A Guide to Body Condition Scoring Your Horse

When it comes to horse health, "looking good" is subjective. One rider’s "fit" is another’s "thin," and what looks like a "healthy curve" might actually be a metabolic red flag.

When it comes to horse health, “looking good” is subjective. One rider’s “fit” is another’s “thin,” and what looks like a “healthy curve” might actually be a metabolic red flag.

Because horses store fat differently based on their breed and age, we need more than just a glance to check their health. We need Body Condition Scoring (BCS). Using the Henneke Scale (a 1–9 system), you can move past the guesswork and get a factual reading on your horse’s fitness.

Why You Can’t Trust Your Eyes

Before you start, remember the golden rule of BCS: Eyes lie, but hands don’t. A thick winter coat can hide protruding ribs, and a “hay belly” (distension caused by forage) can make a malnourished horse look deceptively round. To get an accurate score, you must physically palpate the horse.

The 6 Fat Depots: Where to Feel

To find your horse’s score, you need to check these six specific areas where horses naturally store fat:

Checkpoint What You’re Feeling For
1. The Neck Is there a hard “crest” of fat? In a healthy horse, the neck should blend smoothly into the shoulder.
2. The Withers Are they sharp and bony, or rounded and bulging with fat pads?
3. Behind the Shoulder Run your hand behind the elbow. It should be lean; a “squishy” feel indicates excess weight.
4. The Ribs This is the most critical spot. You should feel the ribs easily (like the back of your hand) but not see them prominently.
5. The Loin Does the back have a ridge (thin), stay flat (ideal), or have a “gutter” crease (obese)?
6. The Tailhead Is the dock of the tail bony, or is it surrounded by soft, spongy fat?

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