Dog Food Portion Calculator
Example Data Table
| Dog type | Weight | Goal | Label calories | Treat share | Meals |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Neutered adult | 20 kg | Maintenance | 350 kcal per cup | 10% | 2 |
| Senior dog | 12 kg | Less active | 320 kcal per cup | 5% | 2 |
| Weight plan dog | 30 kg | Target weight | 280 kcal per cup | 0% | 3 |
Formula Used
RER: 70 × body weight in kg0.75.
Daily calories: RER × energy factor × veterinary adjustment.
Food calories: daily calories − treat calories.
Dry cups: dry food calories ÷ kcal per cup.
Dry grams: dry cups × grams per cup.
Wet cans: wet food calories ÷ kcal per can.
Per meal amount: daily amount ÷ meals per day.
The calculator uses target weight for weight loss or gain goals. It uses current weight for maintenance goals.
How to Use This Calculator
- Enter your dog’s current weight and target weight.
- Select the feeding goal that matches your veterinary plan.
- Read the current food label and enter calorie density.
- Choose the dry food share if using mixed feeding.
- Add treat percentage, meals, cost, and transition days.
- Press calculate to see portions above the form.
- Download the result as a CSV or PDF file.
Hill's Prescription Diet Dog Food Planning Guide
Why Portions Matter
Hill’s Prescription Diet foods are often selected for specific veterinary goals. A dog may need support for weight, digestion, skin, kidneys, joints, or urinary care. Portion accuracy matters because these diets are usually part of a wider care plan. Small daily errors can become large monthly changes.
This calculator helps owners estimate a starting feeding amount. It uses body weight, a calorie factor, treat allowance, and label calories. It can split calories between dry food and wet food. It also shows meal portions, daily cost, monthly cost, and a simple transition schedule.
Use Label Calories
Always read the current package label. Recipes and calorie density can change. One bag may list calories per cup. A can may list calories per can. Enter those numbers exactly. Use a kitchen scale when possible. Grams are usually more consistent than cups.
The energy factor is only an estimate. A calm senior dog needs less food than an active dog. A neutered adult often needs less than an intact adult. Dogs losing weight may need a target weight calculation. Dogs recovering from illness need veterinary guidance.
Treats and Mixed Feeding
Treats should be limited. Many care plans keep treats under ten percent of daily calories. Prescription treats may also count. Table scraps can disturb the plan. Add every extra snack when reviewing intake.
Mixed feeding needs care. If half the calories come from dry food, only half should be divided by dry calorie density. The wet share is then divided by wet calorie density. This keeps both foods balanced within the same daily target.
Transition and Review
Transition days protect comfort. Some dogs change food in four days. Sensitive dogs may need ten days or more. Your veterinarian may request a faster or slower change. Watch appetite, stool, thirst, and energy during the switch.
Use the final result as a practical estimate. Weigh your dog regularly. Track body condition. Adjust portions only with professional advice when a medical diet is involved. Contact your clinic if weight changes quickly, symptoms return, or your dog refuses food. This tool supports planning. It does not diagnose disease or replace veterinary care.
Keep notes after each feeding change. Record portion size, stool quality, appetite, weight, and treats. Clear records help your clinic refine the plan safely over time.
FAQs
Is this calculator a veterinary feeding plan?
No. It estimates portions from weight, calories, and factors. Use it with your veterinarian’s instructions for prescription diets.
Where do I find calories per cup?
Check the product bag, can, or official feeding label. Enter the current calorie value because formulas may change.
Can I calculate wet and dry food together?
Yes. Enter dry calorie share. The calculator assigns the remaining calories to wet food and estimates cans per day.
Should treats be included?
Yes. Treats add calories. Add the treat percentage so the food portion can be reduced correctly.
Why use target weight for weight loss?
Target weight helps estimate calories for the desired body size. Weight plans should be reviewed by a veterinarian.
Are cups or grams better?
Grams are usually more consistent. Cups can vary with scoop size, food shape, and how the cup is filled.
How often should portions be reviewed?
Review portions after weigh-ins. Many dogs need checks every two to four weeks during diet changes.
What if my dog refuses the food?
Contact your veterinarian. Do not force a prescription diet if appetite, vomiting, diarrhea, or energy changes occur.