Why Senior Dogs Need Structured Routines
Senior dogs benefit enormously from predictable, multi-short-session daily routines because:
- Cognitive function declines — predictability reduces anxiety
- Bladder control declines — frequent toilet breaks prevent accidents
- Joint stiffness is worse first thing in the morning — needs warm-up
- Energy peaks earlier in the day — major exercise early
- Medications have specific timing requirements
- Sleep-wake cycle may invert in CCDS (sundowner-style restlessness)
This calculator integrates your dog’s LOAD arthritis, CCDS cognitive, RRR cardiac, and QoL scores along with current medications to generate a personalized schedule.
When Does Your Dog Become “Senior”?
Size-adjusted senior age thresholds:
| Size | Senior threshold | Geriatric threshold |
|---|---|---|
| Toy / small | 10 years | 13 years |
| Medium | 9 years | 12 years |
| Large | 7 years | 10 years |
| Giant | 6 years | 9 years |
Senior = active management phase; routine senior wellness checks every 6 months.
Geriatric = quality of life primary goal; hospice/palliative planning appropriate when signs accelerate.
Medication Timing — Critical Details
Empty Stomach Required
- Levothyroxine (thyroid) — 1 hour before food
- Denamarin (SAMe + Silybin) — 1 hour before food, critical
- Pimobendan (cardiac) — 1 hour before food preferred
Always With Food
- NSAIDs (carprofen, meloxicam, Galliprant, robenacoxib, mavacoxib, firocoxib) — GI protection
- Trilostane (Vetoryl) — 3-5× absorption increase with food
- Some antibiotics (cephalexin, amoxicillin-clavulanate)
Timing-Sensitive
- Furosemide — early evening (NOT bedtime) to allow nighttime urination
- Trazodone — 1 hour before bedtime for sleep
- Melatonin — 30 minutes before bed for sleep-wake regulation
- Insulin — typically 12 hours apart with meals
- Gabapentin — q8-12h for chronic pain
Don’t Combine
- NSAID + corticosteroid — severe GI ulceration risk
- NSAID + another NSAID — duplicate toxicity
- SAMe + tramadol/serotonergic — serotonin syndrome risk
The Senior Dog Daily Schedule Framework
Early Morning (6:00-7:00 AM)
- Toilet break — gentle wake-up, avoid stairs initially (joints stiff after sleep)
- Denamarin if prescribed (empty stomach)
- Levothyroxine if prescribed (empty stomach)
Morning (7:00-10:00 AM)
- Breakfast — portion-controlled, senior or therapeutic diet
- Morning medications with food — NSAID, trilostane
- Morning walk — 10-25 min low-impact (less if LOAD score high)
Mid-day (10:00 AM – 2:00 PM)
- Cognitive enrichment if CCDS — puzzle toys, snuffle mat, simple training
- Mid-day toilet break + 5 min gentle activity
Afternoon (2:00-5:00 PM)
- Rest period — 2-3 hour nap in orthopedic bed
- RRR check if cardiac (count sleeping breaths)
- Afternoon walk — second daily exercise
Evening (5:00-9:00 PM)
- Dinner — second meal (small frequent better than 1 large)
- Evening medications — NSAID BID, gabapentin, pimobendan q12h
- Furosemide early evening (not bedtime)
- Apoquel with dinner if prescribed
- Gentle evening routine for CCDS dogs
Night (9:00-11:00 PM)
- Final toilet break — critical for continence
- Trazodone if prescribed (1 hour before bed)
- Melatonin if prescribed (30 min before bed)
- Bedtime in orthopedic memory foam bed
Condition-Specific Adjustments
Osteoarthritis (LOAD Score Driven)
| LOAD score | Approach |
|---|---|
| 0-10 (Mild) | Weight management + omega-3 + joint supplement + low-impact exercise |
| 11-20 (Moderate) | + NSAID if not contraindicated + Librela + physio/hydro |
| 21-30 (Marked) | + Multimodal (NSAID + gabapentin + amantadine) + Librela monthly + mobility aids |
| 31+ (Severe) | Specialist referral + multimodal pain management + mobility assistance harness + QoL conversation |
See PuppaDogs LOAD Osteoarthritis Tracker.
Cognitive Dysfunction (CCDS Score Driven)
| CCDS score | Approach |
|---|---|
| <10 (Early) | Cognitive support diet (Hill’s b/d, Purina Bright Mind) + MCT oil + omega-3 |
| 10-13 (Mild-moderate) | + SELEGILINE (Anipryl 0.5-1 mg/kg q24h) + Senilife |
| 14+ (Significant) | Full pharmacologic + dietary + structured environment + trazodone for sundowner |
See PuppaDogs CCDS Screening.
Heart Disease (RRR Monitoring Critical)
| RRR (sleeping) | Significance |
|---|---|
| <30/min | Normal – continue monitoring |
| 30-35/min | Borderline – watch trend; if rising, vet contact |
| >35/min sustained | Likely CHF – urgent vet contact; furosemide adjustment likely |
See PuppaDogs Resting Respiratory Rate Calculator.
Quality Of Life (Villalobos HHHHHMM)
Hurt + Hunger + Hydration + Hygiene + Happiness + Mobility + More Good Days Than Bad = 7 domains × 0-10 = 0-70 total.
| QoL score | Interpretation |
|---|---|
| >50/70 | Good – continue current management |
| 35-50 | Borderline – active improvement efforts |
| <35 | Below acceptable – hospice / palliative / end-of-life discussion |
See PuppaDogs Quality of Life Calculator.
Environment Modifications
Mobility Support
- Non-slip surfaces — rugs, gripper socks, yoga mats on slippery floors
- Ramps replacing stairs for vehicle entry/exit and elevated furniture
- Orthopedic memory foam bed with raised edges
- Raised food/water bowls — reduces neck strain
- Mobility assistance harness for severe cases
Cognitive Support
- Predictable routine — same times for meals, walks, bed
- Night light for CCDS dogs with vision changes
- Familiar environments — minimize household changes during cognitive decline
- Quiet rest periods — multiple naps preferred
Comfort
- Warm location away from drafts — senior dogs lose body fat
- Soft bedding — orthopedic memory foam
- Multiple beds in different rooms — accessible rest spots
- Easy bathroom access — avoid stairs to outside
Monitoring Diary For Senior Dogs
Track daily/weekly:
- Weight (weekly)
- Appetite (any decrease >2 days = vet)
- Water intake (PU/PD = CKD/diabetes/Cushing’s screen)
- Resting respiratory rate (if on cardiac watch)
- Mobility / exercise willingness
- Bowel/bladder routine changes
- Behavioral changes
- Medication tolerance
Any decline triggers same-week vet contact — early intervention preserves function.
Multi-Condition Management
Senior dogs often have multiple concurrent conditions:
- Arthritis + CKD — NSAID contraindicated; use Librela + gabapentin + adequan
- Arthritis + heart disease — careful NSAID use; monitor with renal labs
- Cushing’s + diabetes — trilostane + insulin (DM often improves with Cushing’s control)
- CCDS + arthritis — both need management; gabapentin helps both pain and anxiety
- Cancer + comorbidities — oncology consult guides
Veterinary nutritionist consultation valuable for complex cases combining diet-related conditions.
When To Consider Hospice / Palliative
Hospice considerations when:
- QoL <50 despite multimodal management
- Progressive disease with poor prognosis
- Family making “more good days than bad” assessment
- Hospitalization repeatedly required
Hospice care focuses on:
- Comfort over cure
- Pain control (gabapentin, opioids, Librela, NSAIDs as tolerated)
- Dignity — clean, warm, calm
- Family preparation for end-of-life decision
- Planned euthanasia in familiar environment when timing right
Better to decide before crisis — allows peaceful planned end with family present rather than emergency decision.
See PuppaDogs Quality of Life Calculator for ongoing assessment.
Honest Caveats
- Schedule is starting framework — adapt to your dog’s specific routine
- Individual dogs vary — observe what works for yours
- Multiple conditions complicate — vet specialist input valuable
- Cost of multimodal senior care can be substantial — prioritize highest-impact interventions
- Time investment is significant — senior care more demanding than adult care
- Emotional toll on owners — utilize support resources, pet bereavement counseling when appropriate
Conclusion
Senior dogs thrive on predictable, optimized daily routines tailored to their specific conditions. This calculator integrates LOAD arthritis, CCDS cognitive, RRR cardiac, and QoL scores along with current medications to generate a personalized schedule with correct medication timing and condition-specific recommendations. Multi-short-session exercise, multiple smaller meals, frequent toilet breaks, and mental enrichment are core principles. Environment modifications (non-slip surfaces, ramps, orthopedic beds, raised bowls) substantially improve quality of life. Daily monitoring of weight, appetite, water intake, RRR, mobility, and behavior catches disease progression early. With thoughtful daily management, many senior dogs maintain good quality of life well into geriatric years, and when the time comes, planned hospice care allows a peaceful transition.
Frequently Asked Questions
When is my dog considered a senior?
SIZE-ADJUSTED senior age thresholds. TOY AND SMALL BREEDS (under 10 kg): senior at 10 years, geriatric at 13. MEDIUM BREEDS (10-25 kg): senior at 9, geriatric at 12. LARGE BREEDS (25-45 kg): senior at 7, geriatric at 10. GIANT BREEDS (over 45 kg): senior at 6, geriatric at 9. Why size matters – larger dogs age faster cellularly. Once senior, schedule TWICE-YEARLY vet exams with senior bloodwork panel. Geriatric phase shifts focus to QUALITY OF LIFE over disease cure. Many senior dogs do well for years – early intervention for disease preserves function.
What should I feed my senior dog?
SENIOR DOG NUTRITION priorities: (1) MAINTAIN LEAN BODY CONDITION (BCS 4-5/9) – obesity worsens arthritis, diabetes, heart disease; many seniors continue to gain weight as activity declines, so OFTEN NEED LESS FOOD; (2) HIGHER PROTEIN often beneficial – older dogs sometimes need MORE protein not less to maintain muscle mass (modern thinking has shifted); (3) PRESCRIPTION DIET if specific disease (renal k/d, joint j/d, gastrointestinal i/d, cognitive b/d, weight management); (4) MULTIPLE SMALL MEALS often easier on senior digestion than 1-2 large; (5) HYDRATION emphasis – add water/broth to dry food; (6) SOFT FOOD if dental disease; (7) AVOID treats that displace balanced diet calories. Discuss with vet for individual recommendations.
How do I exercise my senior dog?
LOW-IMPACT, MULTIPLE SHORT SESSIONS, breed-appropriate. AVOID HIGH-IMPACT activities (jumping, jogging on hard surfaces, agility). PREFER: leashed walks 15-25 min multiple times daily; SWIMMING excellent (zero impact, full body); sniff walks (mental tiring); gentle play; ramps not stairs; orthopaedic bed for rest between sessions. ADJUST per LOAD arthritis score – mild 0-10 = standard senior exercise; moderate 11-20 = limit duration, low-impact only; marked 21-30 = brief 5-10 min sessions multiple times; severe 31+ = mobility assistance, hospice considerations. WATCH FOR PAIN signs – reluctance to walk, panting at rest, stiff after exercise. PuppaDogs LOAD Tracker for objective monitoring.
What medications do senior dogs typically need?
VARIES by diagnosis. COMMON SENIOR MEDS: NSAIDs (carprofen Rimadyl, meloxicam Loxicom/Metacam, Galliprant, robenacoxib Onsior, firocoxib Previcox, mavacoxib Trocoxil) for arthritis; LIBRELA (bedinvetmab) anti-NGF monthly injection alternative to NSAID; GABAPENTIN 5-15 mg/kg q8-12h for neuropathic/chronic pain; SELEGILINE (Anipryl) for cognitive dysfunction; PIMOBENDAN + FUROSEMIDE + ACE INHIBITOR for heart failure (MMVD Stage C+); TRILOSTANE (Vetoryl) for Cushing’s; LEVOTHYROXINE for hypothyroidism; INSULIN for diabetes; APOQUEL or CYTOPOINT for chronic itch; TRAZODONE for anxiety/sleep; MELATONIN for sleep-wake disruption in CCDS. CRITICAL – medication timing matters (some empty stomach, some with food); discuss with vet for your individual dog.
How do I know if my senior dog is suffering?
Use the VILLALOBOS HHHHHMM QUALITY OF LIFE FRAMEWORK (PuppaDogs QoL Calculator): HURT (pain controlled?), HUNGER (eating?), HYDRATION (drinking?), HYGIENE (clean/dry/not soiled?), HAPPINESS (joy in activities?), MOBILITY (can move/walk without struggling?), MORE good days than bad. Each 0-10, total 0-70. ACCEPTABLE over 35; BORDERLINE 35-50; UNDER 35 hospice/end-of-life discussion. SPECIFIC PAIN SIGNS – panting at rest, reluctance to move/eat, hiding, vocalisation, changes in sleep, snapping when touched, loss of housetraining. CONSULT VET if QoL declining – many issues are treatable. If quality is poor DESPITE optimal multimodal management, hospice/euthanasia conversation appropriate. Better to decide BEFORE crisis – allows peaceful planned end.
Should I use a ramp for my senior dog?
YES if your dog struggles with stairs, jumping into car, or accessing elevated furniture. RAMPS dramatically reduce joint impact (jumping into SUV = significant landing force on hips/elbows). USES: (1) VEHICLE ENTRY/EXIT – car ramp prevents jump injuries; (2) BED/COUCH access – many seniors continue wanting to be on furniture but cause re-injury jumping; (3) STAIRS into/out of house if multiple steps. CHOICE: TRI-FOLD RAMPS portable, BIFOLD RAMPS lighter, TELESCOPING RAMPS adjustable length. WEIGHT CAPACITY check (most rated 100-200kg). NON-SLIP SURFACE essential – traction matters. WIDE ENOUGH for comfortable walking. TRAIN gradually with treats – some dogs initially refuse but adapt. Worthwhile investment for arthritic seniors.
Senior Dog Comfort & Care Essentials
Quality senior dog products dramatically improve daily comfort – orthopedic beds, ramps, supplements, mobility support, and easy-access bowls.
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.
- AAHA Senior Care Guidelines for Dogs and Cats, 2023.
- Villalobos AE. Quality of Life Scale Helps Make Final Call. Journal of the American Animal Hospital Association, 2011.
- Salvin HE, McGreevy PD, Sachdev PS, Valenzuela MJ. The canine cognitive dysfunction rating scale (CCDR): a data-driven and ecologically relevant assessment tool. The Veterinary Journal.
- Hercock CA, Pinchbeck G, Giejda A, Clegg PD, Innes JF. LOAD validation. Veterinary Record, 2009.
- Keene BW, Atkins CE, Bonagura JD, et al. ACVIM consensus guidelines for myxomatous mitral valve disease. JVIM, 2019.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook.
- PuppaDogs. LOAD Tracker, CCDS Screening, Resting Respiratory Rate Calculator, Quality of Life Calculator, Cushing’s Trilostane Monitoring, IRIS Kidney Disease Calculator, Supplement Recommender. puppadogs.com.















