Thyroid Hormone · Hypothyroidism

Levothyroxine Dog Dosage Calculator

Calculate the correct Levothyroxine (T4) dose for your hypothyroid dog.

Dosage Calculator

Enter your dog's weight to calculate the recommended dose.

Calculated Dose

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Per dose in mcg
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Check T4 levels 4–6 hrs post-pill at 4–8 weeks.

Enter your dog's weight above

⚕️ Levothyroxine dosing must be individualised and monitored with regular T4 blood testing. This calculator provides a starting reference only. All thyroid treatment must be overseen by a veterinarian.

Levothyroxine sodium (L-T4) is the standard treatment for canine hypothyroidism, a condition where the thyroid gland produces insufficient thyroid hormone. It is sold under brand names including Thyforon, Soloxine, and Forthyron (canine-specific formulations are preferred over human products).

Starting Dose

The recommended starting dose is 0.02 mg/kg (20 mcg/kg) given twice daily, or 0.04 mg/kg once daily. Twice-daily dosing generally produces more consistent thyroid levels and is preferred. Maximum starting dose is typically 0.8 mg/day regardless of body weight.

Monitoring & Adjustment

Serum total T4 levels should be measured 4–6 hours post-pill at 4–8 weeks after starting or changing dose. Target post-pill T4 is in the upper half of the reference range. Dose adjustments are made in 10–25% increments based on results.

Available Tablet Strengths

Canine levothyroxine tablets are available in 0.1 mg, 0.2 mg, 0.3 mg, 0.4 mg, 0.5 mg, 0.6 mg, 0.7 mg, and 0.8 mg strengths. Use veterinary formulations where possible as bioavailability can differ from human products.

🦋 Thyroid Hormone Replacement

Levothyroxine Dog Dosage Calculator

Precise levothyroxine (Soloxine, Thyro-Tabs, Thyroxine-L) dosing for dogs with hypothyroidism — covering starting dose, twice-daily vs once-daily protocols, tablet selection across all strengths, and TT4 monitoring targets with dose adjustment guidance.

ℹ️

Lifelong daily therapy — consistent timing is critical. Give levothyroxine at the same time each day, 30–60 min before the first meal for best absorption. TT4 monitoring should be performed 4–6 hours post-pill (peak) at 4–8 weeks after starting or any dose change. Bioavailability varies significantly between branded and generic formulations — do not switch brands without rechecking TT4.

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About Levothyroxine Sodium (Soloxine / Thyro-Tabs / Forthyron)

Drug Class

Synthetic Thyroid Hormone — T4 Replacement Therapy

Mechanism of Action

Levothyroxine (T4) is the synthetic form of the primary thyroid hormone thyroxine. It is converted peripherally to the more biologically active triiodothyronine (T3) by deiodinase enzymes. Thyroid hormones regulate metabolism, thermogenesis, protein synthesis, cardiovascular function, and neurological development.

Primary Uses in Dogs

Hypothyroidism (primary — most common endocrine disorder in dogs after diabetes mellitus). Signs include weight gain, lethargy, cold intolerance, poor coat quality, hyperlipidaemia, and bradycardia. Lifetime therapy required in virtually all cases.

Dosing Quick Reference

Indication Dose Frequency
Standard starting dose 0.02 mg/kg (20 mcg/kg) q12h PO
Once-daily option (some dogs) 0.02 mg/kg q24h PO — less consistent
Giant breeds (dose cap) Max 0.8 mg/dose q12h

Common Side Effects

  • Signs of overdose: panting, excessive thirst/urination, weight loss, tachycardia, hypertension
  • GI upset at high doses
  • Behavioural changes (hyperactivity, anxiety) with excessive dosing
  • Cardiac arrhythmias if overdosed in dogs with underlying heart disease

Monitoring

Post-pill T4 at 4–6h post-dose at weeks 4–8, then every 6 months once stable. Fasting lipid panel (cholesterol, triglycerides) as part of monitoring — hyperlipidaemia should normalise with adequate supplementation. ECG if cardiac signs develop.

⚠️ Monitor post-pill T4 (TT4) 4–6 hours after the morning dose at the 4–8 week recheck — target 25–45 nmol/L (2–3.5 mcg/dL). Generic preparations may not be bioequivalent to branded products — stick with one formulation once stabilised. Calcium, aluminium, and iron supplements reduce absorption — administer levothyroxine separately from these.

What Is Levothyroxine for Dogs?

Hypothyroidism is the most common endocrine disorder in dogs, resulting from immune-mediated destruction (lymphocytic thyroiditis) or idiopathic follicular atrophy of the thyroid gland in ~95% of cases. Treatment involves lifelong supplementation with synthetic levothyroxine (L-thyroxine, T4), which is converted peripherally to the biologically active T3 (triiodothyronine) by tissue deiodinases throughout the body.

Canine levothyroxine products include Soloxine, Thyro-Tabs (Vet), Thyroxine-L, and human generics. Dogs require significantly higher doses per kg than humans due to faster metabolism and greater GI absorption variability. Capsules/tablets are available from 0.1 mg (100 mcg) to 0.8 mg (800 mcg).

Key Pharmacokinetics in Dogs

  • Oral bioavailability: 10–50% (highly variable; food reduces absorption by ~20–40%)
  • Peak plasma (Tmax): 4–6 hours post-dose (fasted) — optimal monitoring window
  • Half-life (dogs): ~10–16 hours — shorter than in humans (7 days); requires twice-daily dosing ideally
  • Steady-state: Reached in 2–3 weeks; monitor TT4 after 4–8 weeks
  • Monitoring target (post-pill TT4): 2.5–4.5 mcg/dL (32–58 nmol/L) at 4–6 hours post-dose

Starting Dose Protocols

  • Standard starting dose: 22 mcg/kg PO q12h (0.022 mg/kg)
  • Conservative start (cardiac, elderly, small breeds): 10–15 mcg/kg q12h
  • Once-daily dosing (q24h): 44 mcg/kg — acceptable in some stable patients; twice-daily preferred for reliability
  • Maximum initial dose: 0.8 mg (800 mcg) total per dose regardless of weight in very large dogs

How to Use This Calculator

  1. Enter your dog’s body weight — use lean body weight if obese (hypothyroid dogs are often overweight)
  2. Select starting strategy: standard, conservative, or adjusted based on TT4 result
  3. Select the dosing frequency (q12h is preferred; q24h acceptable for compliant patients)
  4. If adjusting after TT4 result, enter the measured TT4 value and unit
  5. Select your available tablet strength
  6. Click Calculate for dose per administration, tablet count, and monitoring timing

🧮 Levothyroxine Dose Calculator

Use lean body weight — hypothyroid dogs are often obese
Measured 4–6 hrs post-dose. Leave blank if starting.

Levothyroxine Dosing Result

TT4 Monitoring & Dose Adjustment Reference

Post-pill TT4 (4–6 hrs) nmol/L Interpretation Action
<1.5 mcg/dL <19 nmol/L Under-replacement Increase dose 25–50%; recheck in 4–6 weeks
1.5–2.5 mcg/dL 19–32 nmol/L Low-normal — may be adequate if signs resolved Consider 10–20% dose increase; assess clinical signs
2.5–4.5 mcg/dL ✓ 32–58 nmol/L Target range Maintain dose; recheck every 6 months
4.5–6.0 mcg/dL 58–77 nmol/L Mildly elevated Reduce dose 10–20%; recheck in 6 weeks
>6.0 mcg/dL >77 nmol/L Potentially over-replaced Reduce dose 20–30%; assess for hyperthyroid signs; recheck 4 weeks

Frequently Asked Questions

Dogs metabolise levothyroxine much faster than humans. The elimination half-life in dogs is only 10–16 hours (versus ~7 days in humans), meaning dogs clear the drug much more rapidly and require higher doses per kg given twice daily. Additionally, GI absorption of levothyroxine in dogs is more variable (10–50%) and lower than in humans (~80%). The combination of faster elimination and lower/more variable absorption means dogs require 20–44 mcg/kg/day versus the human equivalent of approximately 1.6 mcg/kg/day.

For the most useful TT4 monitoring result, blood should be collected 4–6 hours after the morning levothyroxine dose. This coincides with peak plasma concentrations. Your dog should receive its normal morning dose with a small amount of food (or fasted if that’s the normal routine), then come to the clinic 4–6 hours later. A peak TT4 of 2.5–4.5 mcg/dL at this time indicates appropriate replacement. Pre-pill TT4 (trough) can also be measured — target >1.0 mcg/dL — but peak monitoring is preferred for initial dose titration.

Yes — human levothyroxine (Synthroid, Levoxyl, Euthyrox, generic) is the same active ingredient and can be used in dogs. However, bioavailability can differ between brands and between human and veterinary formulations. If you switch from Soloxine/Thyro-Tabs to a human generic or vice versa, always recheck TT4 levels 4–8 weeks after switching as your dog may need a dose adjustment. Human tablets often come in a wider range of strengths (25, 50, 75, 88, 100, 112, 125, 137, 150, 175, 200 mcg) which can be useful for fine-tuning doses in small dogs.

Clinical improvement typically follows a predictable timeline: increased energy and activity levels are often seen within 1–2 weeks; weight loss and improved coat quality takes 4–8 weeks; neurological signs (facial nerve paralysis, ataxia) may take months to partially or fully resolve. Skin changes (hyperpigmentation, scaling, hair regrowth) show improvement over 2–3 months. If the dog is being over-treated, signs of hyperthyroidism may appear: increased thirst/urination, weight loss despite good appetite, panting, excitability, and tachycardia.

There is some evidence and clinical reports of a link between hypothyroidism and aggression in dogs — a syndrome sometimes termed “hypothyroid aggression.” Proposed mechanisms include altered serotonin metabolism, cognitive dullness, and increased irritability. However, the relationship is debated in the veterinary literature and confirmed thyroid-related aggression is rare. Hypothyroidism should always be on the differential list for new-onset behaviour changes in middle-aged dogs, but levothyroxine should not be started empirically without confirmed diagnosis via TT4 and TSH testing — treating euthyroid dogs with levothyroxine can cause iatrogenic hyperthyroidism.

References

  1. Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook, 9th ed. Wiley-Blackwell; 2018.
  2. Dixon RM, et al. Epidemiological, clinical, haematological and biochemical characteristics of canine hypothyroidism. Vet Rec. 1999;145(17):481-487.
  3. Panciera DL. Hypothyroidism in dogs: 66 cases. J Am Vet Med Assoc. 1994;204(5):761-767.
  4. Scott-Moncrieff JC. Hypothyroidism. In: Ettinger SJ, ed. Textbook of Veterinary Internal Medicine. 7th ed. Saunders; 2010:1751-1761.
  5. Thyro-Tabs (levothyroxine sodium) Prescribing Information. Lloyd Inc.; 2023.
  6. Soloxine (levothyroxine sodium) Prescribing Information. Virbac; 2023.

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