Symptom Guide • Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM
Limping in Boxers
Limping (medical name: lameness) is favoring one or more legs due to pain or weakness. It can be sudden from injury or develop gradually from chronic conditions like arthritis. Most mild limping resolves with rest, but persistent limping needs evaluation.
About Boxers
Energetic, playful, muscular medium-large dogs with short coats and shortened muzzles. Active and athletic but with notable cardiac and oncologic risks.
Health predispositions in Boxers
- Boxer cardiomyopathy
- Aortic stenosis
- Mast cell tumors and other cancers
- Brachycephalic airway syndrome (milder than Bulldogs)
- Skin allergies
- Hip dysplasia
Predispositions don't mean your individual Boxer will develop any of these conditions. They just mean these are seen more often in the breed than in the general dog population.
Common causes of limping
These are common causes across all breeds, including Boxers:
- Soft tissue strain or sprain
- Paw pad injury (cuts, burns, foreign objects)
- Torn or strained ligament (e.g. CCL/ACL in dogs)
- Joint inflammation or arthritis
- Bone fracture
- Hip or elbow dysplasia (breed-related)
- Intervertebral disc disease
- Lyme disease or other tick-borne illness
- Some bone cancers (more common in large breeds)
Red flags — call a vet immediately
- ⚠ Refusing to bear any weight on the leg
- ⚠ Visible deformity, swelling, or open wound
- ⚠ Severe pain on palpation
- ⚠ Sudden inability to stand or walk
- ⚠ Limping that gets worse over hours
Any of these in your Boxer means stop reading the internet and call a vet or go to an emergency clinic. RexVet can help triage by video if you're not sure — but emergencies need in-person care.
When telehealth works — and when it doesn't
A RexVet video visit is appropriate for: mild intermittent limping that comes and goes, suspected arthritis flare-ups in known cases, post-rest stiffness, and follow-up care after a previous diagnosis.
Start a $64.99 video visit →In-person care is needed for: sudden non-weight-bearing lameness, visible deformity or open wound, suspected fracture, severe pain, and any case where X-rays are needed for diagnosis.
What you can do at home for your Boxer
- 1 Strict rest (no running, jumping, or stairs)
- 2 Check the paw and between toes for foreign objects
- 3 Apply a cool compress for the first 24 hours of swelling
- 4 Never give human pain medications (acetaminophen and ibuprofen are toxic)
- 5 Document the limp on video to show your vet — it helps with localization
Not sure if it's serious?
Talk to a licensed RexVet veterinarian by secure video. For $64.99, you'll get a real opinion on your Boxer's limping — and same-day prescriptions through RexVetRx if needed.
Book a vet visit — $64.99Limping in Boxers
Frequently asked questions
Is limping normal in Boxers?
Isolated, mild limping can happen in any dog including Boxers. What matters is the pattern and severity. Boxers have some breed-specific predispositions — boxer cardiomyopathy and aortic stenosis are common — so it's worth running anything persistent past a licensed vet.
When should I worry about my Boxer's limping?
Red flags to call a vet immediately: Refusing to bear any weight on the leg; Visible deformity, swelling, or open wound; Severe pain on palpation. If your Boxer shows any of these, treat it as urgent — don't wait.
Can a RexVet online vet help with limping in my Boxer?
Yes for many cases. A RexVet video visit is appropriate for: mild intermittent limping that comes and goes, suspected arthritis flare-ups in known cases, post-rest stiffness, and follow-up care after a previous diagnosis. A RexVet video visit costs $64.99 and a licensed vet can prescribe medications, suggest in-home care, or tell you when in-person care is required.
What can I do at home for my Boxer's limping?
Until you can speak with a vet: Strict rest (no running, jumping, or stairs); Check the paw and between toes for foreign objects; Apply a cool compress for the first 24 hours of swelling. Never give human medications to your pet without veterinary guidance.
Are Boxers more likely to get limping?
Boxers have some breed-specific health predispositions — including Boxer cardiomyopathy, Aortic stenosis, Mast cell tumors and other cancers — that may make certain symptoms more common. A licensed vet can tell you whether what you're seeing is breed-related or something else.
When does my Boxer need to be seen in person instead of online?
In-person care is needed for: sudden non-weight-bearing lameness, visible deformity or open wound, suspected fracture, severe pain, and any case where X-rays are needed for diagnosis.
Limping in other breeds
Other symptoms in Boxers
Medical review by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM
Chief Executive Officer & Lead Veterinarian, RexVet. Licensed in Florida, New York, and Virginia.
This page is an educational reference and does not replace veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian about your individual pet's symptoms.