How Much to Feed a Labrador Retriever
Daily food for an adult Labrador Retriever depends on weight, spay/neuter status, and the calories in your specific food. The table below runs the veterinary energy formulas across this breed's AKC weight range.
| Adult weight | Spayed/neutered | Intact |
|---|---|---|
| 55 lb | 1,250 kcal · 3.375 cups | 1,407 kcal · 3.75 cups |
| 68 lb | 1,466 kcal · 3.875 cups | 1,649 kcal · 4.375 cups |
| 80 lb | 1,656 kcal · 4.375 cups | 1,863 kcal · 5 cups |
Daily totals from the veterinary RER × MER method, assuming 375 kcal/cup dry food (a mid-range default — your bag will differ; check its calorie statement). Cups shown split across the day.
Get portions for your dog's exact weight and food
Feeding a large-class dog
A large dog needs more food than a small dog, but not in direct proportion to weight. Veterinary nutrition scales resting energy by body weight raised to a fractional power, so calorie needs rise more slowly than pounds as a dog gets bigger. That resting number then gets multiplied for daily life. A large-breed puppy under 4 months old needs about three times resting energy for fast bone and muscle growth. From 4 to 12 months, the multiplier drops to about two times resting energy, still above adult needs.
Because the formula gives calories, not cups, the kcal-per-cup number on the bag matters more than a generic chart. Dry foods commonly range from about 330 to 420 kcal per cup, and two bags with the same scoop size can deliver very different energy amounts. Check the calorie content statement before measuring. Judge portions by body condition rather than bowl fullness: ribs should feel easy to find under a slight fat covering, with a waist visible from above. Adjust the daily amount to match that assessment.
Puppies eat differently
A Labrador Retriever puppy needs far more energy per pound than an adult — published multipliers run 3.0× resting energy under 4 months and 2.0× from 4 to 12 months, against 1.6× for a typical neutered adult. Use the food calculator with the puppy life stage selected, and read our puppy feeding guide for the full picture.
Common questions
How many cups a day for a Labrador Retriever?
At a mid-range adult weight, the table above shows the daily total at a typical dry-food calorie density. The honest answer depends on your bag's kcal/cup — two foods can differ by 25% or more.
My dog is gaining weight on these amounts. Now what?
Published tables put easy gainers at a lower multiplier (1.2–1.4× resting energy). Step down gradually, use body condition checks, and involve your vet.
Starting points, not prescriptions, and not veterinary advice. Formulas and sources: methodology.