How to Check Your Horse’s Pulse
- Monika L Haskell
- Jul 31, 2017
- 2 min read
A pulse is the rhythmic contraction and expansion of an artery due to the surge of blood from the beating of your horse’s heart. Taking your horses pulse measures the rate and strength of his heartbeat. A faster than normal pulse indicates exertion, excitement or system wide stress from conditions such as colic, fever or other trauma.

The normal pulse rate range for adult horses (ages 4-20) is 30-40 beats per minute (bpm), with an average of 36 for Thoroughbreds and warmbloods. Drafts and Quarter horse types often average a little lower: between 32-34 bpm. A foal’s pulse ranges from 70-120 bpm and yearlings from 45-50 bpm. Following moderate exercise, a horse’s pulse rate should increase to 180-240 bpm. It should fall to 60 bpm within 10 to 20 minutes of rest, then slowly return to normal.
Taking your horse’s pulse when he’s healthy will give you a baseline to know when he’s not. To find your horse’s average resting pulse rate, take it daily or every other day for at least a week using the method I describe below. Add the results and divide the number of times you took the pulse to get an average. The reason for doing this is because exercise, environmental temperatures, stress, excitement or physical condition can affect the pulse rate.
Process
Standing at your horse’s left side, use your fingertips to feel the space along your horse’s jawbone under his cheek for a cordlike structure about the thickness of a pencil. It is located directly below and slightly behind the front corner of your horse’s eye. This is his transverse cavil artery and you will feel it move around under his skin.
Curl your middle and ring fingers toward your palm, gently pressing the cord against the inside of his left jawbone. (Don’t use your thumb otherwise you will feel your own pulse.)

Once you feel his pulse, count the number of beats you feel while looking at the second hand on your watch to note when 15 seconds has elapsed. Multiply the number of pulses you count by four. This will give you your horse’s total bpm.
Happy Riding!

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