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How to Take Your Dog’s Temperature in 2025: Vet Approved Guide & What It Means 🐾

  • 131 days ago
  • 5 min read
How to Take Your Dog’s Temperature in 2025: Vet Approved Guide & What It Means 🐾

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How to Take Your Dog’s Temperature in 2025: Vet Approved Guide & What It Means 🐾

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

🔍 Why Measuring Temperature Matters

Body temperature is a vital sign of health in dogs, helping detect fever, infection, or hypothermia 🩺. Unlike humans, you can’t reliably tell if a dog is feverish by feeling their nose or head.

🌡️ Normal Temperature Range

A healthy dog’s normal body temperature is between 100–102.5 °F (38–39.2 °C). Fever (≥102.5 °F) suggests illness; readings above 104 °F or below 100 °F are urgent.

📏 Best Methods to Take Temperature

Two reliable methods:

  • Rectal thermometer: gold standard for accuracy using a digital, lubricated device.
  • Ear thermometer: less invasive, still 2nd-best—but only if the dog allows it and no ear infection is present.

🛠️ Step-by-Step: Rectal Temperature

  1. 📦 Prep equipment—digital thermometer, water-based lubricant, clean cloth.
  2. 👥 Position the dog with gentle restraint—another person is helpful.
  3. 💧 Apply lubricant to the tip.
  4. 🔼 Lift tail and insert ~1″ (small dogs)–2–3″ (large dogs) without force.
  5. ⏱ Wait for beep (~30–60 sec) then read the temperature.
  6. 👏 Praise your dog and disinfect the thermometer.

🦻 Step-by-Step: Ear Temperature

  1. 🔍 Use a pet-specific ear thermometer with a disposable sleeve.
  2. 👐 Secure the dog and lift the ear flap.
  3. 📏 Insert gently to the horizontal canal at 90° angle; no lubricant needed.
  4. 📈 Wait for beep, read result, praise dog.
  5. ⚠️ If the dog has an ear infection, skip this method—it gives false readings and can hurt.

🚫 Other Methods & Why They’re Less Accurate

  • Oral: not advised—risk of bites and inaccurate unless deep under the tongue.
  • Axillary (armpit): approximate—add 1 °F to the reading.
  • Forehead/temporal infrared: fast but unreliable due to hair and external factors.

⚠️ Interpreting Results & Next Steps

  • 100–102.5 °F: Normal—if symptoms are mild, observe.
  • 102.6–104 °F: Fever—vet consult advised if other signs appear.
  • >104 °F: High fever—seek immediate care.
  • <100 °F: Hypothermia—urgent warming & vet attention.

📝 Tips for Stress-Free Temperature Checks

  • ✅ Practice during wellness visits to build positive associations.
  • 🍖 Use treats and praise post-check.
  • 🧊 Choose quick-read digital thermometers.
  • 🧼 Clean equipment and store safely, separate from human items.

🧸 How Ask A Vet, 

  • 🩺 **Ask A Vet:** Guidance on technique, when to act, interpreting temperatures.

📋 Quick Reference Table

Method Accuracy Prep Best Use
Rectal (digital) ✅ Gold standard Lubricant When precise reading is needed
Ear thermometer 🔁 Good if no infection Disposable cover Reluctant dogs
Axillary (armpit) ⚠️ Approximate None When rectal not possible
Forehead/Infrared ❌ Limited reliability None Screening only

🎯 Final Takeaway

Knowing how to take your dog's temperature accurately is an indispensable skill in monitoring health at home. Using a rectal or ear thermometer produces reliable readings, while other methods are less precise. By practicing these skills—backed by expert support from Ask A Vet, you’ll be ready to act confidently when your pup isn’t feeling their best. 🌡️🐾

— Dr Duncan Houston, BVSc

Want personalized help? Visit Ask AVet.com or download the Ask A Vet app for 24/7 veterinary advice and care.

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Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted