Veterinary Fluid Therapy
Calculator for Dogs & Cats
Quickly estimate fluid deficit, maintenance requirements, and total IV fluid therapy volume for your veterinary patients. Built for veterinarians, vet students, and vet nurses.
Understanding Fluid Therapy in Dogs & Cats
Fluid therapy is a cornerstone of veterinary emergency and critical care. When animals become dehydrated — whether from vomiting, diarrhoea, haemorrhage, or reduced intake — their intravascular and interstitial fluid volumes drop, impairing circulation and organ perfusion.
Dehydration is assessed clinically by skin turgor, mucous membrane moisture, and eye position in the orbit. It is expressed as a percentage of body weight. A 5% dehydrated 10 kg dog has lost approximately 500 ml of fluid.
The fluid deficit quantifies the volume that must be replaced: body weight (kg) × dehydration % × 10. This deficit is typically replaced over the first 12–24 hours of treatment.
Maintenance fluids replace ongoing physiological losses — insensible losses through respiration, urination, and faeces. The standard rate is approximately 60 ml/kg/day for most dogs and cats at rest.
Total IV fluid therapy in the first 24 hours equals the sum of the deficit replacement plus the daily maintenance requirement, then divided by 24 to determine the hourly infusion rate in ml/hr.