Yorkshire Terrier Feeding Calculator
Yorkshire Terriers have normal metabolism and a moderate obesity-risk profile. Get a personalized daily feeding amount based on exact weight, age, activity, body condition, and food type.
Prefilled breed data
Adult range: 2 kg-3.2 kg
Metabolism: Normal
Obesity risk: Moderate
Meals: Adults usually do best with 2-3 small meals daily; puppies may need 3-4 meals.
Calculating for
Yorkshire Terrier
Typical adult weight: 2-3.2 kg
Metabolism: Normal
Obesity risk: MODERATE
Recommended meals: Adults usually do best with 2-3 small meals daily; puppies may need 3-4 meals.
Activity
Body condition
Daily feeding guide
201 kcal/day
2.6 kg adult, low activity, neutered.
Treat budget
20
kcal max
Dry amount
0.5 cups
~60 g per day
Per meal
2x/day
Dry equivalent: 0.3 cups / ~30 g. Wet equivalent: ~106 g.
Keep treats at or below 10% of the day. For this plan, that is about 1 medium biscuits or 2 small training treats.
Monthly weight check
Reweigh your Yorkshire Terrier every month, or sooner if body condition changes. If weight shifts by more than 0.5 kg, recalculate from the new weight and compare ribs, waist, and abdominal tuck.
Daily food requirements
How much should a Yorkshire Terrier eat?
Yorkshire Terriers are small dogs with a typical adult reference range around 2 kg-3.2 kg. Daily calories vary by age, activity, neuter status, metabolism, and body condition, so the best answer starts with RER and then adjusts for real life. For a moderate adult Yorkshire Terrier, this page estimates about 229 kcal per day, or roughly 0.6cups of standard dry food.
| Life stage | Daily calories | Dry kibble |
|---|---|---|
| Puppy, 3 months | 196 kcal | 0.5 cups/day |
| Adult, moderate | 229 kcal | 0.6 cups/day |
| Senior | 201 kcal | 0.5 cups/day |
Important: these numbers are starting points. Adjust based on body condition score. If ribs become hard to feel, reduce the food target by about 10%. If ribs become too prominent and medical causes are not suspected, increase carefully and recheck weight.
Puppy feeding
Yorkshire Terrier puppy feeding guide
Yorkshire Terrier puppies grow in a compact pattern, so frequency and food choice matter as much as the calorie total. Young puppies usually need three to four meals per day because stomach capacity is small and growth demand is high. By the later puppy months, many can move toward two or three meals while staying on a growth formula.
| Age | Meals/day | Daily amount | Food type |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 weeks | 4x/day | 0.4 cups dry equivalent | Puppy formula |
| 3 months | 3-4x/day | 0.5 cups dry equivalent | Growth diet |
| 6 months | 3x/day | 0.7 cups dry equivalent | Controlled growth |
| 12 months | 2x/day | 0.6 cups dry equivalent | Transition window |
For Yorkshire Terriers, choose a puppy formula with small, easy-to-measure portions. Tiny treat extras can quickly distort a small daily calorie budget.
Adult feeding
Feeding your adult Yorkshire Terrier
Adult Yorkshire Terriers have more stable calorie needs than puppies, but portions still need regular adjustment. A low-activity adult may need around 202 kcal per day, while a high activity or working dog can require substantially more. The calculator above lets you switch activity levels and immediately see the food amount change.
After spaying or neutering, metabolism often drops. After spay/neuter, reassess calories and consider a 10-15% reduction if weight starts to rise. Seasonal activity also matters: reduce portions during quiet winter periods and reassess on hiking, sport, or working weeks. For Yorkshire Terriers, the practical challenge is: Small meals need precision. Weigh food in grams when possible, protect against picky grazing, and avoid long fasting gaps in very small individuals.
Senior feeding
Feeding your senior Yorkshire Terrier
Yorkshire Terriers are usually considered senior around age 9. Senior calorie targets often move lower because activity and lean mass can decline, but protein quality should not be neglected. This page estimates a senior baseline around 201 kcal per day for a typical adult weight.
Look for digestible protein, omega-3 fatty acids, and joint-support nutrients when mobility starts changing. Smaller meals can also help older dogs with appetite, dental comfort, or digestion. Recalculate food after weight change, new medication, major activity reduction, or a veterinary diagnosis.
Breed diet considerations
Yorkshire Terrier diet: what you need to know
Obesity risk
Moderate
GDV risk
Low
Food sensitivity
Moderate
Yorkshire Terriers are tiny enough that a few treats can meaningfully change the daily calorie total.
Prioritize
- Use small-breed pieces and gram-based portions because tiny errors become meaningful at this body size.
- Keep calories conservative when daily exercise is light or seasonal activity drops.
- Keep treats and toppers inside the daily calorie total rather than adding them after meals are measured.
Watch out for
- Avoid free-feeding if body condition starts moving above ideal.
- Transition foods over 7-10 days so stool quality does not confuse the calorie plan.
- Do not let dental chews or table scraps become hidden meals.
Food labels
Reading dog food labels for Yorkshire Terriers
For Yorkshire Terriers, start with the AAFCO nutritional adequacy statement. Puppies need a food labeled for growth, adults need maintenance, and some foods are formulated for all life stages. The second label item to find is calorie density: kcal per cup for dry food or kcal per 100g, tray, or can for wet and fresh food.
Look for
- Complete and balanced diet matched to life stage
- Moderate-calorie formula for steady body condition
- Measured dry, wet, raw, or mixed feeding with known kcal density
- Named animal protein, omega-3 sources, and adequate adult protein.
Be careful with
- Unbalanced homemade or raw diets without veterinary nutrition guidance
- Foods with unclear kcal per cup or kcal per 100g
- High-calorie toppers that are not counted
- Artificial colors, unclear preservatives, or heavy toppers that are not measured.
Life stage timeline
Yorkshire Terrier feeding through life
| Age | Daily calories | Meals/day | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| 8 weeks | 138 kcal | 4x/day | Puppy formula |
| 3 months | 196 kcal | 3-4x/day | Growth diet |
| 6 months | 250 kcal | 3x/day | Controlled growth |
| 12 months | 215 kcal | 2x/day | Transition window |
| 2-6 years | 229 kcal | 2x/day | Adult maintenance |
| 7+ years | 201 kcal | 2x/day | Senior monitoring |
FAQ
Yorkshire Terrier feeding calculator FAQ
How much should I feed my Yorkshire Terrier per day?
A typical adult Yorkshire Terrier around 2.6 kg with moderate activity needs about 229 kcal per day. With standard dry food at 375 kcal per cup, that is roughly 0.6 cups daily before you adjust for body condition, treats, and the exact food label.
Is my Yorkshire Terrier prone to obesity?
Moderate risk. Yorkshire Terriers are tiny enough that a few treats can meaningfully change the daily calorie total. Weigh monthly, and recalculate after meaningful activity or diet changes.
What is the best food for a Yorkshire Terrier?
The best starting point is a complete and balanced food for the correct life stage. For Yorkshire Terriers, prioritize: Complete and balanced diet matched to life stage; Moderate-calorie formula for steady body condition; Measured dry, wet, raw, or mixed feeding with known kcal density. Avoid diets with unclear calorie density because portion math becomes unreliable.
How many times a day should I feed my Yorkshire Terrier?
Adults usually do best with 2-3 small meals daily; puppies may need 3-4 meals.
How do I know if I am feeding the right amount?
Check body condition monthly. Ribs should be easy to feel with light pressure, the waist should be visible from above, and the abdomen should tuck slightly from the side. If ribs become hard to feel, reduce food by about 10%. If ribs become too prominent, increase cautiously.
Should I change my Yorkshire Terrier's food when they get older?
Yes. Yorkshire Terriers are usually treated as senior around age 9. Senior dogs often need fewer calories but still need quality protein, digestible ingredients, and joint-support nutrients. Recalculate portions when activity, weight, or appetite changes.
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References
References and sources
These sources support the calorie formula, nutrition framework, and breed-risk context used on this page. This calculator is a starting point, not a veterinary diagnosis.
- National Research Council. Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. National Academies Press, 2006.
- WSAVA Global Nutrition Guidelines.
- AAFCO. Understanding Pet Food.
- Raffan et al. A deletion in the canine POMC gene is associated with weight and appetite in obesity-prone Labrador Retriever dogs. Cell Metabolism, 2016.