect). PHASES BEYOND VISIBLE HEAT: DIESTRUS (post-heat) 60-90 days – progesterone elevated whether pregnant or not – PYOMETRA RISK WINDOW; ANESTRUS 2-7 months quiet phase between heats. PROLONGED HEAT (>21-30 days) is ABNORMAL warranting vet workup – ovarian cysts (follicular cysts producing estrogen), ovarian neoplasia, exogenous hormones. SHORT/SILENT HEAT – some dogs have minimal external signs but are still cycling – vaginal cytology + progesterone testing diagnostic if breeding planned. EXPECTATIONS – first 2-3 heats often irregular; usually regularize by 2-3 years old.
When is a dog most fertile during heat?
FERTILE WINDOW typically DAYS 9-13 of heat for most dogs (counting day 1 as first day of bloody discharge). HOWEVER, INDIVIDUAL VARIATION IS SIGNIFICANT – some dogs ovulate as early as day 5, some as late as day 25; cycle estimation alone is INSUFFICIENT for precise breeding timing. BEHAVIORAL SIGNS of fertile phase: 1) Discharge changes from BLOODY (proestrus) to LIGHTER/STRAW-COLORED (estrus); 2) Vulva becomes softer (firm in proestrus); 3) Female FLAGGING TAIL to side when stimulated (back/butt patted); 4) Female ACCEPTS male advances (rejects in proestrus); 5) Increased urine marking; 6) More restless or affectionate behavior. PRECISE BREEDING TIMING tools: 1) PROGESTERONE TESTING (gold standard) – serial samples track ovulation precisely; LH surge progesterone ~2 ng/mL (occurs 2 days before ovulation), ovulation progesterone 5-10 ng/mL, fertile window 5-20 ng/mL; OPTIMAL BREEDING is 2 days AFTER ovulation when oocytes have matured (48-72 hours needed); typical breeding days are 4-6 days after LH surge or 2-4 days after ovulation; 2) VAGINAL CYTOLOGY – examines epithelial cells which progress from parabasal (proestrus) through intermediate to fully CORNIFIED cells (estrus); 100% cornified cells coincides with estrus; 3) LH ASSAY – direct measurement of LH surge (definitive marker but narrow window); 4) BREEDING via NATURAL MATING – if female accepts male, she’s likely fertile (but not 100% reliable). OPTIMAL BREEDING PROTOCOL for fertility: start progesterone testing day 5-7 of heat; sample every 2-3 days until LH surge; ovulation 2 days after surge; breed 2-3 days after ovulation; for chilled/frozen semen, more precise timing essential. WHELPING DUE DATE: 63 ± 1 days from OVULATION (not from mating – mating can occur days before fertilization); see Whelping Watch Calculator. BRACHYCEPHALIC breeds (Bulldog, Frenchie, Pug) often require ELECTIVE C-SECTION due to dystocia – PRECISE progesterone timing essential to schedule procedure 63 days post-ovulation. PRE-BREEDING workup: genetic testing per breed; OFA hip/elbow/heart/eye clearances; brucellosis testing (mandatory for ethical breeding).
My dog isn’t spayed – what’s pyometra?
PYOMETRA = LIFE-THREATENING uterine infection developing in INTACT FEMALES typically 4-8 weeks AFTER heat. INCIDENCE – 25%+ lifetime risk in unspayed females over 10 years; INTACT females over 6 years highest risk; can occur in young dogs but unusual. PATHOPHYSIOLOGY – cyclic progesterone elevation (diestrus phase) causes cystic endometrial hyperplasia; bacteria (usually E. coli) from vagina ascend through open cervix during/after heat; uterus filled with pus; toxin absorption causes systemic illness; can rupture causing peritonitis (often fatal). TWO FORMS: 1) OPEN PYOMETRA – cervix OPEN, pus discharges through vagina (visible foul/bloody/yellow-green discharge); SAFER form because uterus drains; still serious; 2) CLOSED PYOMETRA – cervix CLOSED, pus accumulates without drainage; MORE DANGEROUS – sepsis risk higher, rupture risk; NO visible discharge so often missed until severe illness. CLASSIC SIGNS: 1) POLYDIPSIA + POLYURIA (excessive thirst, increased urination, accidents) – often EARLIEST sign; 2) LETHARGY / WEAKNESS – dramatic decrease in energy; 3) DECREASED APPETITE; 4) VAGINAL DISCHARGE (open) or NO discharge (closed); 5) VOMITING in some; 6) FEVER; 7) DISTENDED ABDOMEN; 8) DEHYDRATION; 9) sometimes COLLAPSE. DIAGNOSIS – ultrasound shows enlarged fluid-filled uterus; CBC neutrophilia + left shift + sometimes anemia; chemistry may show elevated BUN/creatinine if dehydrated, often hyperglobulinemia. TREATMENT – EMERGENCY OVARIOHYSTERECTOMY (emergency spay surgery) – removes infected uterus. MEDICAL MANAGEMENT with prostaglandins + antibiotics only for VERY VALUABLE BREEDING DOGS where preservation of fertility critical – significantly higher mortality + recurrence risk; not first-line. SUPPORTIVE CARE – IV fluids, antibiotics, sometimes blood/plasma transfusion for severe cases. PROGNOSIS – mortality 5-15% even with prompt treatment; near 100% without. PREVENTION – SPAY ELIMINATES RISK COMPLETELY. RECOGNITION CRITICAL – any intact female 4-8 weeks post-heat showing signs of PU/PD + lethargy + reduced appetite = EMERGENCY VET VISIT even without vaginal discharge (closed pyo). Don’t wait, don’t dismiss.
Should I let my dog have a heat before spaying?
DEPENDS ON BREED SIZE, HEALTH, AND INDIVIDUAL CIRCUMSTANCES. The ‘should I let her have a heat first’ question doesn’t have one right answer – varies by breed-specific evidence. SMALL BREEDS (under 20 kg / 45 lb): Spaying BEFORE FIRST HEAT (4-6 months) or after first heat (7-12 months) often acceptable. Mammary cancer risk dramatically reduced by spaying before 2nd heat (0.5% before first heat, 8% after first heat, 26% after 2nd heat, 50%+ if never spayed – Schneider 1969). For most small breeds, traditional 6-month spay or wait until after first heat both reasonable choices. LARGE/GIANT BREEDS – HART ET AL. 2014 UC DAVIS STUDY findings change recommendations: Large-breed females spayed BEFORE 1 YEAR have INCREASED RISK of: 1) Cranial cruciate ligament (CCL) rupture – significantly higher in early-spayed females; 2) Hip dysplasia; 3) Some cancers (osteosarcoma especially in giant breeds). RECOMMENDATIONS by breed (Hart et al.): GOLDEN RETRIEVER – delay female spay until at least 12 months, ideally 24 months for orthopedic protection; LABRADOR – delay 11-12+ months; GERMAN SHEPHERD – delay 12-24 months; ROTTWEILER – delay 12-18 months; great dane/mastiff/saint bernard – delay until at least 18-24 months; LARGE-BREED SPECIFIC – work with vet familiar with current evidence. SMALL VS LARGE TRADE-OFFS: SMALL BREEDS – early spay benefits (mammary cancer prevention) outweigh small orthopedic risks; LARGE BREEDS – delay benefits (orthopedic protection) outweigh slightly higher mammary cancer risk. WHAT TO DO: 1) USE PUPPADOGS SPAY/NEUTER TIMING CALCULATOR for breed-specific guidance based on Hart recommendations; 2) WORK WITH VET familiar with current evidence; 3) CONSIDER OVARIAN-SPARING SPAY (uterus removed, ovaries preserved) as alternative for some large-breed dogs – preserves hormonal benefits while eliminating pyometra risk; 4) INDIVIDUAL HEALTH considerations – high-anxiety female may struggle more with twice-yearly heats vs spay surgery recovery; 5) BREEDING CONSIDERATIONS – if might breed in future, can delay decision; 6) LIFESTYLE – intact dog requires careful management during heats. EARLIER SPAY BENEFITS: mammary cancer prevention; eliminates accidental pregnancy risk; eliminates twice-yearly management challenges; prevents pyometra (25%+ lifetime risk); prevents false pregnancy. DELAYED SPAY BENEFITS (large breeds): hormonal benefits during growth; reduced orthopedic disease risk; possible behavioral benefits. NO ONE-SIZE-FITS-ALL ANSWER – breed-specific, evidence-based decision-making with your vet.
How do I keep my female dog clean during heat?
MANAGING A FEMALE DOG IN HEAT (18-21 days average) involves hygiene, containment, and behavior management. HYGIENE OPTIONS: 1. HEAT DIAPERS / BITCH PANTS – reusable cloth or disposable; come in various sizes; change every 4-6 hours when soiled; brands include Pet Parents Washable Diapers, Simple Solution, OUT Pet Care, Frisco; CHANGE FREQUENTLY to prevent UTI risk from trapped moisture; 2. SANITARY PADS – some owners use human pads inside diaper for extra absorbency; LINER pads attach to diaper for easier change; 3. GENTLE VULVA CLEANING – dampen soft cloth with warm water (not soap unless very dirty – irritates); wipe gently every few hours; some owners use pet wipes (unscented); 4. BATHING – can bathe during heat if needed; some breeds groom themselves adequately; if grooming excessive (compulsive licking causing irritation), e-collar may help; 5. BEDDING management – washable covers, change daily, hot wash; sleeping area cordoned with washable cover. CONTAINMENT – CRITICAL: 1. SECURE FENCING essential; intact males detect females from 3+ km away (~2 miles) and will dig under fences, jump 6-foot fences, escape through tiniest gaps; 2. NEVER OFF-LEASH outdoors during entire heat – even command-trained dogs lose recall during peak fertility; 3. SUPERVISED BATHROOM TRIPS only – leashed and direct supervision; 4. NEVER alone in yard even with secure fence – males have escaped well-built fences during heat; 5. KENNEL/CRATE for unsupervised time if can’t constantly supervise; 6. CHANGES BATHROOM ROUTINE – usual dog-park trips skipped; walk in less-trafficked areas; avoid times when many dogs typically out; 7. NOTIFY NEIGHBORS who might have intact males to know your dog is in heat. BEHAVIOR MANAGEMENT: 1. Expect restlessness, clinginess, possibly irritability toward other dogs; 2. Increase mental stimulation – puzzle feeders, training sessions, indoor games; 3. Maintain regular feeding schedule; 4. Extra patience with mood swings; 5. Some females develop intersex aggression toward other females in household (may need to separate). MULTI-DOG HOUSEHOLDS: 1. SEPARATE intact males from female – boarding, friend’s house, or different rooms with strict supervision; 2. SPAY/NEUTER eliminates these challenges entirely; 3. INTACT MALES in household will be DISTRESSED – whining, off food, restless, attempting to reach female – genuinely difficult; 4. FEMALES often develop tension with each other during heat. NOT-EVERYDAY EVENT – every 6-12 months for years – many owners find heat management challenging and choose to spay (besides medical benefits of pyometra/mammary cancer prevention). Heat management is doable but requires planning and vigilance.
How do I know if my dog is in heat?
SIGNS OF HEAT (ESTRUS) in female dogs – 4 main categories: 1. VULVAR CHANGES: Vulva (external female reproductive opening) SWELLS noticeably – usually 1-2 weeks before bloody discharge starts; may become firm in proestrus then softer in estrus; size 2-4x normal at peak. 2. VAGINAL DISCHARGE: DAY 1 OF HEAT = first day bloody discharge (proestrus): bright red to dark red discharge, can range from minimal spotting to obvious bleeding; lasts ~7-10 days. ESTRUS phase: discharge typically lightens to STRAW-COLORED, PINK, or sometimes mostly clear; female is fertile during this lighter-discharge phase. SOME DOGS have minimal external discharge (silent heat) but are still cycling. 3. BEHAVIOR CHANGES: PROESTRUS phase: clingy, attention-seeking, urinating more frequently (marking), some irritability or restlessness, MALES attracted but female REJECTS them (sits down, growls, snaps). ESTRUS phase: receptive to males, FLAGGING TAIL (holds tail to one side when stimulated), allows male to mount, sometimes more affectionate or restless. 4. MALE DOG INTEREST: Intact males detect females in heat from 3+ km away; will become obsessed with female; constant attempts to reach her; if no males present, can be missed signal but vulvar swelling and discharge usually obvious. ADDITIONAL SIGNS: increased urination (frequent marking outside); increased licking of vulva (some dogs almost compulsively groom genitals during heat); restlessness, possible decreased appetite then return to normal; sometimes mounting behavior on other dogs/objects; some dogs hide blood discharge so check bedding for spots. WHEN DOES IT START? FIRST HEAT typically: toy/small breeds 6-12 months; medium breeds 6-15 months; large breeds 10-18 months; giant breeds 12-24 months (some giant breeds first heat at 2 years). EARLIER first heat 5-6 months possible especially in small breeds; LATER first heat over 24 months should be evaluated by vet (suggests delayed sexual maturity, hormonal abnormality). SOME BREEDS only cycle ANNUALLY – Basenji, Tibetan Mastiff, Norwegian Elkhound, Saluki. SUBSEQUENT CYCLES: small/medium every 6-7 months; large every 7-8; giant every 8-12. FIRST FEW CYCLES often IRREGULAR – usually regularize after 2-3 heats. DOCUMENT cycles – first day of bleeding (day 1), peak signs, when bleeding stops, predicted next heat date; helps predict next cycle and spot abnormalities. IF UNCERTAIN – vet exam, vaginal cytology can confirm cycle phase by epithelial cell type (parabasal/intermediate/cornified) and progesterone testing measures hormone level.
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.
- Concannon PW. Reproductive cycles of the domestic bitch. Anim Reprod Sci.
- Kutzler MA. Estrus induction and synchronization in canids and felids. Theriogenology.
- Johnston SD, Root Kustritz MV, Olson PNS. Canine and Feline Theriogenology.
- Hart BL et al. Long-term health effects of neutering dogs – breed-specific analysis. PLoS One 2014, 2020.
- Schneider R et al. Factors influencing canine mammary cancer development. JNCI 1969.
- Hagman R. Pyometra in small animals. Vet Clin North Am Small Anim Pract.
- Goodman M. Ovarian and uterine disease in dogs – Comprehensive Veterinary Reproduction.
- England GCW. Vaginal cytology in the dog – examination guidelines.
- ESDAR European Society for Domestic Animal Reproduction guidelines.
- Sokolowski JH. Reproductive physiology of dogs.
- Romagnoli S. Practical approach to canine reproduction.
- World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA) reproductive guidelines.
- PuppaDogs. Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator, Progesterone & Ovulation Timing Calculator, Pregnancy & Whelping Due-Date Calculator, Whelping Watch Calculator. puppadogs.com.














