BCS 1-3: Underweight
- • BCS 1: Emaciated. Ribs, spine, and hip bones are extremely prominent.
- • BCS 2: Very thin. Ribs are easily visible with almost no fat cover.
- • BCS 3: Thin. Ribs are easy to feel, waist is obvious, and fat cover is minimal.
How Many Calories Does My Dog Need Per Day?
Calculate your dog's daily calorie needs with the veterinary RER and MER framework, then translate those calories into food portions, treat budget, and a BCS-based weight management plan.
My Dogs integration
Load a saved dog or enter weight and body condition manually.
Step 1 · Weight
Use the most recent reliable weigh-in. Calorie math drifts quickly when weight is guessed.
Step 2 · Life stage
Puppies, seniors, pregnancy, and nursing all change the multiplier.
Step 3 · Reproductive status
Step 4 · Activity level
Step 5 · Body condition score
What is BCS? It is more useful than scale weight alone because it reflects fat cover and body shape.
The report includes RER, MER, treat budget, food portion conversion, activity comparison charts, and a BCS-based weight management plan.
Why this page is stronger
Quick calorie reminders
BCS snapshot
Ideal dogs usually need maintenance, not dramatic calorie changes. Keep rechecking every month so small drift stays small.
Jump to full BCS visual guideBody condition score
Body Condition Score, or BCS, is a 1 to 9 scale used by veterinarians to estimate body fat through rib palpation, waist shape, abdominal tuck, and overall silhouette. It is more useful than the scale alone because it tells you how that weight is distributed.
How to check BCS at home
The science behind the number
RER = 70 x (body weight in kg)^0.75
This is the resting energy requirement, the calories needed just to support basic life functions.
Alternative shortcut for many everyday dogs: RER = 30 x body weight (kg) + 70.
Why it is not linear
Metabolism scales to body size in a way that is closer to the three-quarter power of body mass than to a straight line. In practical terms, that means a 40 kg dog does not need four times the calories of a 10 kg dog.
MER then adjusts that resting number for growth, exercise, reproduction, neuter status, and body condition. This is why calorie planning works best when owners stop thinking in scoop size first and start thinking in energy first.
Treats deserve their own budget because a few “small extras” can easily consume 10 to 20 percent of a small dog's daily calories without looking like much food.
MER reference
These are planning multipliers, not promises. Individual dogs can vary substantially, which is why the result still needs to be tested against BCS and regular weigh-ins.
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Weight loss | 1.0 x RER | 383 kcal/day |
| Weight maintenance | 1.2-1.4 x RER | 460-537 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Intact, sedentary | 1.4 x RER | 537 kcal/day |
| Intact, low active | 1.6 x RER | 614 kcal/day |
| Intact, active | 1.8 x RER | 690 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Neutered, sedentary | 1.2 x RER | 460 kcal/day |
| Neutered, low active | 1.4 x RER | 537 kcal/day |
| Neutered, active | 1.6 x RER | 614 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Light work | 2.0 x RER | 766 kcal/day |
| Moderate work | 3.0 x RER | 1,149 kcal/day |
| Heavy work | 4.0-8.0 x RER | 1,532-3,064 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| 0-4 months | 3.0 x RER | 1,149 kcal/day |
| 4 months to adult size | 2.0 x RER | 766 kcal/day |
| Near adult size | 1.8 x RER | 690 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Pregnancy (first 6 weeks) | 1.8 x RER | 690 kcal/day |
| Pregnancy (last 3 weeks) | 3.0 x RER | 1,149 kcal/day |
| Lactation (peak) | 4.0-8.0 x RER | 1,532-3,064 kcal/day |
| Condition | MER factor | 10 kg example |
|---|---|---|
| Senior, healthy | 1.2-1.4 x RER | 460-537 kcal/day |
| Senior, inactive | 1.1-1.2 x RER | 421-460 kcal/day |
Life stage guide
Puppies need more calories per kilogram than adults because they are growing new tissue while maintaining everything that already exists. Younger puppies often need roughly three times RER, older puppies usually move closer to two times RER, and meal frequency matters almost as much as total calories. Large-breed puppies should be grown steadily rather than pushed fast.
Adult calorie planning is the most stable, but it still depends heavily on neuter status, activity, and body condition. One of the most common mistakes is feeding an intact-active amount to a neutered indoor dog just because the bag chart looks official. Calories should follow the dog in front of you, not the most optimistic chart on the packaging.
Senior dogs often need more nuance rather than simply fewer calories. Some seniors need a reduction because movement is lower and fat gain is creeping upward. Others need more nutritional support because muscle loss, poor dental comfort, or chronic disease is driving weight down. Body condition and muscle condition both matter here.
Pregnancy needs are modest early and much steeper late. Lactation is the most calorie-demanding state many dogs will ever experience, especially with larger litters. This is one reason high-quality puppy food is so often used during late pregnancy and nursing. It supplies more energy density in less bowl volume.
Breed reference
This table is deliberately broad. Real dogs still need calorie planning from their own weight, activity, neuter status, and body condition rather than breed averages alone.
| Breed | Avg weight | RER | MER (neutered) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chihuahua | 2.5 kg | 139 kcal | 167-195 kcal |
| Yorkshire Terrier | 3 kg | 160 kcal | 192-224 kcal |
| Pomeranian | 3.5 kg | 179 kcal | 215-251 kcal |
| Shih Tzu | 5.5 kg | 251 kcal | 301-351 kcal |
| Beagle | 10 kg | 394 kcal | 473-552 kcal |
| Cocker Spaniel | 11 kg | 423 kcal | 508-592 kcal |
| Border Collie | 17 kg | 586 kcal | 703-820 kcal |
| Labrador Retriever | 30 kg | 897 kcal | 1076-1256 kcal |
| Golden Retriever | 30 kg | 897 kcal | 1076-1256 kcal |
| German Shepherd | 35 kg | 1007 kcal | 1208-1410 kcal |
| Rottweiler | 45 kg | 1216 kcal | 1459-1702 kcal |
| Great Dane | 60 kg | 1509 kcal | 1811-2113 kcal |
Weight management science
According to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention's 2022 U.S. State of Pet Obesity Report, 59% of dogs evaluated by veterinary professionals were overweight or had obesity. That makes calorie control one of the highest-leverage nutrition habits owners can build.
The safest protocol is usually a measured calorie deficit, consistent portion measurement, tighter treat control, and weigh-ins every two to four weeks. Fast change is not the goal. Sustainable change is.
Obesity increases risk for osteoarthritis, exercise intolerance, respiratory strain, diabetes, and reduced quality of life. Even moderate excess body fat can matter sooner than owners think.
Treat trap
| Treat | Calories | % of 10 kg adult |
|---|---|---|
| Small biscuit | 20 kcal | 4-5% |
| Medium dental chew | 54 kcal | 10-12% |
| 1 Tbsp peanut butter | 95 kcal | 18-20% |
| 1 slice cheddar | 113 kcal | 20%+ |
| 1 hot dog | 137 kcal | 25%+ |
Myths versus facts
Myth
Follow the feeding guide on the bag.
Fact
Bag charts are broad starting points, not personalized calorie plans. They are often generous enough to overfeed calmer or neutered dogs.
Myth
If my dog acts hungry, they need more food.
Fact
Appetite is not a reliable calorie calculator. Many dogs are opportunistic eaters and will request food even when they are already over target.
Myth
Grain-free means healthier and lower calorie.
Fact
Calorie density depends on the finished formula, not the presence or absence of grains. Some grain-free foods are more calorie-dense, not less.
Myth
Small dogs need fewer calories per kilogram.
Fact
Small dogs usually need more calories per kilogram than large dogs because metabolic scaling is not linear.
Myth
Senior dogs always need fewer calories.
Fact
Some do, some do not. A thin senior with muscle loss may need better protein support and a carefully adjusted calorie plan instead of automatic restriction.
Myth
Free feeding is harmless if the bowl looks about right.
Fact
Free feeding makes calorie tracking difficult and hides appetite changes that could matter medically.
Frequently asked questions
Daily calorie needs depend on body weight, age, activity level, reproductive status, and body condition. A practical starting point is to calculate RER first, then multiply it by an MER factor that reflects the dog's real life. A typical 10 kg neutered adult often lands in the rough range of 460 to 540 kcal/day, but many dogs fall above or below that depending on movement and body condition.
RER stands for Resting Energy Requirement. It estimates the calories a dog needs at rest to support breathing, circulation, cell repair, digestion, and other basic body functions. The commonly used formula is RER = 70 x (body weight in kg)^0.75.
MER stands for Maintenance Energy Requirement. It starts with RER, then scales that resting number for real life using activity, life stage, neuter status, growth, pregnancy, nursing, or weight-management goals. In short, RER is baseline rest. MER is the usable daily feeding target.
The best feedback loop is body condition score plus regular weigh-ins. You should be able to feel ribs with light pressure, see a waist from above, and see an abdominal tuck from the side in a dog at ideal condition. If body condition is drifting upward or downward, adjust calories gradually instead of guessing from hunger cues.
It varies a lot. Many dry kibbles cluster around roughly 300 to 400 kcal per cup, but premium, energy-dense, or grain-free formulas can run much higher. Wet foods, fresh foods, and raw diets use completely different density units. That is why calories should be calculated first and portion size second.
A common safe starting point is a controlled weight-loss target around RER x 1.0, paired with routine weigh-ins and tighter treat control. The goal is usually about 1 to 2 percent body weight loss per week, not crash dieting. Dogs with severe obesity should ideally be managed with a veterinarian.
Yes. Puppies usually need far more calories per kilogram than adults because growth adds major energy demand on top of normal maintenance. Very young puppies can be around three times RER, while older puppies typically move closer to two times RER as they approach adult size.
A practical rule is to keep treats and toppers at or below 10 percent of the total daily calorie budget. If treats go above that, the main meals should be reduced or the dog can drift upward in weight even when the bowl portion looks reasonable.
Neutering commonly lowers energy requirements compared with an intact adult of the same size and activity. Owners often keep feeding the pre-surgery amount, which is one reason post-neuter weight gain is so common.
The RER and MER framework is a strong veterinary starting point, not a promise of exact caloric truth for every dog. Individual metabolism, breed tendencies, environment, disease, and real-world activity can move the true need up or down. Use the calculator to start the plan, then let weigh-ins and BCS tell you how to fine-tune it.
Related tools
Dog Food Calculator
Estimate daily calories, grams, cups, and meal timing using weight, activity level, and food density.
Dog Weight Calculator
Compare your dog to healthy breed ranges, body condition scoring, and realistic goal-weight timelines.
Puppy Growth Calculator
Forecast adult size, monthly milestones, and growth-curve trends for puppies and young dogs.
References