Free Horse Weight Estimator
Girth & Length Formula
Calculate your horse's weight accurately using the validated girth and body length formula — no scales needed. Essential for correct worming doses, feed planning, and medication calculations.
Tell us about your horse
We'll apply the correct formula based on breed type.
Enter your measurements
Use a soft measuring tape. Measure in centimetres for best accuracy.
📐 How to Measure
Heart Girth
Wrap the tape around the barrel just behind the elbow and withers. Measure after the horse exhales. Keep tape snug but not tight.
Body Length
Measure in a straight line from the point of the shoulder to the point of the buttock. Have an assistant hold the tape at the shoulder.
Get your results by email
We'll email your horse's weight estimate along with personalised feeding and worming dose guidance.
Your Results
Results have been emailed to you. Here is a summary:
Want a personalised feeding plan or worming schedule based on this weight?
Why Knowing Your Horse's Weight Matters
Accurate body weight is one of the most fundamental pieces of information in equine health management, yet it is one of the most frequently overlooked. Research consistently shows that horse owners underestimate their horse's weight by an average of 10–15%, with some studies reporting underestimates of up to 30%. This systematic underestimation has real consequences — particularly for parasite control.
The Worming Dose Problem
Anthelmintic (worming) drugs are dosed by body weight. When a horse owner estimates their 550 kg horse weighs 450 kg and doses accordingly, they administer only 82% of the required dose. This sub-therapeutic dosing does not kill all parasites — it kills the susceptible ones and leaves the resistant ones to reproduce. Over time, this is the primary mechanism by which anthelmintic resistance develops. Australia already has documented resistance to ivermectin and oxfendazole in some horse populations. Accurate weight estimation is therefore a critical component of responsible parasite management.
The Girth-Length Formula Explained
The most widely used and validated formula for estimating horse weight from body measurements is the Caroll and Huntington (1988) formula:
Weight (kg) = (Girth cm² × Body Length cm) ÷ 11,877
For ponies, a modified divisor of 10,926 is used to account for their proportionally rounder barrel.
This formula has been validated across multiple studies and is accurate to within 5–10% for most light horse breeds when measurements are taken correctly. It is the formula used in this calculator and by most equine veterinarians when a weigh bridge is not available.
Breed-Specific Considerations
The standard formula works well for thoroughbreds, standardbreds, warmbloods, and stock horses. However, adjustments are needed for:
| Breed Type | Formula Adjustment | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Ponies (under 14.2hh) | Modified divisor (10,926) | Ponies have a proportionally rounder barrel; standard formula underestimates |
| Draft breeds | Standard formula | May slightly overestimate; weigh bridge recommended for drug dosing |
| Foals (under 6 months) | Foal-specific formula | Body proportions differ significantly from adult horses |
| Pregnant mares (late gestation) | Standard formula | Girth measurement includes foetal weight; actual horse weight is lower |
| Thoroughbreds in race training | Standard formula | Highly accurate for lean, athletic horses |
Other Uses for Accurate Horse Weight
Beyond worming, accurate body weight is essential for:
NSAID dosing (phenylbutazone/bute, flunixin, Equioxx) is weight-based. Overdosing NSAIDs in horses causes gastric ulceration and right dorsal colitis — serious and potentially fatal conditions.
Sedation and anaesthesia doses are strictly weight-based. Underdosing can result in inadequate sedation; overdosing can cause cardiovascular depression.
Monitoring Weight Over Time
Regular weight monitoring — ideally monthly — is one of the most valuable health monitoring tools available to horse owners. Gradual weight loss is often the first sign of dental disease, internal parasites, chronic pain, PPID (Cushing's disease), or inadequate nutrition. By tracking weight over time using this calculator, you can detect problems early and intervene before they become serious.
Frequently Asked Questions
Answers to the most common questions about estimating horse weight and why it matters.
Want to be ready for any horse emergency?
The DIY Horse Vet course by Dr. Louise covers colic, wounds, foaling emergencies, eye injuries and more — giving you the knowledge to act confidently before the vet arrives.
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