Labrador Retriever
Labrador Retriever weight by age
Broad planning estimates derived from adult breed weights; individual dogs vary by build, sex and neuter status
Age
8 weeks
Planning estimate
3.5-5.9 kg
Bring-home baseline; compare weekly, not daily.
Age
3 months
Planning estimate
6.5-9.4 kg
Growth should be visible but ribs should still be easy to feel.
Age
6 months
Planning estimate
14-19 kg
Many puppies look lanky here. Avoid overfeeding to make them fill out.
Age
12 months
Planning estimate
24-30 kg
Small breeds may be adult; large breeds may still be maturing.
Age
Adult
Planning estimate
27-32 kg
Use body condition score with your vet, not weight alone.
These are not diagnostic ranges. Woofio will replace them with owner-reported averages once enough dogs are tracked by age, sex and body condition.
Check your dog's weight
Planning estimate only — not diagnostic. Confirm with your vet.
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Feeding guide for Labrador Retriever
General feeding rhythm by size; use your food label and vet advice for exact portions
Puppy meals
3 measured meals/day
Adult meals
2 meals/day
Best practice
Use large-breed puppy food if your vet agrees
First 30 days with a Labrador Retriever puppy
The early routine that prevents most avoidable stress
Book the first vet visit
Take vaccination history, microchip details, food label, and any breeder or rescue paperwork.
Choose one food and transition slowly
Keep the puppy on the same food for the first few days, then transition over 5-7 days if changing.
Start toilet and crate routines
Use short, predictable routines after sleep, meals, play, and before bedtime.
Handle paws, ears and mouth daily
Gentle handling now makes grooming, nail trims and vet checks much easier later.
Vaccination timeline
Core and non-core timing can vary by country, product and vet protocol
Core combination. Puppy series commonly starts from 8 weeks, then adult boosters follow local veterinary guidance.
Required by law in many countries. Follow your local vet and legal schedule.
Often recommended where dogs have water, wildlife, livestock or urban rat exposure.
Often required for boarding, daycare, grooming salons or high-contact dog settings.
Parasite prevention
Flea, tick, worm, and heartworm schedule
Heartworm prevention is region-specific. Use year-round prevention in endemic areas.
Puppy worming is commonly done every 2 weeks from 2 to 12 weeks, then reduced under vet guidance.
Adult worming is commonly scheduled every 3 months, with risk varying by lifestyle, diet and stool testing.
Flea and tick prevention is commonly monthly, but product duration and local parasite risk vary.
Treatment calendar (indicative)
Green = treatment month. Always follow your vet's specific product instructions.
Health checks to discuss
Screening reminders to confirm with your vet for Labrador Retriever dogs
Use this as a reminder to discuss screening timing with your vet.
Use this as a reminder to discuss screening timing with your vet.
Use this as a reminder to discuss screening timing with your vet.
Grooming guide
Short double coat coat · Brush 2-3 times per week as a starting point
Common tools to discuss
Routine starting points
Exercise & mental stimulation
high energy · 90-120 min/day
Daily exercise estimate
90-120 min/day
Long walks, running, swimming, or structured active play
Mental enrichment
Adjust exercise for age, heat, breathing, joint health and your vet's advice. Puppies need shorter sessions than adults.
Health risks to discuss
Conditions listed as more common in Labrador Retriever dogs; ask your vet what matters for your dog
This list represents conditions with elevated prevalence in this breed. It does not mean your dog will develop them. Early screening and regular vet checks significantly reduce risk.
When to call a vet
Do not wait for community answers when symptoms are urgent
Common Labrador Retriever owner questions
Short answers for the questions new owners search most often
How much should a Labrador Retriever weigh?
Labrador Retriever weight depends on sex, frame and body condition. The age table is a planning estimate derived from adult breed weights, so confirm with your vet if your dog is gaining or losing quickly.
How often should I groom a Labrador Retriever?
Labrador Retriever grooming is usually medium. Brush more often during shedding, after muddy walks, or if you notice mats forming.
What should new Labrador Retriever puppy owners do first?
Book a first vet visit, confirm vaccine history, keep food consistent for the first few days, and start a calm toilet, sleep and handling routine.
Owner reports and vet answers
Coming next: community data that improves this page over time
Weight by age, food amount, activity level, grooming frequency and common owner concerns, filtered by sex and age once enough reports exist.
Sources and review
Woofio separates official guidance, breed-specific screening references and future owner-reported averages.
WSAVA vaccination guidelines
Global small-animal veterinary guidance used for core and non-core vaccine framing.
OFA / CHIC breed screening
Breed-specific health screening protocols developed with parent breed clubs.
Royal Kennel Club health testing
UK health testing, screening schemes and breed health resources.
ESCCAP parasite guidelines
European parasite guidance for companion animals.
CAPC parasite guidelines
US companion animal parasite guidance and regional parasite risk resources.
Track all of this for your dog
The Woofio app puts your dog's entire health calendar on your phone — vaccine reminders, weight tracking, vet & groomer bookings, and more.
Something not right about Labrador Retriever?
Our breed profiles use the available breed data we have today and will improve as owners submit real-world reports. If you spot something inaccurate or missing, tell us so we can tighten the plan for every Labrador Retriever owner.