How this calculator works
The rule is weight-based because a 1,300-pound cow and a 125-pound goat do not draw the same amount from a winter water system. West Virginia University Extension gives a practical cold-weather rule of one gallon per 100 pounds of body weight each day for non-lactating livestock. Nebraska Extension places lactating animals near two gallons per 100 pounds. The calculator applies the appropriate rate to every group, multiplies by head count, and then adds the groups for one daily herd total.
The catch is that daily consumption is not the same as dependable supply. Frozen valves, failed heaters, blocked lines, and power interruptions can stop delivery even when a well or tank holds enough water. Enter the number of outage days you want to cover and the tool multiplies that period by daily herd demand. It then adds a 25% delay margin, following a UC Agriculture and Natural Resources example in which 10 lactating cows require 200 gallons daily and a two-day interruption calls for 500 gallons of storage rather than the bare 400 gallons.
The planning rate is deliberately simple, so use judgment around the result. Body weight and lactation make the largest visible changes here, while feed moisture, salt intake, exercise, weather, and individual production can move actual drinking above or below the estimate. Dry hay supplies less water than lush forage, and exceptionally cold water can reduce intake. Treat the result as the amount your system should be ready to deliver, then watch actual use and keep every animal able to reach clean, unfrozen water. Use the same herd in the winter hay calculator for the feed order and the manure calculator for collected-waste planning. Entering a tank capacity adds autonomy in days and hours, weekly tankfuls, reserve fit or shortfall, and refill time when a flow rate is supplied.
Method follows West Virginia University Extension's “Winter Watering for Livestock,” University of Nebraska–Lincoln CropWatch's winter water guidance, and UC Agriculture and Natural Resources' “How Much Water Do My Animals Need Each Day?” Planning estimate only — not veterinary or livestock-management advice.
Frequently asked questions
How much water do livestock need in winter?
A practical winter planning rate is 1 gallon per 100 pounds of body weight each day for non-lactating stock. Lactating animals may need about 2 gallons per 100 pounds.
How much water does a cow drink in winter?
At 1 gallon per 100 pounds, a 1,300-pound non-lactating beef cow needs about 13 gallons daily. The planning rate doubles to about 26 gallons when lactating.
How much backup water should I store for livestock?
Multiply the herd's daily demand by the expected outage days, then add a 25% delay margin. A herd using 200 gallons daily needs about 500 gallons for two days.
Plan the rest of the barn
BaleMath is free to use. Numbers are planning estimates, not veterinary or livestock-management advice.