What Is Doxycycline and What Does It Treat?
Doxycycline is a broad-spectrum antibiotic widely used in dogs. It belongs to the tetracycline family, and it is valued both for its broad activity against bacteria and for its effectiveness against a group of organisms that many other antibiotics cannot reach.
Doxycycline works by blocking bacterial protein synthesis — it stops bacteria from making the proteins they need to grow and multiply. It is described as bacteriostatic (it halts bacterial growth so the immune system can clear the infection), and it penetrates well into many body tissues.
What makes doxycycline particularly important is its effectiveness against tick-borne diseases, which are a major health concern for dogs. Veterinarians commonly prescribe it for:
- Tick-borne diseases — ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, Lyme disease and Rocky Mountain spotted fever; doxycycline is the standard treatment for several of these
- Respiratory infections, including some causes of kennel cough
- Leptospirosis and certain other infections
- A range of other infections caused by susceptible bacteria
Doxycycline is a prescription medicine. Use the calculator above to understand the typical dose, but a veterinarian should confirm the diagnosis and set the prescription. For more, see PuppaDogs’ guide to doxycycline for dogs.
How the Doxycycline Dosage Calculator Works
The calculator estimates a dose from your dog’s body weight and the chosen dosing plan. It then:
- Applies either the 5 mg/kg twice-daily or 10 mg/kg once-daily regimen.
- Converts it into tablets/capsules, or shows the milligram target for a suspension.
- Issues firm flags for growing puppies and pregnancy (tooth staining) and other cautions.
Enter your dog’s weight, choose the dosing plan, the reason for use and the form you have, tick any health considerations, then press Calculate Dose.
How Doxycycline Doses Are Calculated for Dogs
The Standard Dose
The commonly used oral doxycycline dose for dogs is:
5 mg/kg of body weight every 12 hours, or 10 mg/kg once daily.
Both deliver a similar total daily amount; your veterinarian chooses the regimen, and the course length, based on the infection. Tick-borne diseases in particular are usually treated for a prolonged course — often several weeks.
Doxycycline Dosage Chart for Dogs
This chart shows the 5 mg/kg twice-daily regimen. It is a reference only — your veterinarian’s prescription takes priority.
| Dog weight | Dose per administration | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| 5 kg (11 lb) | ~25 mg | every 12 h |
| 10 kg (22 lb) | ~50 mg | every 12 h |
| 20 kg (44 lb) | ~100 mg | every 12 h |
| 30 kg (66 lb) | ~150 mg | every 12 h |
| 40 kg (88 lb) | ~200 mg | every 12 h |
The Most Important Practical Tip: Always Give With a “Water Chaser”
This is the single most important point about giving doxycycline. Doxycycline tablets and capsules can be irritating to the gullet (oesophagus) if they lodge there on the way down instead of reaching the stomach. A tablet stuck against the oesophageal lining can cause a painful ulcer, and — most seriously — a permanent narrowing of the oesophagus called a stricture, which is very difficult to treat.
The prevention is simple and essential: always follow a doxycycline tablet or capsule with water, or a small amount of food, to wash it down into the stomach. Never give it “dry.” Squirting a little water into your dog’s mouth after the pill, or giving the pill inside a small meatball of wet food, both work well.
How to Give Doxycycline to Your Dog
- Always follow the pill with water or a small amount of food — see above.
- Give with food if you wish; it reduces stomach upset and does not greatly reduce absorption.
- Be consistent with timing — every 12 or 24 hours.
- Finish the entire course, even if your dog looks better — tick-borne infections especially need the full, often multi-week, course.
- Missed dose: give it as soon as you remember, then continue on schedule; if it is nearly time for the next dose, skip the missed one — never double up.
Side Effects and Safety Warnings
Doxycycline is generally well tolerated. The most common side effects are mild and digestive — reduced appetite, vomiting or loose stool — and giving the medication with food helps.
A few specific issues deserve attention:
- Oesophageal injury — see the “water chaser” section above; this is the key practical risk.
- Photosensitivity — doxycycline can make the skin more sensitive to sunlight.
- Tooth and bone effects in young dogs — this is the main reason doxycycline is restricted in certain dogs (see below).
When Doxycycline Should Be Avoided or Used With Caution
- Growing puppies / dogs with developing teeth — tetracyclines bind to developing teeth and bone and can cause permanent yellow-brown tooth staining. Doxycycline is generally avoided in young, growing dogs unless the vet specifically decides the benefit outweighs this.
- Pregnant or nursing dogs — for the same reason (effects on the puppies’ developing teeth and bones), doxycycline is generally avoided in pregnancy and lactation.
- Liver disease — the drug is processed partly by the liver; use with monitoring.
- Kidney disease — doxycycline is actually one of the safer antibiotics for dogs with kidney disease, as it does not rely heavily on the kidneys for elimination — but veterinary guidance is still needed.
Why Finishing the Course Matters
Stopping an antibiotic when a dog looks better is a common mistake. With tick-borne diseases in particular, the full multi-week course is what clears the infection — stopping early invites relapse and contributes to antibiotic resistance. Give every dose, for the entire length your veterinarian prescribed.
Conclusion
Doxycycline is an effective, broadly used antibiotic for dogs — and the standard treatment for several tick-borne diseases — dosed at roughly 5 mg/kg every 12 hours or 10 mg/kg once daily. The calculator above gives you that estimate and converts it into tablets. The two rules to remember are practical and important: always follow the pill with water or food to protect the oesophagus, and avoid doxycycline in growing puppies and pregnant dogs because of its effect on developing teeth. Confirm the diagnosis, dose and course length with your veterinarian, and complete the full course.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much doxycycline do I give my dog?
The commonly used oral doxycycline dose for dogs is about 5 mg/kg of body weight every 12 hours, or 10 mg/kg once daily – both deliver a similar total. As a guide that is roughly 50 mg twice daily for a 10 kg dog. Your veterinarian sets the exact dose and course length, which for tick-borne diseases is often several weeks.
Why must doxycycline be given with water?
Doxycycline tablets and capsules can irritate the gullet (oesophagus) if they lodge there instead of reaching the stomach, potentially causing a painful ulcer or a permanent narrowing called a stricture. Always follow the pill with water or a small amount of food to wash it down – never give it dry.
What is doxycycline used for in dogs?
Doxycycline is a broad-spectrum tetracycline antibiotic. It is the standard treatment for several tick-borne diseases, including ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis and Lyme disease, and is also used for respiratory infections, leptospirosis and other infections caused by susceptible bacteria.
Can puppies take doxycycline?
Doxycycline is generally avoided in young, growing puppies because tetracyclines bind to developing teeth and bone and can cause permanent yellow-brown tooth staining. It is used in a growing dog only if a veterinarian specifically decides the benefit outweighs that risk. It is also generally avoided in pregnant and nursing dogs.
What are the side effects of doxycycline in dogs?
Doxycycline is generally well tolerated. The most common side effects are mild digestive ones – reduced appetite, vomiting or loose stool – which are eased by giving it with food. It can also make the skin more sensitive to sunlight, and there is a risk of oesophageal irritation if a pill is not washed down with water.
How long does my dog need to take doxycycline?
The course length depends on the infection. Tick-borne diseases such as ehrlichiosis are usually treated for a prolonged course, often around 4 weeks. Whatever the length, it is important to complete the entire course your veterinarian prescribes, because stopping early can allow the infection to relapse.
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.
- Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook. 10th ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2023 – doxycycline monograph.
- Merck Veterinary Manual. Tetracyclines; tick-borne diseases of dogs. merckvetmanual.com.
- American College of Veterinary Internal Medicine (ACVIM). Consensus statement on tick-borne diseases (ehrlichiosis, anaplasmosis, Lyme borreliosis) in dogs.
- Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC). Vector-borne disease guidelines. capcvet.org.
- PuppaDogs. Doxycycline for Dogs: Benefits, Dosage, Side Effects, and More. puppadogs.com.















