Lean fresh recipe
120 kcal / 100g
- Puppy
- 1135 g/day
- Adult
- 680 g/day
- Senior
- 565 g/day
For a 50 pound dog, start with these daily calorie estimates and rough homemade food portions. Then adjust based on body condition, activity, and how calorie-dense the recipe actually is.
Use the same calorie logic the app uses for puppy, adult, and senior planning. It is built for a fast starting number, not a final prescription.
Estimated maintenance calories
816kcal/day
Best quick estimate for maintenance feeding. Typical day-to-day activity for maintenance planning. This public calculator estimates maintenance calories, not weight-loss or weight-gain targets.
The chart gives you a starting number. These are the factors most likely to move the real portion up or down once the recipe is in the bowl.
For mid-sized dogs, a recipe that looks close on paper can drift over the week if portions are inconsistent. Consistent prep, weighing meals, and knowing your recipe density matter more than eyeballing the bowl.
Calories are the target. Food weight changes with recipe density. These examples show roughly how much a 50 lb dog might eat per day if the recipe lands in one of three common calorie ranges.
120 kcal / 100g
160 kcal / 100g
200 kcal / 100g
If you are feeding an adult 50 lb dog two or three meals per day, this gives you a more practical portioning starting point. Puppies and seniors still need their own daily totals above.
A weight-based guide is useful for getting oriented, but it stops being enough when the feeding goal or the dog’s situation gets more specific.
As a quick starting point, a 50 lb dog needs about 816 calories per day as an adult, around 1361 calories as a growing puppy, and about 680 calories as a senior. That number still needs to be adjusted if your dog is unusually active, underweight, overweight, or eating a therapeutic diet.
That depends on recipe density. A 50 lb adult dog eating a homemade recipe that lands around 160 kcal per 100g would need about 510 grams per day. If the recipe is leaner, the daily food weight goes up. If it is richer, the daily food weight goes down.
Start with a consistent portion so you can actually judge the result. Then adjust based on weekly weight trend, body condition, stool quality, and energy. What matters is feeding the amount that helps your dog stay at a healthy weight and body condition, not sticking to the chart after it stops matching the dog in front of you.
If your 50 lb dog is trying to lose or gain weight, a maintenance estimate is only a starting point. If your dog is a puppy, senior, very active working dog, or recovering from illness, the real target may move faster than a basic chart suggests. If you are feeding a therapeutic or highly customized diet, verify the full recipe and portion plan more closely.
Once you have the calorie range, use the full recipe builder to check ingredient calories, compare against AAFCO targets, and portion meals more precisely.
30 lb dog
Adult estimate: 490 kcal/day
See guide40 lb dog
Adult estimate: 653 kcal/day
See guide60 lb dog
Adult estimate: 980 kcal/day
See guide80 lb dog
Adult estimate: 1,306 kcal/day
See guide