Breed database, manual sizing, home, travel, and airline rules

Dog Crate Size Calculator

Find the right crate dimensions by breed or direct measurements, then match the result to real XS to XXL crate sizes for home use, road trips, or airline travel.

Saved dog profile

Load a saved dog profile or enter the measurements manually.

Life stage

Crate use

Built for shopping reality

Measure once, match to a real retail size, and avoid the usual crate-sizing mess.

This calculator does two jobs at once: it gives the minimum dimensions your dog actually needs, then it checks those against common 18, 22, 30, 36, 42, and 48 inch crates so you can shop with less guesswork.

Current output

XL

42" standard crate

Minimum dimensions

81 cm x 45 cm x 68 cm

Length x width x height

What the result accounts for

  • - Breed averages or direct measurements
  • - Home or travel clearance sizing
  • - IATA-style airline math when airline mode is selected
  • - Snub-nosed size-up logic for airflow
  • - Puppy growth planning when the dog is still growing

Measurement guide

How to measure your dog for a crate

Use a soft measuring tape, a calm moment, and a few treats. Good crate sizing starts with posture. Measure while the dog is standing naturally, not sitting or curled up.

Measurement A - Body length

Have your dog stand naturally, then measure from the tip of the nose to the base of the tail. Do not include the tail. Add 10 cm to reach the minimum crate length for home and travel use.

Measurement B - Standing height

Measure from the floor to the top of the head or ears, whichever sits higher. Add 10 cm to estimate minimum crate height for normal home and travel sizing.

Measurement C - Body width

Measure the widest point of the body, usually around the shoulders or ribcage. Width matters much more when you are checking airline compatibility or comparing tight standard sizes.

The three comfort tests

  • 1. The dog can stand fully without hunching into the roof.
  • 2. The dog can turn around in a full circle without scraping the walls.
  • 3. The dog can lie down stretched out instead of only curling tightly.

Standard chart

Dog crate size chart - standard XS to XXL sizes

Standard retail sizes are useful shopping anchors, not perfect truth. Weight alone is never enough. Tall lean dogs can need bigger crates than heavier stocky dogs.

SizeInchesDimensionsWeight guideTypical breeds
XS18"46 x 30 x 33 cmup to 5 kgChihuahua, Yorkie
S22"56 x 35 x 38 cm5-10 kgShih Tzu, Pug
M30"76 x 48 x 53 cm10-20 kgBeagle, Cocker Spaniel
L36"91 x 58 x 63 cm20-30 kgBorder Collie, Australian Shepherd
XL42"107 x 71 x 76 cm30-45 kgLabrador, Golden, German Shepherd
XXL48"122 x 76 x 84 cm45 kg+Great Dane, Saint Bernard, Rottweiler

Use-case rules

Crate size rules by use - home vs travel vs airline

Home use

  • - Length = body length + 10 cm
  • - Width = body width + 10 cm
  • - Height = body height + 10 cm
  • - Do not oversize the crate for a puppy in active housetraining.
  • - A divider panel is the cleanest way to use an adult crate with a growing dog.
  • - Wire crates are usually the most practical home baseline because airflow and visibility are strong.

Travel / car use

  • - Length = body length + 10 cm
  • - Width = body width + 10 cm
  • - Height = body height + 10 cm
  • - The dog still needs the same basic comfort clearance as home use.
  • - Measure the actual cargo or seat footprint before buying the crate.
  • - Crash-tested travel crates deserve more trust than generic carriers when road safety matters.

Airline / IATA baseline

  • - Length = body length + 1/2 leg height
  • - Width = shoulder width x 2
  • - Height = standing height + bedding / clearance
  • - Ventilation openings, absorbent bedding, and external access to water containers matter as much as raw dimensions.
  • - A hard-sided crate is the normal baseline for cargo travel.
  • - Always confirm the current live-animal policy with the airline before purchase because carriers can be stricter than the baseline.

Crate types

Dog crate types - which is best for your dog?

Wire / metal crate

Home training, ventilation, and most adult dogs.

Pros

  • - Collapsible and easier to store
  • - Excellent airflow and visibility
  • - Divider panels are easy to use for puppies

Tradeoffs

  • - Heavy and noisy compared with soft crates
  • - Not airline cargo compliant

Plastic / hard-sided crate

Airline cargo, anxious dogs, and den-like privacy.

Pros

  • - Hard-sided structure is the airline baseline
  • - More enclosed and den-like for dogs who prefer privacy
  • - Contains mess and drafts better than wire

Tradeoffs

  • - Bulkier to store
  • - Less airflow than open wire crates

Soft-sided crate

Temporary use and calm small dogs.

Pros

  • - Lightweight and portable
  • - Comfortable for very calm, crate-trained dogs

Tradeoffs

  • - Not escape-proof
  • - Not suitable for chewers or airline cargo

Heavy duty / aluminum crate

Escape artists, destructive dogs, and high-security setups.

Pros

  • - Most secure option
  • - Harder to bend, chew, or break than standard crates

Tradeoffs

  • - Expensive and heavy
  • - Overkill for calm dogs who crate well

Furniture / decorative crate

Living room aesthetics and calm trained dogs only.

Pros

  • - Blends into the room
  • - Can double as side table or console

Tradeoffs

  • - Usually not escape-proof or easy to deep-clean
  • - Poor choice for puppies and destructive dogs

Puppy strategy

Puppy crate size - why the divider panel method usually wins

Housetraining works best when the crate feels den-sized, not apartment-sized. If a puppy has too much space, one end becomes the bed and the other end becomes the bathroom.

The cleanest long-term solution is usually to buy the adult crate once and use a divider panel to keep the current footprint small. That reduces transition stress, avoids buying two or three crates, and tracks the puppy's growth better.

  • - Buy the adult-sized crate now.
  • - Set the divider so the puppy can stand, turn, and lie down comfortably.
  • - Move the divider back every few weeks as the dog grows.
  • - Remove it completely once the dog reaches adult size.

Growth checkpoints

AgeDivider settingTypical footprint
8-12 weeksDivider at 1/4XS-S footprint
3-4 monthsDivider at 1/3S-M footprint
5-6 monthsDivider at 1/2M-L footprint
7-9 monthsDivider at 3/4L-XL footprint
10-12 monthsNo divider or near full lengthAdult footprint

Brachycephalic caution

Snub-nosed breeds need more airflow and more caution

Brachycephalic dogs have compressed airways and tolerate heat and poor ventilation less well than longer-nosed breeds. That changes crate planning, especially for travel.

  • - Start one standard retail size larger when airflow is tight.
  • - Favor open wire crates for home use over soft-sided crates.
  • - Treat cargo travel as a policy check, not just a sizing question.
  • - Never leave these dogs crated in warm environments.

Common affected breeds

Pug, French Bulldog, English Bulldog, Boxer, Shih Tzu, Boston Terrier, Cavalier King Charles Spaniel, Pekingese, Chow Chow, Mastiff types, Cane Corso, and Dogue de Bordeaux are all examples where airflow and heat tolerance deserve more respect than a simple weight chart gives them.

Airline reminder: treat every brachycephalic cargo itinerary as a fresh policy check with the carrier before you buy the crate.

Breed quick reference

Dog crate size by breed - quick reference

BreedBody L x HMinimum crateStd sizeType
Chihuahua30 x 23 cm40 x 28 x 33 cmXS (18")Wire
Yorkshire Terrier33 x 25 cm43 x 29 x 35 cmS (22")Wire
Pomeranian33 x 25 cm43 x 30 x 35 cmS (22")Wire
Maltese33 x 24 cm43 x 28 x 34 cmS (22")Wire
Shih Tzu *38 x 28 cm48 x 34 x 38 cmM (30")Wire
Pug *38 x 30 cm48 x 35 x 40 cmL (36")Wire
French Bulldog *43 x 33 cm53 x 37 x 43 cmL (36")Heavy Duty
Boston Terrier *43 x 33 cm53 x 35 x 43 cmL (36")Wire
Cavalier King Charles Spaniel *41 x 31 cm51 x 33 x 41 cmL (36")Wire
Miniature Schnauzer43 x 33 cm53 x 34 x 43 cmM (30")Wire
Beagle53 x 38 cm63 x 38 x 48 cmM (30")Heavy Duty
Cocker Spaniel53 x 38 cm63 x 38 x 48 cmM (30")Wire
Corgi56 x 33 cm66 x 38 x 43 cmM (30")Wire
Bulldog *48 x 38 cm58 x 40 x 48 cmL (36")Wire
Border Collie63 x 53 cm73 x 40 x 63 cmL (36")Heavy Duty
Australian Shepherd63 x 53 cm73 x 41 x 63 cmL (36")Heavy Duty
Boxer *66 x 58 cm76 x 43 x 68 cmXXL (48")Heavy Duty
Siberian Husky71 x 58 cm81 x 43 x 68 cmXL (42")Heavy Duty
Labrador Retriever71 x 58 cm81 x 45 x 68 cmXL (42")Wire
Golden Retriever71 x 58 cm81 x 45 x 68 cmXL (42")Wire
German Shepherd76 x 63 cm86 x 45 x 73 cmXL (42")Heavy Duty
Standard Poodle71 x 58 cm81 x 41 x 68 cmXL (42")Wire
Doberman81 x 68 cm91 x 42 x 78 cmXXL (48")Heavy Duty
Rottweiler86 x 68 cm96 x 48 x 78 cmXXL (48")Heavy Duty
Great Dane107 x 86 cm117 x 52 x 96 cmXXL (48")Heavy Duty
Saint Bernard97 x 76 cm107 x 50 x 86 cmXXL (48")Heavy Duty

* Snub-nosed breeds often deserve one standard size up for ventilation and travel margin.

Crate training basics

A properly sized crate should feel like a den, not a punishment

Crates are most useful when they create structure, rest, and safety. They fail when they are oversized for training, undersized for posture, or used as a default answer to every behavior problem.

  • - Exercise before crating matters.
  • - Calm release matters.
  • - Predictable meals and bathroom breaks matter.
  • - A panicking dog needs a better plan, not just more crate time.

Starter timeline

Week 1 - Introduction

Keep the crate in the main living area, leave the door open, add bedding and treats, and let the dog investigate without being forced in.

Week 2 - Short closed-door sessions

Begin with a few minutes while you stay nearby, then stretch toward 20 to 30 minutes if the dog settles well.

Weeks 3-4 - Routine building

Add short absences, predictable meals, exercise before crating, and calm release habits so the crate becomes boring rather than stressful.

Long-term use

A crate should stay a management tool and rest space, not a punishment box. If the dog is panicking, chewing bars, or regressing in training, rethink the setup instead of simply extending the time.

Frequently asked questions

Dog crate size calculator FAQ

What size crate does my dog need?

Your dog should be able to stand without crouching, turn around cleanly, and lie down stretched out. A practical home-use starting point is body length plus 10 cm for crate length, body width plus 10 cm for crate width, and body height plus 10 cm for crate height. Then match that minimum against real retail crate sizes.

How do I measure my dog for a crate?

Measure body length from the tip of the nose to the base of the tail, not including the tail. Measure standing height from the floor to the highest point of the head or ears. For airline sizing, shoulder width and elbow height matter too. When in doubt, use real measurements instead of breed averages.

Is it better to get a bigger crate?

Not always. For housetraining, a crate that is too large can make it easier for a puppy to sleep in one end and toilet in the other. The goal is not maximum space. It is enough space for comfort and posture. Dogs that are already trained can sometimes tolerate a roomier setup, but oversized is not automatically better.

What crate size for a Labrador Retriever?

Most adult Labradors land in an XL 42 inch crate, though very large males or dogs with unusually long bodies can push toward XXL. A typical adult Lab often measures around 71 cm in body length and 58 cm in height, which usually clears into the XL retail band.

What crate size for a German Shepherd?

Many adult German Shepherds also land in XL 42 inch crates, but bigger males can pressure the top end of that size fast. Because the breed is tall and athletic, actual standing height matters more than weight alone.

What size crate for a puppy?

The best long-term strategy is usually to buy the adult-sized crate and use a divider panel so the puppy only has the space they currently need. That keeps housetraining tighter and avoids buying multiple crates as the dog grows.

What is IATA crate sizing?

IATA sizing for pets in cargo uses a different formula than normal home crates. A CR1-style baseline uses body length plus half the leg height for length, shoulder width doubled for width, and standing height plus bedding or clearance for height. Airline hardware rules can still be stricter than the baseline formula.

Can snub-nosed dogs fly in a crate?

Some carriers restrict or heavily scrutinize brachycephalic dogs because breathing risk rises with heat, stress, and poor ventilation. You should assume extra caution is needed, size up for airflow, and verify the current rule with the airline before booking.

What is the difference between wire and plastic crates?

Wire crates are usually best for home training because they ventilate well, collapse easily, and accept divider panels. Plastic hard-sided crates are the normal baseline for airline-style travel and can feel more den-like for some dogs. The better choice depends on the use case, not just aesthetics.

How long can a dog stay in a crate?

Adult dogs usually tolerate shorter daytime crate blocks better than long ones, and puppies need much more frequent breaks. As a practical rule, crate time should still leave room for exercise, bathroom breaks, and mental stimulation before and after the confinement block.

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