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Healthy Weight Loss in Horses

  • 357 days ago
  • 19 min read
Healthy Weight Loss in Horses

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Healthy Weight Loss in Horses: What Actually Works

By Dr Duncan Houston

Obesity is one of the most underestimated health problems in horses.

A horse does not need to look dramatically overweight to be at risk. Even moderate excess body fat can increase strain on joints, reduce performance, worsen insulin dysregulation, and raise the risk of laminitis. This is why weight loss is not just about appearance. It is about reducing risk and improving long-term soundness.

The challenge is that many overweight horses are managed in ways that stop further gain but do not actually produce meaningful fat loss. Owners often reduce feed “a little” and assume the horse should slim down. In practice, that is rarely enough.

This article explains how to assess overweight horses properly, how to create a safe calorie deficit, and how to combine forage control, pasture management, movement, and monitoring into a plan that actually works.


Quick Answer

Healthy weight loss in horses requires a real calorie deficit, not just slightly less feed. The safest and most effective plans combine body condition scoring, controlled forage intake, reduced pasture calories, structured exercise where appropriate, and regular monitoring. Weight loss should be gradual, consistent, and designed around the horse’s metabolic risk.


Quick Decision Guide

Horse has a body condition score of 7 or more → weight loss plan is needed

Horse has a history of laminitis, insulin resistance, or EMS → weight loss is more urgent and must be more controlled

Horse is overweight but currently sound and comfortable → start calorie control and increase movement safely

Horse is overweight and already footy or laminitic → veterinary input is needed before increasing exercise

Owner has reduced feed slightly but the horse is not changing → current restriction is probably not enough


Why Excess Weight Matters So Much

Extra body fat is not passive.

It increases mechanical load on the horse and changes metabolic function. That means overweight horses are more likely to struggle with:

  • laminitis

  • insulin dysregulation

  • reduced performance

  • joint strain

  • poorer recovery from foot soreness

  • more difficulty during illness, treatment, or anaesthesia

The key point is that obesity is not a cosmetic issue. It is a medical issue.


What This Usually Turns Out To Be

When an overweight horse is not losing condition, the real situation is usually one of these:

  • calorie intake is still too high

  • forage is more energy-dense than the owner realises

  • pasture access is contributing more than expected

  • exercise is too limited to help

  • the horse is metabolically sensitive and needs stricter control

  • progress is not being tracked objectively

The mistake I see most often is thinking the horse is on a “diet” when intake is still close to maintenance.

That may stop further gain, but it often does not create true weight loss.


Body Condition Scoring Comes First

Before starting any plan, you need an honest baseline.

Body condition scoring is more useful than just looking at the horse or relying on a weight tape alone. The key areas to assess are:

  • neck crest

  • withers

  • shoulders

  • ribs

  • backline

  • tailhead

On the 1 to 9 scale:

  • 1 to 3 = underweight

  • 4 to 6 = generally appropriate

  • 7 to 9 = overweight to obese

What Vets Care About Most

What matters most is not the exact tape weight on one day. It is whether the horse is carrying excess fat in the places that reflect metabolic risk, especially over the crest, ribs, and tailhead.


Why Horses Gain Weight

Most overweight horses gain condition for predictable reasons.

Common causes include:

  • too many calories from hay, feed, or pasture

  • too little exercise

  • high NSC pasture access

  • easy-keeper genetics

  • underlying insulin dysregulation or EMS

  • management that underestimates total daily intake

This is why some horses gain weight on what owners describe as a “normal” diet.

Normal for one horse may be excessive for another.


Real Weight Loss Requires a Real Deficit

This is the part many plans miss.

If a horse is fed at 80 to 90 percent of maintenance needs, that may slow gain or hold weight stable, but it often does not produce meaningful fat loss. To get actual weight loss, the horse usually needs a more substantial deficit.

Your draft emphasizes a 60 percent maintenance target as the level that creates a meaningful deficit. That reflects the practical idea that the horse has to be below maintenance, not just slightly below, if body fat is going to come off.

Decision Checkpoint

If the horse has been “on a diet” for weeks and nothing is changing, the intake is probably still too high.


Forage Control Matters More Than Concentrate Removal Alone

Many owners remove hard feed and expect that to be enough.

Sometimes it is not.

Hay and pasture are often the largest calorie sources in the horse’s day. This means the weight loss plan usually has to focus on:

  • total forage amount

  • forage energy density

  • pasture access

  • feeding rate over time

The goal is not to remove forage completely. That would create digestive and behavioural problems. The goal is to feed enough forage for gut health while still creating a controlled calorie deficit.


Small-Hole Hay Nets Can Help

Slow feeding is one of the most useful practical tools in equine weight loss.

Small-hole hay nets can help by:

  • slowing intake

  • extending eating time

  • reducing boredom

  • helping the horse cope better with restriction

This matters because horses do better when forage lasts longer, even when the total amount is controlled.

The important point is that hay nets do not create weight loss by magic. They help make a restrictive diet more manageable and often more realistic to maintain.


Pasture Management Is Critical

Pasture is one of the biggest reasons weight loss plans fail.

Lush or rapidly growing pasture can deliver a lot of sugar and calories, and many overweight or laminitis-prone horses gain weight even when bucket feed is minimal.

Useful pasture strategies include:

  • restricted turnout time

  • grazing muzzles

  • avoiding high-risk grazing windows

  • careful monitoring during flush growth periods

What Vets Care About Most

If the horse is not losing weight and still has regular access to rich pasture, pasture has to stay high on the list of likely reasons.


Exercise Helps, but It Is Not Always the First Step

Exercise improves:

  • calorie expenditure

  • insulin sensitivity

  • muscle tone

  • general metabolic health

But it has to match the horse’s current soundness.

For a comfortable overweight horse, structured movement is an important part of the plan. For a horse that is already footy or recovering from laminitis, exercise may need to wait until the feet are stable.

Useful starting points often include:

  • hand walking

  • light ridden work

  • gradual increases in daily movement

  • regular rather than occasional exercise

The key is consistency.


Hoof Care Still Matters During Weight Loss

Overweight horses are under more strain at hoof level, especially if they are metabolically abnormal or have a history of laminitis.

Regular trimming matters because long intervals can leave the horse mechanically less comfortable and may slow recovery from foot soreness. This is why foot care is not separate from weight control. It is part of it.

A horse that is overweight and uncomfortable in the feet is much less likely to move enough to support weight loss safely.


Common Mistakes Owners Make

Some of the most common mistakes include:

  • reducing feed only slightly and expecting major change

  • ignoring pasture calories

  • removing too much forage too quickly

  • not using body condition scoring

  • failing to track progress objectively

  • trying to exercise a horse that is already footsore

  • focusing only on bucket feed and not on total intake

The biggest mistake is underestimating how much energy the horse is still getting.


How to Track Progress Properly

Progress should be measured, not guessed.

Useful tools include:

  • regular body condition scoring

  • weekly weight tape checks

  • repeat photographs from the same angle

  • written feed records

  • notes on exercise and pasture access

Decision Checkpoint

If you are not measuring progress, it is very easy to think the horse is changing when it is not, or to miss meaningful improvement when it is.


Breeds and Horses at Higher Risk

Some horses need more caution because they gain weight easily and develop metabolic complications sooner.

Higher-risk groups often include:

  • native ponies

  • miniature horses

  • easy keepers

  • horses with a prior laminitis history

  • horses with insulin resistance

  • horses with PPID

These horses often need stricter calorie control than owners expect.


Severity Framework

Situation What It Looks Like What It May Mean What To Do
Mild concern Horse slightly over ideal, no metabolic history, comfortable Early excess weight Start monitoring and tighten intake
Moderate concern BCS 7+, obvious fat pads, reduced fitness Clear overweight state Structured weight loss plan needed
High concern Overweight plus insulin resistance, EMS, or previous laminitis Significant medical risk Strict calorie control and close monitoring
Urgent concern Overweight horse is footy, laminitic, or rapidly worsening Active health threat Veterinary guidance needed immediately

What Should You Do Right Now?

If your horse needs to lose weight:

  1. Assign an honest body condition score

  2. Review everything the horse eats, not just bucket feed

  3. Create a real calorie deficit, not a symbolic one

  4. Slow intake with appropriate forage delivery tools

  5. Restrict pasture if needed

  6. Add exercise if the horse is sound enough

  7. Monitor progress weekly

  8. Keep hoof care regular, especially in at-risk horses

Simple checkpoint:

small feed reduction + unchanged horse = not enough

measured restriction + tracked progress = real plan


When Is This an Emergency?

Weight loss planning becomes urgent if the overweight horse shows:

  • foot soreness

  • laminitis signs

  • marked crest enlargement with metabolic disease

  • worsening comfort

  • rapid deterioration in mobility

In those horses, the problem is no longer just excess condition. It is active medical risk.


Frequently Asked Questions

Can I just cut out hard feed and let the horse lose weight naturally?
Sometimes, but often not. Hay and pasture calories are usually a major part of the problem.

Do all overweight horses need the same plan?
No. Easy keepers and metabolically abnormal horses often need stricter control.

Are hay nets enough on their own?
No. They help manage intake speed, but total calories still matter.

Should I exercise a fat horse straight away?
Only if the horse is sound enough. Footy or laminitic horses need a different starting point.

How fast should a horse lose weight?
Gradual, consistent loss is safest and more sustainable than aggressive short-term restriction.


Final Thoughts

Healthy weight loss in horses is not about starving them thinner.

It is about creating a controlled, realistic plan that reduces risk without creating new problems. The best plans are structured, measured, and adjusted over time. They focus on forage, pasture, movement, and honest monitoring, not wishful thinking.

Excess weight can be changed, but only if the plan is real.


If you need help building a weight loss plan tailored to your horse’s breed, metabolic risk, forage access, or foot health, ASK A VET™ can help you work through the next step clearly and practically.

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