Deworming is the kind of routine task that is easy to put off and then lose track of - was it three months ago, or five? PetHealthLog lets you log each treatment with its date, see when the next one is due, and keep deworming, vaccines, weight and vet visits on a single timeline - free, with no account, and it works offline.
Start tracking - it's freeDeworming sits in an awkward spot. It is important enough to keep up, but spaced out enough - every few months for many adult dogs - that it is easy to lose the thread. By the time you wonder whether a dose is overdue, the last date has usually vanished into a calendar you no longer have or a packet you threw away. A puppy makes it harder still, with a tighter early schedule of treatments to get through before settling into a routine.
The cost of guessing is either doubling up sooner than needed or letting a treatment slide longer than intended, and neither is what you want. A vet can give clear guidance on how often to deworm, but that advice only works if you actually know when the last dose was given.
A dog deworming schedule tracker turns that one nagging question into a date you can see. PetHealthLog keeps it simple: it is free, asks for no account, and works offline, so the next-due date is there whether you are at home, at the clinic, or away for the weekend.
A treatment log only helps if it is fast to update and easy to read. Here is how PetHealthLog handles both for a dog's worming routine.
Record every deworming treatment by name with the date it was given. The history builds up on its own, so you never have to reconstruct it from a vague memory or a row of empty packets.
Set how often a treatment repeats and the tracker shows the next due date. The question stops being "has it been long enough?" and becomes a clear date you can plan around.
A puppy's frequent early treatments and an adult dog's routine schedule live on the same timeline, each with its own interval, so the record carries through every stage of the dog's life.
Worming does not sit alone. Keep vaccines, vet visits and weight on the same private timeline, so when you are at the clinic the whole preventive-care picture is in one place rather than scattered.
Export a clean PDF of your dog's records, including deworming history and recent weight, to take to the vet. The appointment starts from an accurate history instead of a guess.
How often a dog should be dewormed, and which product to use, depends on the dog's age, lifestyle, and where you live - a puppy, an adult dog with a garden, and a dog that hunts or scavenges can all have different needs. Some products target specific parasites, and timing can matter alongside flea and tick prevention. These are decisions for your veterinarian, who knows the local risks and your dog.
PetHealthLog does not set the worming schedule and it does not recommend a product. It gives you a reliable place to record what your vet has advised and what you have actually given, so the plan is followed and the next dose is not forgotten. Which wormer, how often, and any change should always come from your vet.
A dog's preventive-care routine does not pause for a weak signal. You might be checking the next worming date before a trip, logging a dose at a relative's house, or pulling up the history at a clinic counter. An app that needs a login and a live connection can stall in exactly those moments.
PetHealthLog stores everything locally on your device. There is no account to create, nothing is uploaded to a server, and there is no tracking. It opens instantly, shows the next-due dates whether or not you are online, and keeps the data yours. Because it lives only on your device, you can export a backup any time and restore it on another phone.
Free, offline, and ready the moment you open it.
Start with PetHealthLogLog each DHPP and rabies dose in a puppy's series with its date and see when the next shot is due, alongside the deworming schedule.
Log DHPP, rabies and other dog and cat vaccines and see when the next booster is due, on the same offline record as worming.
For an older dog on several long-term medications - schedule each one, catch missed doses, and keep meds, weight and vet visits on one offline timeline.
Follow a kitten's every-two-weeks early deworming by age, log each wormer dose with its date, and see when the next treatment is due.