20-30 min/day
Very Low
Pugs, English Bulldogs, Basset Hounds
Use short, cooler, low-impact walks and extra sniff time.
Daily exercise needs by breed, age, weight, and health
Too little exercise can drive obesity, anxiety, and destructive behavior. Too much can overload growing joints or sore seniors. Build a practical daily plan that combines walks, active play, and brain work.
Informational planning tool only. Dogs with lameness, heart disease, recovery restrictions, fainting, or heat intolerance should have activity cleared by a vet.
My Dogs integration
Load a saved dog or enter breed, age, and weight manually.
Current life stage: Adult
Energy level visual selector
Use breed defaults, then override if your individual dog is calmer or more intense.
Size, body condition, and health status
Today's weather mode
Normal outdoor plan
Use the full physical target and keep mental work as a daily add-on.
The report includes total minutes, schedule planning, estimated calorie burn, mental enrichment, puppy guidance, safety warnings, and a local exercise log.
Live preview
60 min/day
60 min/day · 2 sessions · 33.1 lb · moderate
Mild weather baseline
Minimum acceptable: 42 min/day. Ideal target: 60 min/day.
Exercise breakdown
60
min/day
Estimated calories burned: ~43 kcal
Safety checks
How much exercise does my dog need?
Your Border Collie chewing through another cushion, your Labrador gaining weight on the same food, and your senior dog looking stiff after walks can all trace back to exercise. The solutions are different. Breed energy can swing from a Pug that needs short gentle outings to a Border Collie that needs a job. Age changes the safe type of movement: puppies need protection from high impact, adults can usually tolerate the broadest range, and seniors need frequent low-impact motion.
Health status matters just as much. Arthritis, heart disease, obesity, heat sensitivity, and post-surgery recovery can all limit exercise before the breed baseline is reached. Individual dogs vary too. Use the calculator as a starting plan, then adjust based on recovery, behavior, body condition, and veterinary restrictions. Exercise also changes food needs, so pair this page with the Dog Food Calculator when weight management is part of the goal.
20-30 min/day
Pugs, English Bulldogs, Basset Hounds
Use short, cooler, low-impact walks and extra sniff time.
30-45 min/day
Chow Chows, Shar Pei, Mastiffs
Consistency matters more than speed or long distance.
45-60 min/day
Labradors, Golden Retrievers, Poodles
Combine walks, relaxed play, and a little training.
60-90 min/day
German Shepherds, Huskies, Australian Shepherds
Most need real daily structure, not only bathroom walks.
90-120 min/day
Border Collies, Jack Russells, Vizslas
Add brain work, skill work, and decompression, not just mileage.
Puppy exercise calculator
Growth plates are soft cartilage zones near the ends of growing bones. Before they close, a puppy's skeleton is more vulnerable to repetitive impact. A common rule for structured exercise is 5 minutes per month of age, twice daily. A 4-month puppy gets about 20 minutes per session, two times per day; a 6-month puppy gets about 30 minutes per session. This is a ceiling for organized walking, not a command to exhaust the dog.
Free play in a safe area is usually easier for puppies to self-regulate than forced jogging, long hard-surface walks, repeated stairs, or jumping from furniture and cars. Safe options include short flat walks, supervised free play, gentle swimming, and short training sessions. Delay forced running, bike-following, repeated jumping, and heavy stair work until the dog is physically mature.
Important puppy rules
Growth plate timing
Small dogs
around 12 months
Medium dogs
about 14-16 months
Large dogs
around 18 months
Giant dogs
up to 24 months
Senior dogs
Senior dogs still need movement to protect muscle, manage weight, support joint range of motion, and reduce boredom. The adjustment is usually lower impact and better recovery, not removing exercise. Short and frequent beats long and rare. Grass is often kinder than concrete, swimming can be excellent, and extreme weather should shorten sessions.
Arthritic dogs benefit from a slow warm-up, gentle leash walks, soft footing, and careful observation after exercise. Limping or stiffness later in the day is feedback. Pain plans belong with a veterinarian; these related tools can help you understand common medication math: Carprofen Dosage Calculator and Meloxicam Dosage Calculator.
Post-surgery restrictions
Too much activity after surgery can open incisions, delay healing, or compromise orthopedic repairs. Spay/neuter, soft-tissue procedures, TPLO, FHO, and other surgeries can have very different recovery rules, so the veterinarian's protocol is the source of truth. At home, use gates or pens, block furniture jumping, limit stairs, and prevent licking as instructed.
| Weeks 1-2 | Leash potty walks only | 5 min, 3-4x/day |
| Weeks 3-4 | Short leash walks | 10-15 min, 2-3x/day |
| Weeks 5-8 | Gradual increase if cleared | 15-20 min blocks |
| Week 8+ | Return based on recheck | Veterinary direction |
Overweight dogs
Extra weight increases joint load, reduces stamina, and raises heat risk. The goal is a habit the dog can recover from, not a punishment workout. Flat walks and swimming are better first choices than hills, sprints, or intense fetch.
Exercise alone rarely produces major weight loss in dogs. Diet control usually does more, and the best result comes from both together. Use the Dog Food Calculator for feeding targets and the Dog Weight Calculator to track progress.
Eight-week safe starting plan
Weeks 1-2
10-15 min gentle walk, twice daily
Weeks 3-4
15-20 min walk, twice daily
Weeks 5-6
20-25 min walk, twice daily
Weeks 7-8
25-30 min walk plus 10 min play
Month 3+
Gradually approach breed-appropriate level
Mental exercise
Mental enrichment is the difference between a dog that is physically tired and a dog that is actually satisfied. Sniffing is demanding because dogs process the world through scent. Training asks for impulse control. Puzzle feeders turn meals into problem solving. High-drive breeds such as Border Collies, German Shepherds, and Australian Shepherds often need their brains worked as much as their legs.
On rainy, hot, cold, or time-limited days, 20 to 30 minutes of enrichment can partially substitute for reduced outdoor exercise. It should not erase all physical movement for healthy dogs, but it can reduce destructive behavior, barking, and indoor restlessness when walking time is limited.
Easy
5-10 minutes
Moderate
10-15 minutes
Advanced
15-20 minutes
Breed reference
These rows assume healthy adult dogs in mild weather. Puppies, seniors, overweight dogs, brachycephalic breeds in heat, and post-surgery dogs should usually land lower than the broad adult baseline.
| Breed | Size | Energy | Adult target | Planning note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chihuahua | toy | moderate | 43-53 min | Balanced companion profile with regular walks and play. |
| Pug | small | very low | 16-20 min | Often does better with steadier, cooler, lower-impact routines. |
| Beagle | medium | high | 81-99 min | Usually benefits from real daily activity, not just bathroom walks. |
| Cocker Spaniel | medium | moderate | 54-66 min | Balanced companion profile with regular walks and play. |
| Border Collie | medium | very high | 108-132 min | Needs both hard exercise and structured mental work. |
| Labrador Retriever | large | high | 86-105 min | Usually benefits from real daily activity, not just bathroom walks. |
| Golden Retriever | large | high | 86-105 min | Usually benefits from real daily activity, not just bathroom walks. |
| German Shepherd | large | high | 86-105 min | Usually benefits from real daily activity, not just bathroom walks. |
| Siberian Husky | medium | very high | 108-132 min | Needs both hard exercise and structured mental work. |
| Boxer | large | high | 27-33 min | Usually benefits from real daily activity, not just bathroom walks. |
| Great Dane | giant | moderate | 46-56 min | Balanced companion profile with regular walks and play. |
| Saint Bernard | giant | low | 23-29 min | Often does better with steadier, cooler, lower-impact routines. |
Weather and surface safety
| Mild weather | 100% of base | Best case for normal walks, field play, and longer sessions. |
| Hot weather | 60% of base | Shift walks earlier or later, use shade, and keep a closer eye on panting and recovery. |
| Cold weather | 80% of base | Seniors, smaller dogs, and short-coated dogs may need shorter outdoor blocks and warmer gear. |
| Rainy weather | 70% of base | Use shorter outdoor sessions and replace the missing time with training, food puzzles, or sniff work. |
Related behavior support
Under-exercise can look like chewing, digging, barking, whining, and attention-seeking. Over-exercise can look like soreness, avoidance, or heat stress. Dogs with anxiety or extreme arousal may need behavior support in addition to better routines. For medication context, see the Trazodone Dosage Calculator.
Frequently asked questions
Most dogs need somewhere between 20 and 120 minutes of daily movement, but the useful answer depends on breed energy, age, body condition, health status, and recovery. Very low-energy dogs may do well with 20 to 30 minutes of gentle walking and sniffing. Moderate family dogs often need 45 to 60 minutes. High-drive working, sporting, and herding dogs may need 90 minutes or more, and they usually need mental work as much as distance.
A common puppy guideline is 5 minutes per month of age, twice daily, for structured walks. A 4-month puppy would get about 20 minutes per session, two times per day. This does not mean a puppy must lie still the rest of the day. Free play, short training, gentle sniffing, and naps all matter. Avoid forced running, repeated jumping, long stair sessions, and hard-surface endurance work until growth plates mature.
Yes. Over-exercise can cause limping, sore paw pads, stiffness, heat stress, reluctance to continue, and lethargy lasting more than a day. Puppies are vulnerable because growth plates are still developing. Senior and arthritic dogs may pay for a hard session later with stiffness. Short-nosed, obese, and heart-limited dogs need extra caution in heat or intense activity.
Senior dogs usually need less intensity, not zero activity. A practical starting point is to reduce adult exercise by roughly 20 to 40 percent, then watch recovery. Several short walks, warm-up time, soft surfaces, sniffing, swimming, and gentle mobility play are usually better than one long hard walk. If a senior dog is stiffer later in the day or reluctant the next morning, the prior session was probably too much.
Walking, hiking, swimming, fetch, tug, free play, agility foundations, and controlled running can all count as physical exercise when they fit the dog's age and health. Mental exercise also matters: sniff walks, training, food puzzles, hide-and-seek with treats, and nose work can reduce frustration and help high-energy dogs settle. A good routine combines movement, sniffing, problem solving, and recovery.
Use short, high-value blocks instead of waiting for one perfect long walk. A 15-minute sniff walk before work, a puzzle feeder at lunch, 10 minutes of training, and an evening walk can cover more needs than a single rushed lap around the block. For high-drive dogs, daycare, dog walkers, structured play, or weekend sport classes can supplement limited weekday time.
A 30-minute walk can be enough for some very low or low-energy adult dogs, especially if it includes sniffing and the dog settles well afterward. For moderate dogs, it is often only part of the day. For high-drive breeds such as Border Collies, Australian Shepherds, Huskies, and many working lines, 30 minutes is usually a minimum bathroom-and-movement baseline, not a complete exercise plan.
Many adult Labradors need about 60 to 80 minutes per day split between walks, active play, and mental work. Labs are also prone to weight gain, so exercise and food planning should work together. A Lab that is overweight, arthritic, elderly, or recovering from injury may need a slower progression, lower-impact activity, and closer monitoring than a lean, conditioned adult Lab.
Mental exercise can partially replace physical exercise on bad-weather or recovery days, but it should not fully replace movement for healthy dogs. Sniffing, training, and puzzle work are tiring because they require concentration and scent processing. They are especially valuable for working breeds that stay restless after a plain walk. Physical exercise still supports cardiovascular health, muscle, weight management, and joint mobility.
For light walking, many dogs do best with a short wait of about 30 to 60 minutes after meals. For hard running, intense play, or large and giant breeds at higher bloat risk, a more conservative 1 to 2 hour wait is prudent. Avoid vigorous exercise immediately before or after a large meal, and ask your veterinarian for breed-specific guidance if your dog is deep-chested or has a history of digestive problems.
Related tools
Dog Food Calculator
Estimate daily calories, cups, grams, and meal timing using RER/MER math, food type, and brand calorie density.
Dog Body Condition Score Calculator
Take a three-step rib, waist, and abdominal tuck assessment using the veterinary 9-point BCS scale.
Dog Weight Calculator
Compare your dog to healthy breed ranges, body condition scoring, and realistic goal-weight timelines.
Dog Age Calculator
Convert dog years to human years with the 2020 DNA methylation formula, size context, and life-stage advice.
Dog Size Calculator
Predict toy, small, medium, large, or giant adult size from breed, age, weight, and mixed-breed clues.
Carprofen Dosage Calculator for Dogs
Calculate Rimadyl or generic carprofen tablet doses by weight with once-daily and twice-daily schedules.
Trazodone Dosage Calculator for Dogs
Calculate a veterinarian-prescribed trazodone range by weight with event timing and gabapentin-combination context.