Urban Tail Co. vs Typical Dog Stairs
Not all foam dog stairs are built the same. Here is how ours compare to what you will find elsewhere.
| Urban Tail Co. | Typical Foam Dog Stairs | |
|---|---|---|
| Foam density | ✓ High-density memory foam that holds its shape | Standard polyurethane that compresses over time |
| Cover | ✓ Removable, machine-washable, non-slip surface | Often spot-clean only or non-removable |
| Base | ✓ Non-slip grip base included | Varies, often requires a separate pad |
| Design options | ✓ Curved ergonomic and classic shapes available | Usually one straight traditional shape |
| Step configurations | ✓ 3, 4, and 5-step available | Often limited to one or two sizes |
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Dog Feeding Chart: How Much to Feed Your Dog
The complete chart Feeding chart by weight & life stage. Adult dogs Puppies Senior dogs For dogs aged one to seven years at a healthy body condition. Amounts shown are total daily food, typically split across two meals. Calorie estimates assume standard dry kibble. Dog weight Cups per day Daily calories Per meal (2x) 3 lbsToy breed ⅓ cup 120 kcal ⅙ cup 6 lbsToy breed ½ cup 180 kcal ¼ cup 10 lbsSmall breed ¾ cup 270 kcal ⅜ cup 15 lbsSmall breed 1 cup 360 kcal ½ cup 20 lbsSmall breed 1⅔ cups 600 kcal ⅚ cup 30 lbsMedium breed 1¾ cups 630 kcal ⅞ cup 40 lbsMedium breed 2¼ cups 810 kcal 1⅛ cups 50 lbsMedium to large 2⅔ cups 960 kcal 1⅓ cups 60 lbsLarge breed 3 cups 1,080 kcal 1½ cups 70 lbsLarge breed 3½ cups 1,260 kcal 1¾ cups 80 lbsLarge breed 3¾ cups 1,350 kcal 1⅞ cups 90 lbsGiant breed 4¼ cups 1,530 kcal 2⅛ cups 100 lbsGiant breed 4½ cups 1,620 kcal 2¼ cups 100+ lbsGiant breed +¼ cup per 10 lbs +90 kcal per 10 lbs add half each These ranges assume an adult dog at ideal body weight with moderate activity. Adjust down by ten percent for low activity or weight management, and up by ten to twenty percent for working dogs and high activity levels. Puppy feeding amounts depend on age and expected adult weight, since growing dogs need significantly more calories per pound than adults. Most puppy foods run higher in calories than adult formulas. Six to twelve weeks The early weeks Toy / small (5-15 lbs adult)½ to 1 cup Medium (15-50 lbs adult)1 to 1½ cups Large (50-90 lbs adult)1½ to 2¼ cups Giant (90+ lbs adult)2¼ to 3 cups Meals per day4 meals Three to six months Active growth Toy / small (5-15 lbs adult)¾ to 1¼ cups Medium (15-50 lbs adult)1½ to 2½ cups Large (50-90 lbs adult)2½ to 3¾ cups Giant (90+ lbs adult)3¾ to 5 cups Meals per day3 meals Six to twelve months Late puppyhood Toy / small (5-15 lbs adult)¾ to 1 cup Medium (15-50 lbs adult)1¾ to 2¾ cups Large (50-90 lbs adult)3 to 4¼ cups Giant (90+ lbs adult)4¼ to 5½ cups Meals per day2 meals Twelve months and beyond Transition to adult Small breedsSwitch at 9-12 mo Medium breedsSwitch at 12 mo Large breedsSwitch at 15-18 mo Giant breedsSwitch at 18-24 mo Then followAdult chart Puppy nutritional needs are higher per pound of body weight because they're building bone, muscle, and organs. Underfeeding during this window can stunt growth, while overfeeding large breeds specifically can accelerate growth and cause joint problems. Always follow your specific puppy food's chart and consult your vet at every checkup. Senior dogs typically need ten to twenty percent fewer calories than adults due to reduced activity and slower metabolism. Maintaining a healthy weight in older age is critical for joint health, mobility, and longevity. Dog weight Cups per day Daily calories Per meal (2x) 10 lbsSenior small ⅔ cup 240 kcal ⅓ cup 15 lbsSenior small ⅞ cup 315 kcal ½ cup 20 lbsSenior small 1½ cups 540 kcal ¾ cup 30 lbsSenior medium 1½ cups 540 kcal ¾ cup 40 lbsSenior medium 2 cups 720 kcal 1 cup 50 lbsSenior medium 2⅓ cups 840 kcal 1⅙ cups 60 lbsSenior large 2⅔ cups 960 kcal 1⅓ cups 70 lbsSenior large 3 cups 1,080 kcal 1½ cups 80 lbsSenior large 3¼ cups 1,170 kcal 1⅝ cups 90 lbsSenior giant 3¾ cups 1,350 kcal 1⅞ cups 100 lbsSenior giant 4 cups 1,440 kcal 2 cups Dogs are typically considered senior at different ages: toy and small breeds at 11 to 12 years, medium breeds at 10 years, large breeds at 8 years, and giant breeds at 7 years. Talk to your vet about transitioning to a senior formula and monitoring weight at each checkup. The chart above gives you a starting point. The number you read off the row that matches your dog's weight is a good first portion to feed for a week or two. After that, your dog's body tells you whether the number was right. Most adjustments are small. A quarter cup more or less makes a meaningful difference over weeks and months, even when it feels invisible day to day. The rest of this guide is about everything that shapes that number. How activity, age, and food type pull the answer up or down. What good nutrition actually looks like in a bowl. The mistakes most owners make without realizing it. And when the chart is the wrong tool entirely and you need to talk to your vet. How to read the chart correctly. Three things trip people up when using any feeding chart, including this one. Get these right and you avoid most of the common errors. i. Feed for ideal weight, not current weight If your dog should weigh 50 pounds but currently weighs 60, run the chart on 50. Feeding to current weight just maintains the problem. The body adjusts to slightly lower portions over weeks, and the dog gradually returns to a healthy weight. ii. The numbers are daily totals, not per meal Every cup figure on the chart is the total food per day. If you feed twice daily, split it in half. If you feed three times, divide by three. The "per meal" column on the chart already does this for you assuming two meals. iii. Cross reference against your specific food This chart assumes a typical dry kibble at 360 calories per cup. A premium dense food might be 450, a budget food 320. Look at the back of your bag for kcal per cup and adjust the cup amount to match the calorie target. The variables that change the answer. Two dogs at the same weight can need food amounts that differ by 30 to 40 percent. Weight is the largest variable, but it's not the only one. The chart gives you an average. These six factors tell you whether your dog falls above or below it. Feed more if your dog is Very active or working daily Intact (not spayed or neutered) A puppy still growing Pregnant or nursing Underweight by body condition In cold weather conditions Feed less if your dog is Sedentary or low activity Spayed or neutered A senior with slowing metabolism Overweight by body condition On certain medications Recovering from surgery For a more precise number that accounts for these factors automatically, use our dog feeding calculator. It applies the same veterinary formula vets use, with adjustments for life stage and activity built in. A 60 pound dog who hikes every weekend and a 60 pound dog who naps on the couch can need food amounts that differ by nearly a full cup a day. The chart is the starting point. Your dog's life is the rest of the math. A note from our team What good nutrition actually looks like. How much you feed matters. What you feed matters at least as much. A dog eating the right amount of poor food will still struggle with energy, coat quality, digestion, and long term health. Good nutrition is not about expensive brands or trendy ingredients. It is about a few fundamentals that every quality dog food gets right. Protein as the foundation Adult dogs need a minimum of 18 percent protein by dry matter, and most do better in the 22 to 30 percent range. Puppies need closer to 28 percent or higher. The first ingredient on the bag should be a named meat (chicken, beef, lamb, salmon) rather than a generic "meat byproduct" or grain. Protein supports muscle, organ function, immune health, and recovery from activity. Fats for energy and skin Healthy fats are not the enemy. Dogs use fat as their primary energy source, and fat carries fat soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K). Most adult foods land between 10 and 18 percent fat. Active dogs do well at the higher end. Look for omega 3 sources like fish oil or flaxseed listed on the ingredient panel, since these support skin, coat, and joint health especially in seniors. Carbohydrates as fuel, not filler Dogs do not require carbohydrates the way humans do, but quality carbs from sources like sweet potato, brown rice, oats, and barley provide steady energy and fiber for digestion. Avoid foods where the first three ingredients are corn, wheat, or soy. These act as cheap filler and can trigger sensitivities in some dogs. The carb source should support the protein, not replace it. The micronutrient picture A complete food should be marked "complete and balanced" by AAFCO standards on the back of the bag. That label means the food meets minimum requirements for vitamins, minerals, and amino acids without you needing to supplement. Specific micronutrients worth noting: glucosamine and chondroitin for joint health (especially senior or large breed), taurine for heart health, and probiotics for digestive support. 22-30% Protein range for healthy adult dogs 10-18% Fat range for most adult formulas 10% Maximum daily calories from treats Reading a dog food label. Dog food marketing is loud. The actual nutritional information is on the back of the bag, in the small text. Three numbers do most of the work when comparing foods. i. Calories per cup (kcal/cup) This is the number that tells you how much to feed. A food at 380 kcal/cup is more calorie dense than one at 320. Less food per meal means you can use a smaller scoop while delivering the same energy. ii. Guaranteed analysis Lists minimum protein and fat percentages, maximum fiber and moisture. Use this to verify the food meets your dog's needs. A senior food with 18 percent protein at the minimum is borderline. A working dog food at 30 percent is built for activity. iii. The first five ingredients Ingredients are listed by weight before cooking. The first five tell you what the food is mostly made of. You want named meats, whole grains or vegetables, and identifiable fats in the top of the list. If you see corn, wheat gluten, or generic "meat" first, keep looking. The mistakes that quietly add up. Most overfeeding does not happen in the bowl. It happens around it, in moments most owners never count. Get these right and the chart numbers tend to take care of themselves. What people get wrong Eyeballing portions instead of measuring Using a measuring cup with packed kibble Free feeding all day from a full bowl Forgetting to count training treats Not adjusting after spay or neuter Treating sedentary dogs like active ones Sticking with puppy food too long What actually works Using a kitchen scale or marked scoop Loose scooping with a leveled cup Set meal times morning and evening Reducing meal portion when treating Recalculating after every life change Honestly assessing daily activity Switching to adult food on schedule A practical tip Weigh once, then mark your scoop Use a kitchen scale to weigh out the right amount of your specific food in grams (the back of the bag tells you grams per cup). Then put that exact amount into your scoop and mark the level with a permanent marker. From then on, you can scoop accurately without weighing every single meal. How often to feed. Most adult dogs do best with two meals a day, roughly twelve hours apart. This keeps blood sugar stable, supports digestion, and reduces the risk of bloat in deep chested breeds like Great Danes, Boxers, and Standard Poodles. Free feeding, where food sits out all day, makes portion control nearly impossible and is one of the leading causes of canine obesity. Puppies need more frequent feedings because their stomachs are small and their caloric demand is high. Six to twelve weeks: four meals a day. Three to six months: drop to three meals. After six months, most puppies can transition to the adult schedule of two meals daily. Senior dogs sometimes do better with smaller, more frequent meals. Two to three smaller portions can help with digestion, blood sugar stability, and energy throughout the day. If your senior dog is losing weight or appetite, talk to your vet about whether the issue is portion size, food type, or an underlying health condition. The body check that matters most. The chart gives you a starting point. Your dog's body tells you whether the starting point was right. Veterinarians use a scoring system called Body Condition Score, which runs from 1 (emaciated) to 9 (obese), with 4 to 5 being ideal. You can do a quick version at home in under a minute. Run your hands along your dog's sides. You should be able to feel ribs easily under a thin layer of fat, without seeing them clearly through the coat. Look down at your dog from above. You should see a visible waist behind the ribs. From the side, the belly should tuck up slightly toward the back legs. If ribs are sharply visible, increase food by 10 percent. If you cannot feel ribs at all, decrease food by 10 percent. Reassess every two weeks. Try the calculator Want a more precise daily portion? Our dog feeding calculator uses the same Resting Energy Requirement formula veterinarians rely on, with adjustments for your dog's life stage and activity level built in. It gives you a daily calorie target and translates that into cups for typical dry kibble. When the chart is the wrong tool. Feeding charts assume a healthy dog at an ideal weight with no medical conditions. The moment any of those assumptions break, the chart stops being useful and your vet becomes the source of truth. Skip the chart, call your vet Diabetes or insulin resistance Kidney or liver disease Pancreatitis history Severe food allergies or sensitivities Pregnancy or nursing Recent major surgery or recovery Worth a vet conversation Sudden weight gain or loss Loss of appetite for more than a day Persistent digestive issues Coat quality declining Senior dog with new symptoms Switching to a prescription diet Prescription diets exist for a reason. They have very different calorie profiles, ingredient ratios, and feeding instructions than over the counter foods. If your vet has prescribed a specific diet, follow their feeding guidance rather than this chart. The bottom line. Feeding the right amount is not complicated, but it does require honesty. Honesty about how active your dog actually is, not how active you wish they were. Honesty about ideal weight versus current weight. Honesty about treats and scraps. Use the chart to get a starting number, run a body check every couple weeks, and adjust by 10 percent when what you see does not match what the math says it should. Done well, this is one of the highest leverage things you can do for your dog's long term health. A dog at ideal weight lives longer, moves better, and stays themselves later into life. Studies have shown that maintaining a lean body condition can extend a dog's lifespan by nearly two years. That is worth measuring the kibble. Made by Urban Tail Co. Built for senior and small dog parents who care about doing right by them. From feeding to mobility to sleep, we make products designed for the dogs that need them most. Shop Now
Learn moreDog Dementia: Signs, Stages, and What to Do When Your Senior Dog Starts Acting Confused
Dog dementia, also called Canine Cognitive Dysfunction (CCD), is a progressive brain disease in older dogs that causes confusion, disorientation, anxiety, sleep changes, and loss of learned behaviors like house training. It affects roughly 28% of dogs aged 11 to 12 and over 68% of dogs aged 15 to 16, and while there is no cure, the symptoms can be slowed and managed with the right combination of diet, supplements, environment, and veterinary care. If your senior dog is staring at walls, getting stuck in corners, pacing at night, or forgetting commands they have known for years, you are likely dealing with cognitive decline. The good news is that early intervention makes a measurable difference. This guide walks through every major question dog owners ask about dementia, what works, what does not, and how to make your dog's remaining years comfortable. What Is Dog Dementia and How Is It Different From Normal Aging? Dog dementia is a neurodegenerative disease similar to Alzheimer's in humans, caused by the buildup of beta-amyloid plaques in the brain that damage neurons and disrupt cognitive function. Normal aging causes mild slowing, but dementia causes confusion, personality changes, and a clear loss of previously learned behaviors. A normally aging dog might sleep more, move slower, and have grayer fur, but they still recognize you, follow familiar routines, and respond to their name. A dog with cognitive dysfunction does not just slow down. They get genuinely lost in their own home, forget what they were doing mid-task, and often seem like a different dog at night than they were during the day. The disease is progressive, meaning it gets worse over time. The earlier you recognize the signs and start interventions, the more you can slow that progression. What Are the Early Signs of Dog Dementia? The earliest signs of dog dementia fall into a pattern called DISHAA: Disorientation, Interaction changes, Sleep-wake cycle disruption, House soiling, Activity level changes, and Anxiety. Most owners notice the night pacing or house accidents first, often dismissing them as "just getting old." Early signs are subtle and easy to miss. Your dog might pause at the wrong side of a door, hesitate before going up steps they have used for years, or stand in the middle of a room looking unsure of what to do next. These small moments are the first red flags. Look for changes like: Staring at walls, ceilings, or into empty corners Getting stuck behind furniture or in tight spaces Forgetting cues they have known their entire life Waking up at 2 or 3 a.m. and pacing or vocalizing New clinginess or, conversely, withdrawing from family Accidents in the house from a previously trained dog If you see three or more of these consistently, it is time for a vet visit. What Are the Stages of Canine Cognitive Dysfunction? Canine Cognitive Dysfunction progresses through three general stages: mild, moderate, and severe, typically over 6 months to 2 years from first symptoms to advanced decline. Each stage has distinct behaviors and care needs. In the mild stage, dogs show occasional confusion, slight sleep changes, and minor lapses in training. Most owners do not yet realize anything is seriously wrong. In the moderate stage, symptoms become daily and obvious: regular night waking, frequent disorientation, accidents, and visible anxiety. Dogs in this stage often need medication and environmental support to stay comfortable. The severe stage involves loss of recognition (sometimes including family members), constant disorientation, severe anxiety, deep sleep-wake reversal, and significant loss of learned behaviors. Dogs at this stage need substantial daily management and end-of-life conversations become appropriate. How Is Dog Dementia Diagnosed? Dog dementia is diagnosed through a combination of behavioral history, physical exam, and ruling out other medical conditions that cause similar symptoms. There is no single blood test or scan that confirms it in a clinical setting. Your vet will likely ask you to fill out a CCD assessment questionnaire that scores behaviors across the DISHAA categories. They will also run blood work, check thyroid function, do a urinalysis, and possibly recommend imaging to rule out brain tumors, kidney disease, vision or hearing loss, and pain conditions that mimic dementia symptoms. This step matters because many "dementia" symptoms are caused by treatable issues. A dog pacing at night might have arthritis pain. A dog having accidents might have a UTI. Confirm what you are actually treating before assuming the worst. What Treatments Actually Work for Dog Dementia? The most effective treatments for dog dementia are a combination of prescription Selegiline (Anipryl), a brain-supporting diet like Hill's b/d or Purina Bright Mind, omega-3 supplementation, environmental enrichment, and a consistent daily routine. No single treatment works alone, but stacked together they can slow progression significantly. Selegiline is the only FDA-approved medication for canine cognitive dysfunction in the United States. It typically costs $50 to $120 per month depending on dog size, and many owners report visible improvement within 4 to 8 weeks. It does not reverse the disease, but it can roll symptoms back to an earlier stage. Diet matters more than most owners realize. Prescription cognitive diets are formulated with medium-chain triglycerides (MCTs) that give the aging brain an alternative energy source. Add a high-quality omega-3 supplement, SAM-e, and possibly a senior-formulated probiotic, and you have a meaningful intervention package for roughly $80 to $200 per month total. Selegiline vs Natural Supplements: Which Should You Try First? Selegiline is more powerful and faster-acting, but natural supplements like SAM-e, omega-3s, and MCT oil are safer to try first in mild cases and work well as a long-term foundation. Most vets recommend starting with diet and supplements, then adding Selegiline if symptoms continue progressing. Selegiline works on a specific brain chemistry pathway and can produce noticeable changes within a month. The trade-off is that it requires a prescription, has potential interactions with other medications (especially certain antidepressants and pain medications), and costs more than supplements. Natural supplements work more slowly and subtly, but they support overall brain health, are easier to start without a vet visit, and stack well with prescription treatment later. For mild cases caught early, a quality cognitive diet plus omega-3s and SAM-e is often enough for the first 6 to 12 months. For moderate to severe cases, skip ahead to Selegiline plus supplements together. How Do You Care for a Dog With Dementia at Home? Caring for a dog with dementia at home centers on three things: keeping the environment predictable, reducing nighttime anxiety, and removing physical obstacles that cause confusion or injury. Consistency is the single most important variable. Senior dogs with cognitive decline rely heavily on memorized routines because their ability to figure out new situations is fading. Feed at the same times. Walk the same route. Keep furniture in the same place. Sudden changes spike confusion and anxiety, sometimes for days. Here is a practical step-by-step home care setup: Stick to a strict daily schedule for meals, walks, and bedtime Use night lights in hallways and near food and water bowls Block off stairs or risky spots with baby gates Add ramps or low foam stairs to beds and couches so your dog does not have to jump (a real injury risk for disoriented seniors) Use orthopedic bedding to reduce joint pain that worsens nighttime restlessness Keep a written log of symptoms to share with your vet at every visit Add 10 to 15 minutes of light mental stimulation daily through scent games, slow puzzle feeders, or short training refreshers That last point matters more than people expect. The brain follows a use-it-or-lose-it pattern, and gentle daily mental work measurably slows cognitive decline. When Should You NOT Push for More Treatment? You should not push for more aggressive treatment when your dog has stopped recognizing family, can no longer find food or water, is constantly anxious or vocalizing, has lost interest in everything they used to enjoy, or is suffering from multiple late-stage conditions at once. At that point, the goal shifts from extending life to protecting quality of life. This is the hardest section to write and the hardest part of dementia to live through. Dogs with severe CCD can reach a stage where medication, supplements, and environmental support stop providing meaningful relief. Continuing to add treatments at that point often causes more stress than benefit. Use a quality-of-life scale (the HHHHHMM scale by Dr. Alice Villalobos is the standard one most vets use). Score your dog honestly each week. If the score keeps dropping despite your best efforts, have an open conversation with your vet about comfort care and timing. Choosing to stop is not failing your dog. Sometimes it is the most loving option available. How Long Do Dogs Live After a Dementia Diagnosis? Dogs typically live 18 months to 2 years after a clinical dementia diagnosis, though this varies widely based on the stage at diagnosis, the dog's overall health, and how aggressively the condition is managed. Some dogs do well for 3+ years with strong intervention. Others decline quickly within 6 to 12 months. The biggest factor is how early you catch it. A dog diagnosed in the mild stage who starts diet, supplements, and Selegiline early often plateaus for a long time. A dog diagnosed in the moderate or severe stage typically has a shorter window because so much neuron loss has already occurred. Other major factors include co-existing conditions like kidney disease, heart disease, or severe arthritis, all of which compound the daily burden on a cognitively declining dog. Dog Dementia FAQ Is dog dementia painful? Dog dementia itself is not physically painful, but the anxiety, confusion, and sleep disruption it causes create real psychological distress. Many dogs with CCD also have arthritis, dental disease, or other painful conditions at the same time, which is why a full vet workup matters so much. Can young dogs get dementia? True canine cognitive dysfunction is extremely rare in dogs under 7. If a young dog shows dementia-like symptoms, the cause is almost always something else, such as a brain tumor, infection, toxicity, seizure disorder, or behavioral issue. Get imaging and blood work before assuming cognitive decline. Should I get a puppy to keep my dementia dog company? No, in most cases. Bringing a puppy into a home with a dog who has CCD usually increases the senior dog's anxiety and confusion rather than helping. Senior dogs with cognitive decline do best in calm, predictable environments. Adding a puppy is the opposite of calm and predictable. Will CBD help my dog's dementia symptoms? CBD may help with dementia-related anxiety, especially nighttime restlessness, but the evidence for actual cognitive improvement is limited. Talk to your vet first, use a pet-specific product with third-party testing, and start at the lowest dose. Treat it as a supportive tool, not a primary treatment. Why does my dog with dementia walk in circles? Circling, especially in one consistent direction, is a classic sign of moderate to severe CCD and points to neurological dysfunction in the brain's spatial processing areas. It can also be caused by vestibular disease or a brain tumor, so any new circling behavior deserves a prompt vet visit to rule out other causes. Does pet insurance cover dog dementia? Most pet insurance plans cover dementia diagnostics, medications, and related vet visits as long as the policy was active before symptoms started. Pre-existing condition exclusions are strict, so dementia coverage is something to lock in years before your dog reaches senior age, not after symptoms appear. Making Life Easier for Your Senior Dog Watching a dog you love slowly become someone different is one of the harder experiences in pet ownership. The most important thing you can do is reduce the small daily struggles that wear them down. Predictable routines, soft lighting at night, easy access to their favorite spots, and protection from falls and confusion all add up to real comfort. One small change that helps more than most owners expect: removing the need to jump. Senior dogs with cognitive decline frequently miscalculate height and distance, and a missed jump onto a bed or couch can cause an injury that accelerates everything else. A set of well-designed dog stairs or an adjustable dog ramp lets your dog keep their favorite resting spots without the risk.
Learn moreCaring for a Senior Dog: The Complete Guide
One day your dog is bounding up the stairs like nothing has changed. The next, you notice them pause at the bottom, look up, and take that first step a little slower. Maybe they need a boost onto the couch. Maybe the gray around their muzzle has crept further up their face. Maybe they are sleeping in a little longer than they used to. Senior dog care is one of those things that sneaks up on you. There is no birthday card from the vet telling you your dog has officially aged. It happens gradually, in small moments that add up. This guide is a complete walkthrough of what senior dog care actually looks like. You will learn when dogs are considered seniors, the most common signs of aging, how to adapt your home and routine, what to feed them, when to call the vet, and how to keep their quality of life high for as long as possible. Every section links out to a more detailed post if you want to go deeper on a specific topic. Here is what this guide covers: When a dog is considered a senior Common signs your dog is aging Mobility and joint health Sleep and rest Nutrition and feeding Exercise and mental stimulation Cognitive changes and behavior Vet care for senior dogs Comfort and quality of life Recognizing when your dog is in pain The hardest conversations Frequently asked questions When is a dog considered a senior? There is no single age when a dog flips from adult to senior. It depends mostly on size, and to a smaller degree on breed. As a general guide: Small breeds (under 20 lbs) are considered seniors around age 10-12 Medium breeds (20-50 lbs) around age 8-10 Large breeds (50-90 lbs) around age 6-8 Giant breeds (over 90 lbs) around age 5-7 Larger dogs age faster. A Great Dane at 6 years old is solidly in senior territory, while a Chihuahua at 6 is still in their prime. This is one of the stranger facts about dog ownership, and it catches a lot of owners of larger breeds off guard. There is also a difference between senior and geriatric. Senior generally means slowing down, with some age-related changes. Geriatric means significantly limited, often dealing with multiple age-related conditions. Most dogs spend several good years in the senior stage before transitioning to geriatric. The practical takeaway: once your dog hits their senior threshold, it is worth shifting how you think about their care, even if nothing dramatic has changed yet. Prevention is much easier than treatment. Common signs your dog is aging Most owners notice a few changes before any official senior label applies. These are the most common early signals: Graying around the muzzle and eyes. Usually the first visible sign. Slower response when called. Could be hearing loss, could be a small cognitive shift. Trouble with stairs, jumping, or getting up from lying down. Often the first sign of joint changes. Sleeping more, playing less. Energy levels naturally taper. Cloudy or bluish tint in the eyes. Often lenticular sclerosis, which is normal aging and different from cataracts. Changes in appetite or weight. Can go either direction. More reserved or clingy behavior. Personality shifts happen as dogs age. None of these are emergencies on their own. But if several show up at once, or if any of them appear suddenly rather than gradually, it is worth a vet conversation. Sudden changes in senior dogs almost always have an underlying cause. Mobility and joint health This is the area where thoughtful senior dog care makes the biggest daily difference. Mobility issues rarely fix themselves, and the longer they go unaddressed, the faster quality of life drops. Arthritis and joint pain Arthritis affects a huge percentage of senior dogs. It develops slowly, which is why it is easy to miss in the early stages. By the time you see a limp, the condition has often been progressing for months or years. Early signs of arthritis include: Stiffness after rest, especially in the morning Reluctance to jump up on the couch or bed Slower on walks, or shorter walks than usual Pausing at the bottom of stairs Licking one specific joint Irritability when touched in certain areas Arthritis cannot be reversed, but it can be managed well with weight control, joint supplements, vet-prescribed anti-inflammatories, and environmental changes that reduce strain. Making your home easier to navigate Your home was designed for humans. Every couch, bed, and hardwood floor is a small physical challenge for a dog whose joints are not what they used to be. The biggest environmental fixes: Beds and couches. Jumping up and down from furniture is one of the hardest things on a senior dog's joints and spine. The impact on landing is significantly worse than climbing. Stairs or a ramp eliminate that impact entirely. Slippery floors. Hardwood, tile, and laminate become dangerous for dogs with weak hind legs or arthritis. Rugs, runners, and grippy paw pads reduce slipping and fall risk. Stairs. A flight of stairs in your home can become a no-go zone for a senior dog. Some owners add a ramp or carry smaller dogs. For dogs that still want to access upstairs areas, a pet gate at the top and bottom can prevent dangerous solo attempts. Car entry. Jumping into SUVs and trucks is hard on aging dogs. A portable ramp or a harness with a handle can make a big difference. The goal is not to baby your dog. It is to remove unnecessary wear and tear so they can keep doing the things they love longer. Recovery from injury or surgery Senior dogs are more prone to soft-tissue injuries, and they recover more slowly than younger dogs. ACL tears in particular are common in older large-breed dogs, often requiring surgery and a 12-week recovery. During recovery, mobility aids are not optional. Your vet will almost certainly tell you the dog cannot jump onto furniture or navigate stairs. Stairs and ramps are the practical solution that keeps your dog comfortable without requiring you to lift them every time. What recovery actually looks like: Dog ACL Surgery Recovery: What to Expect Before, During, and After → Built for senior dogs. Our foam stairs and ramps are designed for joints that need a break from jumping. Lightweight, machine-washable covers, and sized to fit most beds and couches. Shop Mobility Products → Sleep and rest Senior dogs sleep more. Fourteen to eighteen hours a day is well within normal for many older dogs, and they often sleep deeper than they used to. This is a natural part of aging and not something to worry about on its own. What matters is the quality of their sleep and the bed they are sleeping on. As joints wear down, a flat cushion on the floor stops being enough. Pressure points develop where their hips and elbows contact the ground. Getting up from a soft, unsupportive bed becomes harder. Orthopedic beds, which use memory foam or high-density foam to distribute weight evenly, make a real difference for senior dogs. A few other sleep considerations for older dogs: Temperature regulation gets harder. Seniors can overheat more easily in summer and chill more easily in winter. Keep their sleeping area out of direct sun and away from drafts. Nighttime restlessness can signal pain or cognitive changes. If your dog starts pacing at night, waking more often, or panting at rest, it is worth a vet visit. Location matters. Some senior dogs want to be closer to their people as they age. A second bed in the bedroom often helps. Nutrition and feeding A senior dog's nutritional needs are different from an adult dog's, and getting this right has a meaningful impact on longevity and comfort. The main shifts: Fewer calories, higher-quality protein. Metabolism slows with age, so most seniors need 20-30% fewer calories than they did at their peak. But protein needs stay the same or even increase slightly, because aging bodies lose muscle mass. The answer is not less food, it is better food. Joint-supporting nutrients. Glucosamine, chondroitin, and omega-3 fatty acids (especially EPA and DHA) support joint health and reduce inflammation. Many senior formulas include these, but dedicated supplements often have higher therapeutic doses. Dental health affects eating. Dental disease is extremely common in older dogs and can make eating painful. If your dog suddenly prefers softer food, drops kibble, or eats slower than they used to, dental is the first thing to check. Hydration matters more. Seniors are more prone to kidney issues and dehydration. Fresh water should always be available, and some dogs benefit from wet food or water added to kibble. Slow feeders for anxious or cognitive eaters. Some senior dogs start eating too fast, often because of anxiety or cognitive changes. Bolting food can lead to choking, vomiting, and in worst cases bloat. A slow feeder bowl forces them to eat at a healthier pace. Exercise and mental stimulation Senior dogs still need exercise. The worst thing you can do is assume that because they are older, they should be resting all day. Muscle loss, weight gain, and cognitive decline all accelerate when activity stops. The shift is in type and intensity, not amount. Shorter, more frequent walks beat long ones. Two 15-minute walks are easier on joints than one 30-minute walk, and they give your dog more chances to sniff and explore. Low-impact options are best. Swimming, if available, is nearly perfect for senior dogs with joint issues. Sniff walks, where the dog sets the pace and direction, provide mental stimulation without physical strain. Gentle play, not fetch marathons. Mental enrichment becomes more important. As physical capacity decreases, mental work picks up the slack. Puzzle feeders, lick mats, nose work, and new routes on walks all keep their brain active. Watch for signs of overdoing it. If your dog is stiff or slow the day after activity, you went too far. Back it down and build up gradually. A rule of thumb: whatever your dog used to do easily, reduce by about 30-40% and observe. Adjust from there. Cognitive changes and behavior One of the harder aspects of aging in dogs is cognitive decline, sometimes called Canine Cognitive Dysfunction (CCD). It is the dog equivalent of dementia, and it affects a meaningful percentage of dogs over 11. Signs to watch for: Disorientation. Getting stuck in corners, staring at walls, going to the wrong side of a door. Changed sleep patterns. Sleeping more during the day, restless at night. Altered social interaction. Less interest in greeting you, or unusual clinginess. House-training lapses. Accidents after years of being reliably house-trained. Repetitive behaviors. Pacing, circling, or vocalizing for no apparent reason. CCD is not something to write off as "just getting old." It is a real medical condition, and there are medications and supplements that can slow its progression and improve quality of life. Environmental changes help too: consistent routines, nightlights for dogs that wake confused, and reducing novel stressors. If you are seeing any of these signs, bring it up at your next vet visit. The earlier CCD is addressed, the better the outcome. A deeper look at cognitive changes: Dog Dementia: Signs, Stages, and What to Expect → Vet care for senior dogs The single biggest lever you have in senior dog care is catching problems early. That means shifting from once-a-year vet visits to twice-a-year. What typically changes at senior vet visits: Comprehensive bloodwork becomes standard. Baseline values for kidney function, liver function, thyroid, and blood sugar help your vet catch trends before they become problems. A single reading is a snapshot. Multiple readings over time show the direction things are heading. More frequent dental exams. Dental disease in senior dogs is linked to heart disease, kidney disease, and reduced lifespan. It is not just about bad breath. Screening for common senior conditions. Heart disease, kidney disease, Cushing's disease, thyroid issues, and cancer are all more common in older dogs. Many are very manageable if caught early. Pain assessment. Vets are trained to spot pain signs that owners miss. A good senior exam includes gentle palpation of joints, spine, and abdomen. Conversations about quality of life. As your dog ages, your vet becomes a key partner in thinking about what a good life looks like for this specific dog, and when it is time to adjust expectations. If your current vet is not offering senior wellness panels or proactive screening, ask. Or consider finding a vet who takes senior care seriously. Comfort and quality of life The day-to-day stuff matters more than you think. Small changes to your dog's environment can meaningfully improve their comfort. Warmth. Older dogs feel cold more easily. An extra blanket, a heated bed in cold climates, or a dog sweater for walks can make a real difference. Grooming shifts. Skin gets more sensitive. Nails grow differently and can become brittle. Matting becomes a bigger problem for dogs that cannot groom themselves as well. Shorter, more frequent grooming sessions tend to work better than long ones. Accessible food and water. Bowls at a comfortable height reduce neck strain. Multiple water stations around the house mean less walking to stay hydrated. Some dogs benefit from elevated bowls, especially larger breeds. Patience with slower movement. Senior dogs do things at their own pace. Rushing them up stairs, into the car, or through a walk causes stress and increases the risk of injury. Build in extra time. Deafness and vision loss. Many senior dogs lose some hearing or vision. Hand signals, foot stomps for vibration cues, and keeping furniture in consistent places all help. Most dogs adapt remarkably well to sensory loss. The thread running through all of this: your job is to meet them where they are, not where they used to be. Recognizing when your dog is in pain Dogs evolved to hide pain. In the wild, showing weakness was dangerous. That instinct means your dog will often suffer silently until the pain is severe. Learning to spot subtle pain signs is one of the most important skills for senior dog care. Subtle signs of pain include: Panting at rest, especially in a cool environment Reluctance to be touched in certain areas Changes in posture, like a hunched back or low tail Licking a specific spot repeatedly Reduced appetite with no other explanation Restlessness at night, unable to settle Increased irritability with other pets or people Trembling that is not from cold or fear Pain in senior dogs is almost always treatable. Arthritis meds, dental work, physical therapy, and supplements all make a real difference. The hardest part is recognizing that pain is present in the first place. If your gut tells you something is off with your dog, trust that. You know their baseline better than anyone. The hardest conversations No senior dog guide is complete without acknowledging the reality that the senior years eventually end. There is no script for the end-of-life conversations you will have with your vet. But a few things are worth knowing: Quality of life matters more than length of life. A good vet will help you assess this honestly. You are not failing your dog by considering end-of-life decisions. You are advocating for them. Saying goodbye is something you do together. Most vets offer at-home euthanasia for dogs where travel is stressful. The best thing you can do in the senior years is give your dog as many good days as possible, and pay close attention so you know when the balance starts to shift. Frequently asked questions At what age is a dog considered a senior? It depends on size. Small breeds are considered seniors around 10-12, medium breeds 8-10, large breeds 6-8, and giant breeds as early as 5-7. Larger dogs age faster than smaller ones. How often should senior dogs see the vet? Twice a year is the standard recommendation for senior dogs, versus once a year for adult dogs. More frequent visits help catch age-related conditions early, when they are most treatable. What are the first signs a dog is getting old? The most common early signs are graying around the muzzle, slower response when called, more hesitation on stairs or jumps, and sleeping more than usual. These usually appear gradually. Should senior dogs eat different food? Most senior dogs benefit from food with fewer calories, high-quality protein, and joint-supporting nutrients like glucosamine and omega-3s. Your vet can recommend a specific formula based on your dog's size, health, and conditions. How much exercise does a senior dog need? Senior dogs still need daily exercise, but the type and intensity change. Shorter, more frequent walks and low-impact activities work best. Reduce what your dog used to do by about 30-40% and adjust based on how they respond. Do senior dogs really need stairs or ramps? For most senior dogs, yes. Jumping on and off furniture puts significant impact on aging joints and spine. Stairs or ramps eliminate that impact, and most dogs adapt to them quickly. They are one of the easiest mobility upgrades you can make. How do I know if my senior dog is in pain? Look for subtle signs: panting at rest, reluctance to be touched, changes in posture, licking a specific spot, reduced appetite, or nighttime restlessness. Dogs hide pain well, so trust your instinct if something feels off. Final thoughts Caring for a senior dog is not about dreading every sign of aging. It is about paying closer attention, adapting the environment to meet them where they are, and catching issues early enough to manage them well. The dogs who thrive in their senior years are the ones whose owners took the slow changes seriously. A ramp added at the right time. A switch to senior food. An extra vet visit that caught kidney disease at stage 1 instead of stage 3. A supportive bed that let arthritic joints rest properly. These are small decisions that compound into years of good quality life. Your dog spent their whole life adapting to your world. The senior years are when you return the favor.
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