Calculate llama weight, feed requirements, body condition scoring, stocking rate, and shearing yield. Complete management tool for llama and alpaca owners.
Llamas and alpacas are increasingly popular as livestock, fiber animals, pack animals, and companion animals. However, their nutritional needs, health management, and production parameters differ significantly from more familiar livestock species. Camelids have a unique three-compartment stomach system, lower metabolic rates than sheep or goats of similar size, and specific mineral requirements that can cause serious health problems if not met.
This calculator provides llama and alpaca owners with essential management tools. It estimates body weight from body measurements (heart girth and body length), calculates daily feed requirements based on body weight, activity level, and physiological status (pregnant, lactating, growing, or maintenance), and determines appropriate stocking rates for your pasture.
Additionally, it includes body condition scoring references, fiber yield estimates for different breeds, and mineral supplementation guidelines. Whether you're a first-time llama owner, an experienced breeder, or a 4-H youth learning about camelid management, this calculator helps you make informed husbandry decisions.
Llama and alpaca management information is harder to find than for common livestock. This calculator consolidates weight estimation, nutrition guidelines, stocking rates, and body condition references into one tool, helping camelid owners make better management decisions. This llama calculator helps you compare outcomes quickly and reduce avoidable mistakes when making day-to-day care decisions. Use the estimate as a planning baseline and confirm final decisions with a qualified professional when risk is high.
Llama weight (lbs) ≈ (Heart Girth² × Body Length) / 300. Daily DM intake = BW × 1.8-2.2% (maintenance), BW × 2.5-3.0% (lactating/growing). Stocking rate = 3-5 llamas per acre on good pasture. Fiber yield: Llama 3-7 lbs/year, Alpaca 5-10 lbs/year.
Result: ~296 lbs, Feed: 5.3 lbs DM/day
Weight estimate: (46² × 42) / 300 = 296 lbs. At 1.8% BW for maintenance, daily DM intake is 296 × 0.018 = 5.3 lbs. This llama needs about 5.3 lbs of hay equivalent per day.
Llamas are larger (250-400 lbs) with banana-shaped ears and coarser guard hair over soft undercoat. They're used as pack animals, guard animals, and fiber producers. Alpacas are smaller (100-200 lbs) with straight ears and produce finer, more valuable fiber. Both are social herd animals that need at least one companion. Despite their differences, their nutritional requirements per unit body weight are similar, and both are managed as modified hindgut fermenters with a three-compartment stomach.
Camelids are remarkably efficient feed converters, requiring about 25-30% less feed than sheep of equivalent body weight. Good quality grass hay (8-10% crude protein) is the foundation of the diet. Alfalfa hay should be limited or avoided for adult males (excess protein and calcium can contribute to urinary calculi). Grain supplementation is rarely needed for maintenance animals but may be appropriate for late-gestation females, lactating dams, and growing crias. Always provide salt and a camelid-specific mineral mix. Fresh, clean water is essential—llamas can drink 2-5 gallons per day.
Meningeal worm (Parelaphostrongylus tenuis) is the most serious parasite threat in areas with white-tailed deer. Monthly ivermectin treatment is the standard prevention protocol. Internal parasites (Haemonchus, Nematodirus) require monitoring through fecal egg counts and targeted deworming. Heat stress is a major concern—llamas originated in cool Andean highlands and struggle in hot, humid climates. Fighting teeth in intact males should be removed to prevent injury. Annual shearing prevents heat stress and maintains fiber quality.
Adult llamas in maintenance consume about 1.8-2.2% of body weight in dry matter per day. A 300 lb llama eats roughly 5-7 lbs of hay. Pregnant or lactating females need 2.5-3.0% BW.
Llamas are more efficient than horses and need less feed per pound of body weight. However, they should NOT eat horse feed, which often contains copper levels toxic to camelids. Plain grass hay is the ideal base diet.
On good pasture, 3-5 llamas per acre is typical. On poor or dry pasture, reduce to 1-2 per acre. Always have hay available to supplement when pasture is thin.
Use a soft tape to measure heart girth (around the barrel just behind the front legs) and body length (point of shoulder to pin bone). The formula (girth² × length) / 300 gives a weight estimate within about 10%.
BCS rates the animal's fat cover on a 1-10 scale by palpating the spine, ribs, and hip bones. Score 4-6 is ideal. Below 3 indicates undernourishment; above 7 indicates obesity, which can cause fatty liver disease.
Llamas produce 3-7 lbs of fiber per year (sheared annually). Alpacas produce 5-10 lbs of finer, more valuable fiber. Fiber quality depends on genetics, nutrition, and age.