English Bulldog Feeding Chart: How Much to Feed by Age & Weight
A healthy adult English Bulldog (40–50 lb) needs roughly 1,100–1,300 calories a day — about 3 to 4 cups of dry food, split into two meals. English Bulldogs gain weight easily and have an unusual body shape that hides extra pounds, so measuring portions against a calorie target — and ignoring the bag's generic 'cups per day' guidance — matters more for this breed than for most.
Growing English Bulldog puppies need more per pound, fed across 3–4 smaller meals. They mature into adult food on a slightly later timeline than typical medium breeds — around 14 months — so growth isn't rushed. The chart below gives weight-based starting points; the calculator tailors them to your dog.
Helping your English Bulldog lose weight? Work out the right amount to feed to slim down safely.
Dog Weight Loss Calculator →
Last updated 2026-05-30 · Every number links to its source.
Daily Feeding Amounts by Weight & Age
Find your dog's current weight in the chart for an estimated daily amount. Calories come from the Merck Vet Manual energy formula; cups assume a typical ~350 kcal/cup dry food, so check your bag's label for its exact kcal/cup.
⬇ Save chart as imageSee the exact numbers as a table
Puppy (under 4 months) — 4 meals/day
RER × 3.0 (Merck, high-growth window)
| Weight | Daily calories | ~ Cups/day | ~ Grams/day |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 lb | 445 kcal | 1.3 | 127 g |
| 12 lb | 748 kcal | 2.1 | 214 g |
| 18 lb | 1014 kcal | 2.9 | 290 g |
| 24 lb | 1259 kcal | 3.6 | 360 g |
Puppy (4 months to 14 months) — 3 meals/day
RER × 2.0 (Merck)
| Weight | Daily calories | ~ Cups/day | ~ Grams/day |
|---|---|---|---|
| 6 lb | 297 kcal | 0.8 | 85 g |
| 12 lb | 499 kcal | 1.4 | 143 g |
| 18 lb | 676 kcal | 1.9 | 193 g |
| 24 lb | 839 kcal | 2.4 | 240 g |
Adult — 2 meals/day
RER × 1.6 neutered (Merck; intact a little more, obesity-prone a little less)
| Weight | Daily calories | ~ Cups/day | ~ Grams/day |
|---|---|---|---|
| 40 lb | 985 kcal | 2.8 | 281 g |
| 43 lb | 1039 kcal | 3 | 297 g |
| 47 lb | 1111 kcal | 3.2 | 317 g |
| 50 lb | 1164 kcal | 3.3 | 333 g |
These are healthy-dog starting points, not a strict rule — body condition and activity vary. Confirm your dog's target with your veterinarian. For your exact dog, use the calculator below.
Is my puppy a healthy weight for its age?
Rather than one “correct” weight, vets track puppies against evidence-based growth standards that run from 12 weeks to 2 years.
Those standards are grouped by a dog's adult body size (up to 40 kg), not by individual breed.
We don't publish a per-age “your puppy should weigh X” figure — that belongs on a vet's growth chart, weighed over time. What we give you instead is the daily caloriesfor your dog's actual weight today (the chart above and the calculator below), every number cited.
Adjust this plan for your own dog
The plan below is for a typical English Bulldog. Change the details to match yours.
The plan for a typical English Bulldog
🐕 Here's the plan for your English Bulldog
Healthy puppy (4 months+) · 4 months old · 30 lb
992 cal/day · ~2.8 cups · 3 meals/day
🍽 HOW MUCH YOUR ENGLISH BULLDOG PUPPY SHOULD EAT
Your little one is growing fast — and that takes fuel. About 992 calories a day will keep your english bulldog on a healthy track.
Puppies have small stomachs and growing bodies that want food often. As your dog grows, you'll feed less often:
- • 6 to 12 weeks: 4 meals a day
- • 3 to 6 months: 3 meals a day ← your puppy now
- • 6 to 12 months: 2 meals a day
- • After age 1: 2 meals a day
Just look up your puppy's age in months and pick the row that matches.
💧 Water~30 oz/day▼
A good rule of thumb: a weaned puppy needs about ½ to 1 ounce of water per pound of body weight each day. The numbers below use the higher end as a safe target — most dogs settle in somewhere in this range.
Keep the bowl filled with fresh water.
🍬 Treatsup to 99 cal/day▼
Treats are great for training and bonding — but they should be the bonus, not the main course.
- • 90% of daily calories from real dog food
- • 10% from treats, chews, table scraps — anything extra
🛒 How to choose dog food▼
Walking into the pet store can be overwhelming. But you only need to check the back or side of the dog food bag for these things:
- ☐ The bag has an AAFCO Nutritional Adequacy Statement that mentions “growth”Look for a full sentence on the back or side of the bag containing both “AAFCO” and “growth”. Typical wording is one of two formats:
- “[Brand] is formulated to meet the nutritional levels established by the AAFCO Dog Food Nutrient Profiles for growth.”
- “Animal feeding tests using AAFCO procedures substantiate that [Brand] provides complete and balanced nutrition for growth.”
- ☐ “Calories per cup” is printed on the bagUsually in the feeding guide section. You need this number to know exactly how much to scoop for your dog.
🚫 FOODS TO KEEP AWAY FROM YOUR ENGLISH BULLDOG
Some everyday human foods are dangerous — even tiny amounts can cause serious harm. Keep these well out of reach:
Never feed: chocolate, xylitol (sugar-free gum / candy / some peanut butters), grapes, raisins, onions, garlic, macadamia nuts, alcohol, caffeine, avocado.
⚠️ Xylitolis a sweetener that's safe for humans but can be deadly to dogs. If your dog ingests anything containing xylitol, call your vet right away.
- Free-feeding (leaving food out all day). It sounds convenient but makes portion control and weight monitoring much harder.
- Switching food suddenly. Transition over 7-10 days — mix the new food with the old in growing proportions to avoid an upset stomach.
- Switching to adult food too early. Puppy formulas are higher in protein than adult formulas — tuned for the demands of growth. When to actually switch? Small breeds (under 20 lb) at 8-12 months; medium breeds (20-50 lb) around 12 months; large breeds (50+ lb) at 12-15 months; giant breeds at 18-24 months.
💡 About English Bulldogs▼
These aren't about feeding amounts or food choices — they're the breed-background facts every English Bulldog owner is better off knowing.
- •AKC specifically calls out English Bulldogs (along with Pugs) as exceptions when applying the standard body-condition test — their build hides extra weight, so the usual rib-and-waist check is less reliable. The practical implication: measure portions to a calorie target rather than eyeballing condition.
📚 WHERE WE GOT ALL THIS
Every number and recommendation above comes from one of these sources. Tap any (▼) citation throughout the page to see the original wording. Full source documents are linked below.
- MERCK — Merck Veterinary Manual ↗The Merck Veterinary Manual (published as MSD Veterinary Manual outside the U.S. and Canada) is a free, comprehensive veterinary reference used by veterinarians, students, and pet owners worldwide. Its nutrition chapters are authored by named board-certified veterinary nutritionists.
- AAFCO — Association of American Feed Control Officials ↗AAFCO is a non-profit organization of U.S. state and federal feed-control officials that develops model regulations and nutrient profiles for pet food. Every dog food sold in the U.S. must meet AAFCO's standards to be marketed as 'complete and balanced'.
- AKC — American Kennel Club ↗The AKC is the largest U.S. registry of purebred dogs and a widely-cited authority on general dog care, breed information, and owner education. Its Chief Veterinary Officer and expert advice column publish nutrition guidance for everyday dog owners.
- FDA — U.S. Food and Drug Administration ↗The FDA is the U.S. federal agency that regulates food and drug safety, including pet food. Its Center for Veterinary Medicine publishes safety alerts about ingredients and household items toxic to pets.
- PMC — PubMed Central (NIH) ↗PubMed Central is a free archive of peer-reviewed biomedical and life-sciences research curated by the U.S. National Library of Medicine (NIH). Papers cited here are open-access primary sources.
Last verified: 2026-05-23
❤️ A friendly reminder: this is general guidance, not a custom plan for your dog.
The plan above reflects what the Merck Veterinary Manual, AAFCO, AKC, and the FDA publish for dogs matching your English Bulldog's breed, age, weight, and life stage. But every dog is different — habits, digestion, and individual quirks aren't in our data.
If something seems off, or you just want a second opinion, your vet is the right call. We've put together some talking points below to make that conversation easier ↓
🩺 QUESTIONS TO BRING TO YOUR VET
Save or print this list and bring it to your next visit.
- ❓ “What body condition score is my English Bulldog at now, and what's the ideal?”Why ask: The 1-9 body condition score is the standard vets use to tell if your dog is at a healthy weight.
- ❓ “When should we transition from puppy to adult food?”Why ask: Most small/medium breeds transition at 9-12 months — your vet can confirm based on your dog's growth.
- ❓ “Are there breed-specific screenings or watches for English Bulldogs at this age?”Why ask: English Bulldogs have known breed traits worth monitoring — your vet may suggest preventive screening based on age and lineage.
English Bulldog feeding — common questions
- How much should I feed an adult English Bulldog?
- A healthy adult English Bulldog (about 40–50 lb) needs roughly 1,100–1,300 calories a day — about 3 to 4 cups of dry food, split into two meals. The exact cups depend on your food's kcal per cup (check the bag); see the adult row matching your dog's weight.
- How many times a day should an English Bulldog eat?
- Two measured meals a day works for most adult English Bulldogs — not one large bowl, and not free-feeding. Bulldogs eat quickly, so a slow-feeder bowl or food puzzle can help. Growing puppies eat 3–4 smaller meals.
- How much should I feed an English Bulldog puppy?
- An English Bulldog puppy under 4 months is fed about 3× its resting energy needs across 3–4 small meals a day; from 4 months it steps down toward 2× across 3 meals. Find your puppy's current weight in the puppy rows of the chart above for an estimated daily amount.
- When should an English Bulldog switch from puppy to adult food?
- Around 14 months — slightly later than smaller medium breeds, because English Bulldogs finish growing on a slower pace. Your vet can confirm timing based on your dog's actual growth.
- How do I know if my English Bulldog is overweight?
- The usual rib-feel test doesn't work as cleanly for this breed — the body shape hides extra weight. Use your hands to feel for ribs without pressing hard, look for a waist-tuck behind the ribcage from above, and check whether your dog is moving easily. If you can't feel ribs at all or movement is laboured, scale portions back and confirm a target weight with your vet.
- Why is portion control extra important for English Bulldogs?
- English Bulldogs are one of the breeds AKC specifically calls out as exceptions when assessing body condition — their build hides extra weight. Combined with a food-motivated temperament, that makes portion control via a calorie target (not free-pouring) the practical lever for keeping a Bulldog healthy.
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