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Signs of a Healthy Dairy Cow: A Vet-Backed 2026 Checklist

By Farmers Advisory Editorial Team · Published July 10, 2026 · Updated July 10, 2026 · 9 min read · Category: Dairy Farming

Cows are prey animals, which means they instinctively hide signs of illness until a condition is already advanced — a cow can look fine on casual observation while something is genuinely wrong. This guide gives you an objective, vet-backed checklist of the signs of a healthy dairy cow — vital signs, body condition scoring, and behavior cues — so you can catch problems early instead of relying on appearance alone.

Key Takeaways

1. Normal Vital Signs

Vital signs are the fastest, most objective way to assess a cow's health, and abnormal readings often appear before visible symptoms do.

Normal Vital Signs for Adult Dairy Cattle
Vital SignNormal RangeWhat to Watch For
Rectal temperature100.4 - 102.9°F (38 - 39.4°C)Elevated temp often signals infection or disease
Pulse (heart rate)60 - 70 beats per minuteTake at the jaw, above the inner dewclaw, or above the hock
Respiration rate10 - 30 breaths per minuteCount flank movements; pain or fever increases rate
💡 Quick Tip Take vital signs when the cow is calm and at rest — exercise, excitement, and extreme weather can all temporarily push readings outside the normal range without indicating illness.

2. Body Condition Score (BCS)

Body Condition Scoring (BCS) measures a cow's fat reserves on a 1-5 scale (in 0.25-point increments), and is one of the most useful management tools for spotting nutritional or metabolic problems before they become visible health issues.

Ideal Body Condition Score by Stage
StageIdeal BCS (1-5 scale)
During lactation2.5 - 3.0
Dry-off and calving3.0 - 3.25
Acceptable BCS loss (first 60 days post-calving)0.5 - 1.0 points

Scores below 2.0 require corrective action under most dairy welfare codes of practice. Over-conditioned cows (BCS above 4.0) at calving face higher risk of metabolic disorders and calving difficulty, while under-conditioned cows (BCS below 3.0) typically show lower peak milk yield and reduced fertility.

3. Behavior and Alertness

4. Coat, Skin, and Eyes

5. Mobility and Gait

Mobility scoring, widely used in the UK dairy industry, classifies cows on a scale from 0 (perfect mobility) to 3 (severely lame), based on gait and weight-bearing.

6. Manure and Urine

Manure and urine consistency offer a quick, non-invasive health check that many farmers overlook.

7. Rumination and Appetite

⚠️ Common Mistake Relying only on how a cow "looks" from a distance. Because cattle instinctively mask illness, a cow can appear normal on casual observation while vital signs, rumination, or manure consistency already show early warning signs.

Warning Signs That Need Immediate Attention

✅ Normal Signs

  • Temperature, pulse, and respiration within normal ranges
  • Even weight-bearing on all four limbs
  • Consistent appetite and active rumination

❌ Warning Signs

  • Temperature above 103°F or notably below normal range
  • Reluctance to rise, or persistent lying down
  • Sudden drop in feed intake or rumination
  • Swelling under the chin/brisket or abnormal discharge

Frequently Asked Questions

What is a normal temperature for a healthy dairy cow?

A healthy dairy cow's normal rectal temperature ranges from 100.4-102.9°F (38-39.4°C). Readings significantly above this range often indicate infection or illness.

What is a good body condition score for a dairy cow?

An ideal Body Condition Score (BCS) is 2.5-3.0 during lactation and 3.0-3.25 at dry-off and calving, on the standard 1-5 point scale used across the dairy industry.

How can I tell if a dairy cow is sick just by looking at her?

Visual appraisal alone often isn't enough, since cattle instinctively mask illness. Combining visual checks (coat, eyes, gait) with objective measures like temperature, rumination time, and manure consistency gives a much more reliable picture of health.

What does it mean if a cow stops chewing her cud?

Reduced or stopped rumination is often one of the earliest signs of illness or stress in dairy cattle, frequently appearing before other visible symptoms develop.

What is a normal pulse rate for a dairy cow?

A healthy adult dairy cow has a resting pulse of 60-70 beats per minute, measurable at the jaw, above the inner dewclaw, or above the hock joint.

Conclusion

Recognizing the signs of a healthy dairy cow comes down to combining a few objective checks — vital signs, body condition score, mobility, and rumination — rather than relying on how a cow looks from a distance. Because cattle are naturally inclined to hide illness, building these checks into a regular routine is one of the simplest, highest-value habits any dairy farmer can develop, catching problems early enough to actually make a difference.

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Data sources: NADIS Animal Health Skills (UK); Penn State Extension and University of Wisconsin Dairy Extension body condition scoring guidance; Iowa Beef Center vital signs reference; and dairy welfare code of practice standards (2024-2026). Figures represent normal ranges and vary by individual animal, breed, and environmental conditions. Current as of July 10, 2026.