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How Much to Feed a Puppy: Chart by Age and Weight (2026)

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"How much should I feed my puppy?" is one of the first questions every new owner asks โ€” and one of the easiest to get slightly wrong. Feed too little and a fast-growing puppy misses the fuel they need; feed too much and you set them up for excess weight and, in large breeds, joint problems. The honest answer is that the right amount depends on several things at once, and no single number fits every puppy.

Below is a plain-English explanation of what actually drives the amount, a simple starting-point chart by expected adult size and age, how many meals to serve, and a quick body-condition check so you can tell whether you've got it right. One rule runs through all of it: the feeding chart printed on your puppy's food bag and your veterinarian's advice are the authoritative sources โ€” everything here is a general guide to get you in the right ballpark.

What actually determines how much to feed

There is no universal "cups per day" number because the right amount is a product of four variables that differ from puppy to puppy:

Because of that last point, treat every chart โ€” including ours โ€” as a place to start, then adjust based on how your puppy's body looks and feels, and what your vet recommends at each checkup.

Puppy feeding-amount guidance chart (starting points)

The table below gives typical total daily ranges in cups of dry puppy food, split by your puppy's expected adult weight and their age band. These are general starting points based on average-calorie-density kibble (roughly 350โ€“400 kcal per cup). Your specific bag's chart may differ โ€” follow it, and your vet, over this table. Divide the daily amount across that age's meals (see the next section).

Expected adult size 6โ€“12 weeks 3โ€“4 months 5โ€“7 months 8โ€“12 months
Toy (up to ~12 lb) ½โ€“1 cup/day ½โ€“1 cup/day ½โ€“1 cup/day ⅓โ€“¾ cup/day
Small (~13โ€“25 lb) 1โ€“1½ cups/day 1โ€“1¾ cups/day 1โ€“2 cups/day 1โ€“1½ cups/day
Medium (~26โ€“50 lb) 1½โ€“2½ cups/day 2โ€“3 cups/day 2½โ€“3½ cups/day 2โ€“3½ cups/day
Large (~51โ€“90 lb) 2โ€“3 cups/day 3โ€“4½ cups/day 4โ€“6 cups/day 3½โ€“6 cups/day

Ranges are general guidance only, not a prescription. Always cross-check against the feeding chart on your food's packaging and your veterinarian's advice. Giant breeds (over ~90 lb adult) grow slowly over 18โ€“24 months and should follow a large-breed puppy formula with your vet's guidance to protect developing joints.

How many meals per day, by age

Younger puppies have small stomachs and steep energy needs, so their daily food is split across more meals. A common, vet-supported pattern is:

Whatever the number of meals, keep the times consistent โ€” a predictable routine steadies digestion and makes potty training far easier. We lay out sample times in our new puppy feeding schedule.

The body-condition check: the number that matters most

Charts get you started, but your puppy's body is the real feedback. Rather than fixating on cups, do a quick weekly hands-on check:

If ribs are hard to feel and the waist has disappeared, ease back a little; if ribs, spine, and hips are prominent, increase gradually. Adjust in small steps and re-check over a week or two rather than making big swings. When in doubt, ask your vet to score your puppy's body condition at their next visit.

Handy to have

A digital kitchen or pet scale

Measuring cups are convenient but notoriously inaccurate โ€” studies of pet owners have found scooping can be off by a wide margin, which quietly adds up over weeks. Weighing your puppy's daily portion in grams (using the gram figure on the bag's chart) is the single easiest way to feed consistently and avoid accidental overfeeding. Any inexpensive digital scale works.

Type: Digital gram scale ยท Best for: Portioning kibble accurately and consistently

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When to switch from puppy food to adult food

Puppies need a food formulated for growth until they're close to their adult size. As a rough guide, small and medium breeds usually make the switch around 12 months, while large and giant breeds may stay on a large-breed puppy formula until 18โ€“24 months so they grow at a controlled rate that protects their joints. Your vet can pin down the right timing for your dog, and when you do switch, do it gradually (see the safe-transition method in our feeding schedule guide). For choosing the food itself, see our best puppy food guide.

Common overfeeding mistakes to avoid

The bottom line

Start from your food bag's chart for your puppy's expected adult size and age, split the daily amount across the right number of meals, then let your puppy's body condition fine-tune it. Use our table as a sanity check, weigh portions when you can, and let your veterinarian make the call on anything specific to your dog. Lean and consistent beats generous and guessed, every time.

Frequently asked questions

How much should I feed my puppy by weight?

Portions are best estimated from your puppy's expected adult weight and their age, not just their current weight, because two puppies of the same weight today can grow into very different sizes. Use the chart on your food's bag as the primary source, use our table above as a starting-point cross-check, then adjust based on body condition and your vet's advice.

How many times a day should a puppy eat?

A common vet-supported pattern is four meals a day from about 6โ€“12 weeks, three meals from 3โ€“6 months, and two meals from 6โ€“12 months. Keep the meal times consistent, which helps digestion and makes potty training easier.

Is it better to measure puppy food by cups or grams?

Grams. Measuring cups are convenient but easy to scoop inaccurately, and small errors add up over weeks. Weighing the daily portion in grams โ€” using the gram figure on your food's chart โ€” is the most reliable way to feed consistently and avoid accidental overfeeding.

How do I know if I'm overfeeding my puppy?

Do a weekly body-condition check: you should be able to feel the ribs easily under a light layer, see a waist from above, and see the belly tuck up from the side. If the ribs are hard to feel and the waist has disappeared, ease the amount down gradually and re-check. Your vet can score body condition at each visit.

When should I switch my puppy to adult food?

Roughly around 12 months for small and medium breeds, and up to 18โ€“24 months for large and giant breeds, which benefit from a controlled-growth large-breed puppy formula. Confirm the timing with your vet, and transition gradually over 7โ€“10 days to avoid stomach upset.

โš•๏ธ A note on advice: This article is general guidance to help you make informed decisions โ€” it is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice. Always consult your vet about your dog's individual health and needs.

Trusted resources for further reading

We recommend these respected organizations for authoritative, vet-reviewed information: American Kennel Club (AKC), ASPCA, and the American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).

Adrian Furletti โ€” Founder & Editor, PawSmart

Adrian is a lifelong dog owner who founded PawSmart to give new owners clear, research-backed answers instead of thin, sell-first โ€œreviews.โ€ Every guide is researched against manufacturer specs, safety standards and veterinary and kennel-club sources (AKC, ASPCA, AVMA), and is reviewed and updated as products and advice change. Spotted something that needs a correction? Tell us โ€” we fix it.