Pug weight predictor
AKC standard: 14–18 lb. Pugs love food and gain easily — watch the waistline for their breathing.
Typical adult: 14–18 lb · grown by ~11 months
Predicted adult weight
Fully grown—
likely —
Enter your puppy’s weight and age.
That doesn’t look right
Your puppy’s growth curve
Estimated weight as they grow up — the dot is where they are now.
| Age | Est. weight |
|---|
Good to know
General guidance only — an estimate, not veterinary advice. Always check with your vet about your pet’s growth, weight and diet.
How this was calculated
For a Pug we use the small-breed growth curve (matures around 11 months): adult weight ≈ current weight ÷ the fraction of adult weight a small breed reaches at this age. Typical adult weight (14–18 lb) is from the AKC breed standard. The gauge shows where your prediction lands against the breed-typical adult range.
Source: AKC breed standard + WALTHAM growth charts. Full method on our methodology page.
Built by the PawGauge team, reviewed against cited veterinary sources. Last reviewed 29 June 2026.
About our figures →Pug growth, explained
Pugs are a small breed, so they follow the small-breed growth curve. AKC standard: 14–18 lb. Pugs love food and gain easily — watch the waistline for their breathing. Most reach close to their adult weight by around 11 months, then continue to firm up in muscle and chest for a while after.
To predict an adult weight we divide your puppy’s current weight by the fraction of adult weight a small breed has typically reached at that age. Typical adult weight (14–18 lb) is from the AKC breed standard. The result is an estimate with a likely range — genetics and nutrition move individual dogs up or down. If your Pug looks heavier or lighter than the breed-typical band, your vet is the best person to check.
Pug weight questions
- How big do Pugs get?
- A typical adult Pug weighs about 14–18 lb. AKC standard: 14–18 lb. Pugs love food and gain easily — watch the waistline for their breathing.
- When is a Pug fully grown?
- Pugs are a small breed and usually finish growing around 11 months, though they may keep filling out a little after that.
- How accurate is this for a Pug?
- Within about 10–15% if your puppy is a typical Pug. Crossbreeds, runts and big-boned individuals vary more. It’s an estimate — your vet can assess your individual dog.