
Estimate lambing date for your ewe based on breeding date and breed type
Sheep gestation lasts 142–152 days (average 147 days). Most ewes lamb within a day or two of the expected date.
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Managing a successful sheep operation requires accurate lambing date predictions. Knowing when your ewe will deliver allows you to prepare facilities, adjust nutrition, schedule veterinary checks, and ensure assistance is available when needed. This sheep gestation calculator estimates lambing dates based on breeding date and breed type.
The average sheep gestation period ranges from 142 to 152 days, with 147 days (approximately 5 months) being the most common average. Standard wool and meat breeds (Suffolk, Dorset, Hampshire) average 147 days. Hair sheep breeds (Katahdin, Dorper) average 150 days slightly longer than wool breeds. Primitive breeds (Shetland, Soay) average 145 days. Ewes carrying multiples (twins or triplets) often lamb 2-5 days earlier than those carrying singles.
This calculator does more than predict a lambing date. It shows you days since breeding, days remaining, current pregnancy stage, and displays key ovine pregnancy milestones from breeding through lambing. Sheep producers use this information to time vaccinations, schedule ultrasound exams, and prepare lambing pens. Powered by Toolraxy — all calculations happen in your browser with no data storage.
Select your breed type — Choose Standard Wool/Meat, Hair Sheep, Primitive Breeds, or Custom
Enter custom days (if selected) — Set any gestation length between 138-155 days
Enter the breeding date — Select the date of natural breeding or AI
Click Calculate — Results update automatically as you change inputs
View the estimated lambing date — See predicted delivery date with color coding
Check days remaining — Know how much preparation time you have left
See the current stage — Understand early, mid, or late pregnancy
Review key milestones — Use the timeline grid for management planning
The sheep gestation calculator adds breed-specific gestation days to the breeding date, then calculates time-based metrics relative to today’s date.
| Breed Type | Gestation Days | Example Breeds |
|---|---|---|
| Standard Wool/Meat | 147 days | Suffolk, Dorset, Hampshire, Southdown, Romney |
| Hair Sheep | 150 days | Katahdin, Dorper, St. Croix, Barbados Blackbelly |
| Primitive Breeds | 145 days | Shetland, Soay, Jacob, Hebridean |
| Custom | 138–155 days | User-defined |
Lambing Date Formula:
Days Since Breeding:
Days Remaining:
Pregnancy Stage Determination:
Early Pregnancy: Days Since ≤ Trimester Length Mid Pregnancy: Days Since > Trimester Length AND ≤ Trimester Length × 2 Late Pregnancy: Days Since > Trimester Length × 2 Late Pregnancy Final 3 Weeks: Days Remaining ≤ 21
Worked Example
Scenario: A Suffolk ewe (standard breed) was bred on October 1, 2025. Today is December 1, 2025.
Step-by-step calculation:
Identify breed type: Standard Wool/Meat → 147 days gestation
Breeding date: October 1, 2025
Calculate lambing date: October 1 + 147 days = February 25, 2026
Days since breeding: October 1 to December 1 = 61 days
Days remaining: December 1 to February 25 = 86 days
Trimester calculation: 147 ÷ 3 = 49 days per trimester
Days since (61) > 49 and > 98? No (61 ≤ 98) → Mid Pregnancy
Check approaching status: 86 days remaining > 14 → no orange warning
Interpretation: The ewe is in mid-pregnancy, 61 days along. According to the milestone grid:
At Day 60-70, her belly should be beginning to fill out
Udder development will begin around Day 90-100 (approximately December 29)
Lambs grow rapidly during Day 110-120 (mid-January)
The producer has 86 days (approximately 12 weeks) to prepare for lambing. The orange warning color will appear when 14 days remain (February 11, 2026) — signaling the start of close observation. At Day 130-140 (February 15-25), the ewe will “bag up” (udder fills) and the vulva will swell.
Hair sheep example: A Katahdin ewe bred on October 1, 2025. Select “Hair Sheep” → 150 days. Lambing date = February 28, 2026 (3 days later than standard breed).
The most frequent error is using the same gestation length for all breeds — hair sheep average 150 days (not 147). Another common mistake is not adjusting for litter size — ewes with twins/triplets often lamb earlier. Forgetting that first-time ewes may lamb later than mature ewes leads to missed preparation windows. Assuming single breeding date accuracy when the ewe may have been exposed to a ram over several days. Finally, failing to watch physical signs (bagging up, ligament relaxation) in addition to date calculations reduces preparedness.
A Dorset ewe (standard breed, 147 days) was bred on November 1. Using the calculator, due date is March 28.
December 6 (Day 35): Schedule ultrasound for pregnancy confirmation and fetal count
January 10 (Day 70): Administer CD&T booster
January 20 (Day 80): Begin increasing feed gradually
February 20 (Day 111): Notice udder development beginning
March 1 (Day 120): Gather lambing supplies, prepare lambing pen
March 14 (Day 133): Ewe begins “bagging up” (udder tight, full)
March 21 (Day 140): Check pelvic ligaments daily — still firm
March 25 (Day 144): Ligaments softening, vulva swelling
March 27 (Day 146): Calculator shows orange warning (day of? days remaining)
March 28 (Day 147): 4 AM — ewe separates from flock, pawing; 7 AM — twins delivered
The producer followed the milestone timeline, with the orange warning at Day 147 triggering increased observation.
Saves time — Instant lambing date calculation without manual date counting
Breed-specific presets — Standard (147d), Hair Sheep (150d), Primitive (145d)
Custom gestation — Set any length between 138-155 days
Stage tracking — Know early, mid, or late pregnancy with final 3-week alert
Visual milestones — Reference grid shows key management benchmarks
Lambing warning — Orange color at 14 days remaining signals close observation
Free to use — No premium version, subscriptions, or registration
Private — All calculations in your browser; no data transmitted
Accessible on any device — Works on phones, tablets, and computers
Countdown display — Days remaining helps with preparation deadlines
Shareable results — Copy or share timeline with veterinarian
The calculator provides estimates based on breed averages. Individual ewes may vary by ±3-5 days from the predicted lambing date. Hair sheep average 150 days, not 147. Ewes with multiples often lamb 2-5 days earlier. Use the calculator as a planning tool and watch physical signs (bagging up, ligament relaxation) for actual timing.
Without a known breeding date, lambing date estimation is difficult. A veterinarian can estimate gestation stage by:
Ultrasound with fetal measurements (Days 35-100)
Observation of udder development and physical signs (late pregnancy)
For future pregnancies, record breeding dates or expected lambing dates from ram turnout.
Prolonged gestation beyond 155 days is uncommon. If a ewe reaches Day 155 without lambing:
Verify breeding date accuracy
Consider possibility of single large lamb or small litter
Consult veterinarian — fetal oversize increases lambing difficulty risk
Most healthy ewes lamb within 142-152 days.
Research consistently shows hair sheep breeds (Katahdin, Dorper) average 150 days gestation, approximately 3 days longer than standard wool breeds (147 days). The reason is not fully understood but may relate to different selection histories — hair sheep were developed in tropical environments, while wool breeds originated in temperate regions with different seasonal breeding patterns.
Yes. Research shows ewes carrying twins or triplets often lamb 2-5 days earlier than those carrying singles. The calculator’s breed presets use averages. For known multiples (based on ultrasound), consider using the lower end of the normal range (145 days for standard breeds).
Schedule ultrasound at Day 35-45 post-breeding. This window allows:
Confirmation of pregnancy
Reliable counting of fetuses (important for nutrition planning)
Estimation of gestational age
Detection of uterine abnormalities
The calculator’s milestone “Day 30–35: Ultrasound confirmation possible” reminds producers of this timing.
Contact a veterinarian immediately if you observe:
Vaginal bleeding or discharge before Day 130
Signs of pregnancy toxemia (ewe separates from flock, tremors, blindness, recumbency)
Fever or lethargy
Premature udder development (suggests possible placentitis)
Straining or signs of premature labor
Ewe not eating for more than 24 hours
Set up 2-3 weeks before due date:
Clean, dry, well-bedded area with straw (minimum 5×5 feet per ewe, 6×6 for multiples)
Good lighting and ventilation without drafts
Temperature maintained 50-65°F (10-18°C)
Lambing supplies within reach: towels, lubricant, iodine, scale, heat lamp
Clean water available
Separate area for ewes that have lambed
The Day 130-140 milestone signals pen preparation.
Most reliable signs:
“Bagging up” — udder becomes tight, full, shiny — 7-14 days before
Milk secretion — colostrum may drip or spray — 24-48 hours before
Pelvic ligament relaxation — tail head area becomes soft and hollow — 12-24 hours before
Vulva swelling — elongated, reddened, relaxed — 12-24 hours before
Behavior changes — restless, pawing straw, separating from flock, off feed — 2-6 hours before
Temperature drop — below 101°F (38.3°C) — 12 hours before
The calculator’s orange warning at 14 days remaining helps producers start watching for these signs.
Lambs should nurse or be bottle-fed colostrum within the first 2 hours of life. Target intake: 50-100 ml per kg of birth weight within the first 6 hours (e.g., a 4 kg lamb needs 200-400 ml colostrum). The ewe produces colostrum for approximately 24 hours after lambing before milk transitions to regular milk. This calculator focuses on gestation — for lamb care resources, consult sheep management guides.
This sheep gestation calculator provides estimates for informational purposes only and does not constitute veterinary medical advice. Ovine gestation varies by individual ewe, breed, litter size, nutrition, and environmental factors. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for pregnancy confirmation, lambing assistance, and emergency situations. The milestones and timelines are general guidelines; individual ewes may show different signs or lamb at different times. This tool is for educational and farm management purposes only. Powered by Toolraxy — no data is stored or transmitted.
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