Chart inputs
Enter age, size, weight, and body condition.
A dog weight chart compares your dog's current weight with common healthy reference ranges for age, breed size, and body condition. Use this generator to create a printable chart for puppies and adult dogs.
Weight ranges are planning references, not a diagnosis. Sudden weight change, appetite changes, vomiting, diarrhea, or extreme body condition should be reviewed by a veterinarian.
Enter age, size, weight, and body condition.
Printable weight chart
Large dog, 24 months old, BCS 4-5 / 9
Current weight
55 lb
Expected range
55-80 lb
Result
In the expected range
The current weight is close to the reference range. Keep tracking trends, appetite, and body condition.
Recheck weight monthly and update food portions if the trend changes.
| Age | Reference range | Life stage |
|---|---|---|
| 8 weeks | 8.8-13 lb | puppy |
| 12 weeks | 18-22 lb | puppy |
| 4 months | 31-35 lb | puppy |
| 6 months | 53-58 lb | puppy |
| 9 months | 58-67 lb | puppy |
| 12 months | 59-75 lb | puppy |
| Adult | 55-80 lb | adult |
Review puppy and adult ranges for the selected breed size.
Weight alone is incomplete, so the chart includes body condition notes.
Use the printable summary for family handoffs, sitters, or vet visits.
A dog weight chart compares a dog's current weight with common reference ranges for age and breed size. It is a planning tool, not a diagnosis.
Puppy weight varies by adult breed size. Toy breeds may weigh only a few pounds at 6 months, while large and giant breeds can keep growing for 18-24 months.
Your dog may be overweight if ribs are hard to feel, the waist is missing from above, and fat cover is obvious. Use body condition with weight, not weight alone.
Ask a vet about sudden weight gain, sudden weight loss, appetite changes, vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, or any weight plan for a growing puppy.