
If your vet, Reddit's r/DogFood, and Healthline all point to the same brand, that's not a coincidence. Purina Pro Plan is the wet food you can trust without second-guessing.
What holds up
- Meets WSAVA Global Nutrition Guidelines, one of only a handful of brands that does
- Backed by feeding trials and robust quality-control programs
- Formulated with input from board-certified veterinary nutritionists
- Widely available at pet stores, grocery stores, and online via Chewy or Amazon
What to know
- Some formulas contain chicken by-products, which some owners prefer to avoid
- Shredded texture in some varieties is disliked by certain dogs
- Pricier than store-brand wet foods
Most of their foods carry an AAFCO statement, meaning they provide the essential nutrients pets need for their specific life stage. Their products are developed with input from pet nutrition experts, supported by feeding trials, and backed by quality-control and research programs.
Purina, Iams, Eukanuba, Hills, Royal Canin. Check out r/DogFood. Do a deep dive if you want. But here's the gist.
I just use small amounts of freshly cooked (unseasoned) meat at home or use ProPlan canned food.
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