Exercise Calculator
Find out how much exercise your dog needs per day based on breed, age, and health. Get recommendations for walk duration, intensity, and activity types.
Calculate
Exercise calculator
Daily exercise plan
Total daily
50 min
Sessions
1×
~50 min each
Intensity
Moderate
Recommended activities
- Brisk walks
- Fetch
- Swimming
- Play dates
Rest days: No mandatory rest days — follow your dog's cues
This calculator provides estimates based on established veterinary formulas. Every dog is different — use results as a starting point and consult your veterinarian for personalized advice.
How to use
- 1
Select your dog's breed
Choose your dog's breed from the dropdown. The breed determines baseline energy level and exercise tolerance. For mixed breeds, select the closest energy category.
- 2
Enter age
Enter your dog's age. Puppies, adults, and seniors have very different exercise needs and limitations. The calculator adjusts recommendations by life stage.
- 3
Note any health conditions
Select any relevant health conditions: arthritis, hip dysplasia, heart condition, or obesity. These reduce the recommended intensity and duration.
- 4
View your exercise plan
The calculator shows recommended daily minutes, suggested activities (walking, running, swimming, fetch), ideal session length, and rest day guidance.
- 5
Adjust for conditions
In hot weather (above 85°F/30°C), reduce exercise by 25–50% and shift to early morning or evening. In extreme cold, short-coated and small breeds need shorter outdoor sessions.
Exercise Calculator FAQ
- It varies dramatically by breed, age, and health. High-energy breeds like Border Collies, Huskies, and Vizslas need 60–120 minutes of vigorous exercise daily. Medium-energy breeds like Labradors and Beagles need 45–75 minutes. Low-energy breeds like Bulldogs, Basset Hounds, and senior dogs may only need 20–30 minutes. The key is matching exercise to your dog's breed-typical energy level — under-exercised dogs develop behavioral problems (chewing, barking, anxiety), while over-exercised puppies risk joint damage.
- Yes, and it's a common mistake. Puppies' bones, joints, and growth plates are still developing, and excessive impact exercise (long runs, high jumps, extended fetch on hard surfaces) can cause permanent orthopedic damage. The general rule is 5 minutes of structured exercise per month of age, twice a day — so a 4-month-old puppy gets two 20-minute sessions. Free play in a yard is fine in addition to this. Avoid running on pavement with puppies under 12–18 months, especially large and giant breeds.
- Common signs include destructive behavior (chewing furniture, digging), excessive barking or whining, hyperactivity or inability to settle, weight gain, and attention-seeking. Some dogs also develop anxiety or compulsive behaviors when chronically under-exercised. If your dog zooms around the house, pesters you constantly, or destroys things when you leave, they likely need more physical and mental stimulation. The solution is usually longer or more intense exercise sessions, plus mental enrichment like puzzle feeders.
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