How to care for a senior dog
If your dog is getting older, you're in one of the most rewarding phases of dog ownership. Senior dogs are calmer, more bonded, more in tune with you. They know you and you know them. There's a depth to the relationship that younger dogs can't match. It also comes with challenges. Senior dogs slow down. They have aches and pains. They develop health issues. They need more vet visits, more careful nutrition, more consideration of their limits. This isn't sad. It's not depressing. It's just what it means to love a dog through their whole life. They gave you their best years. Now you give them their best senior years. Here are the practical things that help.
Adjust vet care — twice a year, not once
Adult dogs should see the vet annually. Senior dogs (usually 7+, varies by breed — giant breeds are senior at 5-6, small breeds at 9-10) should see the vet twice a year.
Why: dogs age faster than humans. By the time an annual checkup shows a problem, six months of damage may have already happened. Twice-yearly visits catch things earlier when they're more treatable.
What to expect at senior visits:
- Bloodwork (kidney, liver, thyroid, blood sugar)
- Urinalysis
- Heart check
- Joint exam
- Eye and dental check
- Discussion of behavior changes
Common senior dog issues that early detection helps:
- Kidney disease
- Heart disease
- Diabetes
- Cancer
- Cognitive decline (doggy dementia)
- Arthritis
- Dental disease
Don't skip these visits. They're the most important thing you can do for your senior dog.
Manage joint pain — they won't always tell you
Dogs hide pain. It's a survival instinct — showing weakness in the wild makes you a target. Your senior dog is almost certainly in some pain that they're not showing you.
Signs of joint pain:
- Slower to get up, especially after lying down
- Reluctance to jump on/off furniture or into the car
- Stiffness, especially in the morning or after exercise
- Limping (often intermittent)
- Licking or chewing at joints
- Behavioral changes (irritability, withdrawal)
- Loss of muscle mass in the hind legs
What helps:
- Joint supplements (glucosamine, chondroitin, omega-3s)
- Pain medication from your vet (NSAIDs like carprofen, gabapentin for chronic pain)
- Weight management (extra weight = extra joint stress)
- Orthopedic beds (memory foam)
- Ramps for furniture and cars
- Lower-impact exercise (swimming, slow walks)
- Warmth (joints hurt more in cold)
Don't just accept that they're 'slowing down.' Slowing down is often pain. Address the pain and you might see significant improvement.
Adjust their diet — senior formulas or fresh food
Senior dogs have different nutritional needs than adults:
- Fewer calories (they're less active)
- Higher protein (to preserve muscle mass)
- More fiber (digestive health)
- Specific supplements for joints, brain, heart
- Often lower phosphorus (kidney health)
Options:
- Senior commercial dog food: easy, balanced, formulated for older dogs
- Fresh food (cooked, vet-approved): often better ingredients, more palatable
- Prescription diets: for specific health conditions (kidney, heart, joint)
- Home-cooked: requires vet nutritionist consultation to be complete
Don't just keep feeding the adult formula. Their nutritional needs have changed.
Also: dental health becomes critical. If they're not eating, check their mouth. Painful teeth cause older dogs to stop eating, leading to rapid weight loss.
Adapt their environment
Small changes to your home make a huge difference for senior dogs:
- Orthopedic bed: memory foam, easy on joints. Place in their favorite spot.
- Ramps: to the couch, the bed, the car. Eliminates jumping.
- Non-slip rugs: on slippery floors. Senior dogs slip and re-injure themselves.
- Stairs: limit access to stairs they shouldn't navigate
- Raised food bowls: easier on the neck and joints
- Easy outdoor access: dog door or always-available outside access
- Lower temperatures: senior dogs get cold more easily. Sweaters, warm beds, warmer rooms
These changes aren't indulgent. They're necessary. A senior dog struggling to get on the couch and then slipping on the kitchen floor is a dog who's suffering unnecessarily.
The cost of a ramp and an orthopedic bed is much less than the cost of treating a fall-related injury.
Keep their brain active — cognitive decline is real
Senior dogs can develop cognitive dysfunction (similar to dementia in humans). Signs:
- Disorientation (staring at walls, getting stuck in corners)
- Changes in sleep-wake cycles (pacing at night)
- Loss of housetraining
- Decreased interaction with family
- Anxiety, especially at night
- Forgetting commands they used to know
What helps:
- Mental exercise (training, puzzle toys, snuffle mats)
- Physical exercise (slow walks, swimming — keep them moving)
- Antioxidants and omega-3s (some evidence for slowing cognitive decline)
- Prescription medications (selegiline for cognitive dysfunction)
- Consistent routines (predictability reduces confusion)
Don't dismiss these changes as 'just old age.' Some are treatable. Even when they're not, mental stimulation improves quality of life.
Also: keep training them. Teaching new things keeps the brain active. Even an old dog can learn a new trick if you go slow.
Know when to say goodbye — the hardest decision
At some point — and I know this is the hardest part of having a senior dog — you'll face the decision about euthanasia. It's the last gift you can give them.
How to know it's time is different for every dog. Some questions that help:
- Are they still enjoying things? Eating, walks, play, interaction?
- Are they in pain that can't be managed?
- Can they still do the things that make them 'them'?
- Are they having more bad days than good days?
- Is the treatment for their condition worse than the condition?
Talk to your vet about quality of life. There are quality-of-life scales (HHHHHMM scale, Lap of Love scale) that help you think through it objectively.
When the time comes, in-home euthanasia is a kind option. Many vets offer it. Your dog passes peacefully in their favorite spot, with you nearby.
This is the price of loving a dog. They're with us for too short a time. But the love is real, and the loss is real, and the decision to end suffering when it's time is the deepest expression of that love.
Take care of yourself during this. Grief is real. Don't apologize for how hard this is.
Citations & External Resources
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Frequently Asked Questions
How to care for a senior dog?
Senior dogs need different care than adults — and they give back more than you can imagine. Here's how to keep them comfortable. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.
What is the best way to care for a senior dog?
The best way to care for a senior dog is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. If your dog is getting older, you're in one of the most rewarding phases of dog ownership. Senior dogs are calmer, more bonded, more in tune with you. They know you and you know them. There's a depth... You might also find our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants helpful.
How long does it take to care for a senior dog?
Most people can care for a senior dog within 7 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.