Key takeaways
- Training load changes week to week; calories should track reality—not habit.
- Body condition score (BCS) is the simplest guardrail against “invisible” weight creep.
- Deload weeks may still include conditioning, travel stress, or heat—energy needs are not automatically minimal.
- Measure food by weight when adjusting; cups are error-prone.
Competition dogs, bite-sport dogs, and active pets often eat like athletes during peak blocks. When training eases—taper weeks, injury rest, or seasonal breaks—many owners keep the same scoop out of routine. That is how weight quietly drifts up.

What actually changes on a rest week
“Rest” is not one thing. Compare:
- True crate rest after injury (often lower expenditure)
- Deload with reduced intensity but still daily activity
- Travel to trials (stress and micro-movements add up)
- Heat increasing effort on “easy” walks
If your dog is still doing long sniff walks, hiking, or play, maintenance calories may be closer to normal than you assume.
Use BCS before you change the bag size
Athlete dogs should stay lean for joint health and heat tolerance. If rest weeks stack, check:
- Rib palpability at the flank
- Waist view from above
- Abdominal tuck
Baseline skill: BCS beyond the scale. For working-dog framing specifically: condition scoring for working dogs.
A practical adjustment playbook (veterinarian-informed)
- Measure current intake in grams (kibble weighed daily).
- Observe two weeks of condition and weight trend (home scale trends are noisy—BCS still helps).
- Adjust in small steps (often ~5–10% changes) rather than drastic cuts.
- Reassess when training ramps again.
For calorie literacy, revisit RER explained—it is the conceptual anchor even when real life adds complexity.
Treats and training calories during downtime
If training sessions shrink but treat pouches stay full, calorie balance shifts fast. Re-center with: the 10% rule for treats.
FAQ
Should I switch to “weight management” food on rest?
Not automatically. Some dogs need fewer calories from the same diet; others need a different strategy if intake is already low and muscle is a concern. Ask your veterinarian—especially for deep-chested breeds or medical histories.
My dog seems hungrier on rest—why?
Boredom, stress, or routine disruption can increase food-seeking behavior even when needs drop.
Do supplements replace training calories?
No. Supplements don’t cancel out excess energy balance.
Disclaimer: Working dog nutrition should be individualized. This article is educational; consult your veterinarian for medical conditions or competition feeding plans.


