
Trazodone Dosage for Dogs, By Weight
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Same product/legal note as meloxicam — loop in your vet board.
Trazodone Dosage for Dogs, By Weight
Trazodone is commonly prescribed for situational anxiety (vet visits, thunderstorms, travel) and for calming dogs during post-surgical recovery, and dosing is notably wider-ranged than many other veterinary medications — commonly cited situational dosing falls in the 2.5-3.5 mg/kg range for occasional use, while ongoing use for chronic anxiety may follow a different, often more conservative protocol determined by your vet. Unlike an antibiotic with a fairly fixed dose, trazodone dosing is frequently titrated based on individual response, which is why "the" dose varies so much between dogs of the same weight. This is a prescription-only medication in the US — this page explains what your vet is calculating, it doesn't replace their specific prescription.
How to use this calculator
Enter your dog's weight and whether this is a one-off situational dose (vet visit, thunderstorm, travel) or part of an ongoing management plan — situational dosing runs notably higher than typical chronic-use protocols.
Reference dosing by weight
| Dog weight | Situational (2.5–3.5 mg/kg, one-time) | Ongoing use (starting point, vet-titrated) |
|---|---|---|
| 10 lb (4.5 kg) | 11–16 mg | Lower, individualized |
| 20 lb (9 kg) | 22–32 mg | Lower, individualized |
| 40 lb (18 kg) | 45–63 mg | Lower, individualized |
| 60 lb (27 kg) | 68–95 mg | Lower, individualized |
| 80 lb (36 kg) | 90–126 mg | Lower, individualized |
| 100 lb (45 kg) | 113–158 mg | Lower, individualized |
Trazodone tablets commonly come in 50 mg and 100 mg strengths (scored for splitting), so a real prescription typically rounds to the nearest half-tablet rather than an exact calculated figure.
Understanding your results
Unlike a fixed-ratio medication, trazodone is frequently titrated: many vets start at the lower end of the situational range and increase on a follow-up occasion if the response was too mild, since individual sensitivity varies more with this drug than with something like an antihistamine. If it's being used for a specific event, give it early enough that it's active by the time the event starts — commonly 1–2 hours ahead, though your vet's instructions for your dog's specific prescription take priority over this general window.
A trial run before the real event helps. Because individual response varies so much, many vets recommend a "test dose" a few days before a known stressful event (a move, a fireworks holiday, a grooming appointment) rather than trying trazodone for the first time on the day it matters most — this reveals how sedated your dog actually gets at that dose with time to adjust if needed.
Combination protocols are common, not a red flag. Trazodone is frequently prescribed alongside other behavioral medications (like gabapentin, for a combined calming effect around vet visits) — if your dog's prescription includes more than one medication for the same event, that's a standard combination protocol, not a sign of an unusually severe case.
Planning around a known stressful event
Because trazodone is so frequently used situationally rather than daily, planning around a known trigger date — a move, a fireworks holiday, a grooming appointment for a dog that finds it stressful — is where most owners actually interact with this medication, and a little advance planning improves the outcome considerably. Beyond the test-dose recommendation already covered, think through the full timeline of the event itself: if it's a multi-hour situation (a long car ride, an all-day fireworks display), ask your vet whether a single dose is expected to last the full duration or whether a follow-up dose partway through is part of the plan, since assuming one dose covers everything can leave your dog unprotected during the tail end of a stressful event. For dogs with veterinary-visit anxiety specifically, some vets recommend giving the dose at home before departure rather than in the clinic waiting room, since the goal is for the medication to already be taking effect by the time your dog encounters the more triggering parts of the visit.
What a follow-up conversation with your vet should cover
If trazodone becomes a recurring part of managing a specific situation (frequent vet visits, seasonal fireworks, ongoing recovery from a repeat injury), it's worth having an explicit follow-up conversation with your vet rather than just reusing the same dose indefinitely without reassessment. Ask specifically whether the dose that worked well the first few times is still appropriate as circumstances change — a dog's weight, overall health status, and even the specific situation's intensity can shift what's appropriate over time. If you've noticed the effect seeming weaker with repeated situational use, mention this directly rather than independently increasing the dose, since your vet may want to explore whether a different medication or a combination approach fits better than simply scaling up trazodone. This kind of periodic check-in is what keeps a situational-use protocol safe and effective over months or years of recurring need, rather than treating an initial prescription as a permanent, unreviewed default.
When to consult a professional
For health, dosage, or nutrition decisions, always confirm calculator output with your veterinarian. This tool provides reference estimates, not medical advice.
Questions about this calculator
The math, openly documented.
Inputs
Weight, use case, and product strength where relevant.
weight · tablet_mg · use
Formula
Published veterinary reference dosing math.
dose = f(weight_kg)
Output
Reference range with safety notes.
mg · tablets · frequency
Disclaimer
Not a prescription — vet confirmation required.
reference only
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