Pediatric Weight-Based Dose Calculator
Convert a weight-based prescription (mg/kg) into a per-dose and daily total in milligrams.
Includes maximum dose capping and total course quantity.
Almost all pediatric prescriptions are weight-based: the dose is given as milligrams per kilogram of body weight per dose, often abbreviated as mg/kg/dose. This calculator converts that into a concrete per-dose milligram amount, the daily total, the full course quantity, and (if liquid) the volume in milliliters.
The basic formula:
per-dose mg = weight (kg) × mg/kg/dose
Almost every pediatric medication has a maximum single dose, beyond which adult dosing applies regardless of weight. Larger children might calculate above that cap; the calculator applies the cap and shows whether it took effect.
daily total = per-dose × doses per day course total = daily × days
For liquid medications: volume per dose (mL) = per-dose mg ÷ concentration (mg/mL). Useful for dispensing the right syringe size and for checking whether the daily volume is realistic for the child to swallow.
Worked example: 15 kg child, ibuprofen 10 mg/kg per dose, max 400 mg per dose, every 8 hours (3 doses/day), liquid is 100 mg/5 mL (= 20 mg/mL).
Per dose = 15 × 10 = 150 mg. Below the 400 mg cap, so 150 mg stands. Volume per dose = 150 ÷ 20 = 7.5 mL. Daily total = 150 × 3 = 450 mg. Day 1 volume = 7.5 × 3 = 22.5 mL.
For a 5-day course: 750 mg total medication, 112.5 mL of liquid total — reasonable for one bottle.
Why this matters: dosing errors are the most common medication-related cause of pediatric hospital visits. Two common categories are decimal mistakes (10 mg/mL written as 10.0 mg/mL with the decimal misread as a different digit) and concentration confusion (the same drug sold at multiple strengths). This calculator helps verify both — the per-dose amount and the volume in mL — before measuring.
Always cross-check three times against the original prescription: the mg/kg/dose, the maximum dose, and the concentration. Two adults reviewing independently is the recommended safety practice in hospitals. At home, ask your pharmacist to walk through the syringe markings before the first dose if the medication is new to your child.
This tool is a math helper, not a prescribing reference. Specific drug doses, maximum doses, and frequencies must come from the prescribing clinician or an authoritative pediatric formulary like the AAP’s Red Book or Lexicomp Pediatric.
How we build and check this calculator
This calculator runs entirely in your browser, so the numbers you enter stay on your device. The math behind it is written by hand and tested against worked examples and standard references before the page goes live.
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