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Breeds Serviced

  • All equines

Coat Color


The basic coat color of a horse is determined by the following genes:
White (W), Gray (G), and E and A. The first two genes, W and G are dominant (need only one copy to produce the white or gray color). While these horses may contain genetic variations at the E and A locus, these variations cannot be determined by inspection of the coat or skin.

In the absence of one or two copies of the W or G genes, the coat colors of Bay, Chestnut/Sorrel and Black are controlled by variations at the E and A locus as seen in the following table. VetGen currently offers DNA testing for Black, Chestnut and Cream dilution. 

Genotype Coat Color
EEAA Bay/Wild Bay
EeAA Bay/Wild Bay
EEAa Bay/Wild Bay
EeAa Bay/Wild Bay
eeAA Red (Chestnut/Sorrel)
eeAa Red (Chestnut/Sorrel)
eeaa Red (Chestnut/Sorrel)
EEaa Black
Eeaa Black


All other colors are variations of the above core colors, and are controlled by other genes that have not yet been located and for which no test exists.

Coat Color Inheritance Chart for Horses


EEAA EeAA EEAa EeAa eeAA eeAa eeaa EEaa Eeaa
EEAA All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay All Bay
EeAA All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Red
All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Red
½ Bay
½ Red
½ Bay
½ Red
½ Bay
½ Red
All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Red
EEAa All Bay All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Black
¾ Bay
¼ Black
All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Black
½ Bay
½ Black
½ Bay
½ Black
½ Bay
½ Black
EeAa All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Red
¾ Bay
¼ Black
9/16 Bay
¼ Red
3/16 Black
½ Bay
½ Red
3/8 Bay
½ Red
1/8 Black
¼ Bay
½ Red
¼ Black
½ Bay
½ Black
3/8 Bay
¼ Red
3/8 Black
eeAA All Bay ½ Bay
½ Red
All Bay ½ Bay
½ Red
All Red All Red All Red All Bay ½ Bay
½ Red
eeAa All Bay ½ Bay
½ Red
¾ Bay
¼ Black
3/8 Bay
½ Red
1/8 Black
All Red All Red All Red ½ Bay
½ Black
¼ Bay
½ Red
¼ Black
eeaa All Bay ½ Bay
½ Red
½ Bay
½ Black
¼ Bay
½ Red
¼ Black
All Red All Red All Red All Black ½ Black
½ Red
EEaa All Bay All Bay ½ Bay
½ Black
½ Bay
½ Black
All Bay ½ Bay
½ Black
All Black All Black All Black
Eeaa All Bay ¾ Bay
¼ Red
½ Bay
½ Black
3/8 Bay
¼ Red
3/8 Black
½ Bay
½ Red
¼ Bay
½ Red
¼ Black
½ Red
½ Black
All Black ¾ Black
¼ Red


Once your horse has been tested and you know its genotype, use this table for breeding strategies and breeding stock selection. The outer ring of the color buttons shows the visible coat color. The inner rings show the hidden color genes carried by the horse. Entries in the table show the probabilities of producing various coat colors within a litter. For example, if your results show that your horse is a Genotype eeAa, your horse is a chestnut horse carrying the hidden genes for black. If you were to mate this horse with a Genotype EEaa, the resulting foal would, on the average, have a 50/50 chance of being black or bay.

These probabilities represent expectations averaged over the long run and are subject to the law of probabilities.

While a test for the W and G genes does not yet exist it should be noted that:
In the presence of the dominant allele W, a horse from birth will typically lack pigment in skin and hair. The skin is pink, the eyes brown (sometimes blue), and the hair white. Sometimes such a horse is called albino. The W allele is only rarely encountered. All non-white horses are ww. The homozygous condition (WW) is lethal

A young horse with a G allele will be born with any color but gray and will gradually become white or white with red or black flecks as an aged animal. Earliest indications of change to gray can be seen by careful scrutiny of the head of a young foal, since often the first evidence of the gray hairs will be seen around the eyes. In intermediate stages of the graying process, the horse will have a mixture of white and dark hairs, a most confusing stage for trying to identify color. In the later age, the hair color tends to become more silver.