Reptile Feeding Schedule Calculator
Reptile Husbandry Tool

Reptile Feeding Schedule Calculator

Build a practical, species-appropriate feeding plan in seconds. Enter your reptile's species, life stage, and current weight to get a realistic feeding interval, per-meal portion, and projected monthly food requirement.

Please choose a species.

Please choose a life stage.

Enter a positive weight (up to roughly 50 kg / 1,760 oz).

Your Feeding Plan

Feeding frequency

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    Overview

    The Reptile Feeding Schedule Calculator turns the most common husbandry question — "how much, and how often, should I feed my reptile?" — into a clear, practical plan. Instead of generic advice, it tailors the result to your animal's species, life stage, and current body weight, the three factors that most influence metabolism and prey size in captivity.

    It is built for keepers at every level: first-time owners trying to avoid the twin risks of underfeeding and obesity, experienced hobbyists managing a growing collection, breeders tracking power-feeding versus maintenance, and even reptile-focused pet shops and rescues that need a fast, repeatable reference. The tool covers four real-world diet categories — rodent-eating snakes, insectivorous geckos and lizards, omnivores like bearded dragons, and plant-eating herbivores such as tortoises — because a single "one schedule fits all" answer simply does not reflect how these animals actually eat.

    How It Works

    1. Select the species. This automatically sets the correct diet type (snake, insectivore, omnivore, or herbivore) and the assumptions behind it.
    2. Choose the life stage. Hatchlings and juveniles grow fast and eat more frequently; adults shift to maintenance feeding.
    3. Enter the current body weight. Switch between grams and ounces — portion sizes scale directly from this number.
    4. Press "Calculate". You'll get a feeding interval, a per-meal portion (prey weight and feeder size, insect count, or greens portion), and a projected weekly and monthly requirement.
    5. Adjust with observation. Use the plan as a starting baseline, then fine-tune based on your animal's body condition, appetite, and shed/growth cycle.

    Formula Explanation

    The calculator applies established, field-tested husbandry rules rather than idealized lab values. The core logic differs by diet type:

    Snakes (rodent feeders) Prey weight = Body weight × Stage % (Baby 15% · Juvenile 12% · Adult 10%)
    The result is matched to the closest standard feeder (pinky → jumbo rat). Interval: Baby every 5 days, Juvenile every 7 days, Adult every 10–14 days.
    Insectivores (geckos & small lizards) Insects per meal = Base count (by stage) × (Weight ÷ Reference weight)
    Fed daily (baby), every 2 days (juvenile), or every 3 days (adult). Each insect should be no larger than the space between the animal's eyes.
    Omnivores & Herbivores (plant portions) Daily greens (g) = Body weight × Stage factor
    Protein-to-plant ratio shifts with age — protein-heavy when young, plant-heavy at maturity. Greens are offered daily; insect feedings taper as the animal matures.

    Projected totals are derived simply: Meals per week = 7 ÷ interval days and Meals per month = 30 ÷ interval days, then multiplied by the per-meal portion.

    Practical Benefits

    • Prevents obesity and underfeeding — two of the leading causes of preventable health problems in captive reptiles.
    • Right-sizes prey and portions so you avoid regurgitation, impaction, and refused meals caused by feeding items that are too large.
    • Makes budgeting and stocking easy — the monthly projection tells you how many feeder rodents, insects, or grams of greens to keep on hand.
    • Standardizes care across keepers — ideal for households, shops, and rescues where multiple people feed the same animals.
    • Supports growth tracking — recalculate as your animal gains weight to keep the schedule aligned with its real needs.

    Frequently Asked Questions

    It produces a sound, real-world starting baseline using widely accepted husbandry ratios. However, every animal is an individual — metabolism, enclosure temperature, breeding status, and health all affect appetite. Treat the result as a guideline and adjust based on body condition rather than feeding to a fixed number indefinitely.
    A meal that is too large relative to the animal can cause regurgitation or impaction, while one that is too small leaves it undernourished. Tying prey to roughly 10–15% of body weight (for snakes) or to the space between the eyes (for insects) keeps portions safe and digestible at any size.
    Not necessarily. Refusals are common around shedding, brumation, seasonal changes, or after a recent meal. Check that enclosure temperatures are correct, give the animal a few days, and re-offer. Persistent refusal combined with weight loss warrants a vet visit rather than force-feeding.
    Yes. This tool calculates quantity and frequency, not nutrition completeness. Insect-eaters generally need calcium and vitamin D3 dusting, and herbivores need calcium and varied greens. Follow species-specific supplement guidance alongside the schedule this calculator provides.

    Disclaimer

    This calculator provides general, educational estimates only and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice. Feeding requirements vary by individual animal, species sub-type, environment, and health status. Always consult a qualified exotic-animal veterinarian or experienced specialist for decisions affecting your reptile's health, and adjust feeding based on regular body-condition assessment. The creators accept no liability for outcomes resulting from use of this tool.

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    Subrata Das Gupta
    Subrata Das Gupta

    Subrata Das Gupta is the founder of reptilecalc.com, a specialized platform that provides practical calculators and tools for reptile keepers, breeders, and enthusiasts. He develops data-driven resources covering reptile enclosure design, heating and lighting requirements, feeding schedules, humidity management, breeding, incubation, and overall reptile husbandry to help owners make informed care decisions.

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