Most healthy dogs on a complete diet don't need a cabinet full of pills. But a few targeted supplements genuinely earn their place.
The honest rule
A “complete and balanced” food already covers baseline vitamins and minerals. Supplements are about targeting a specific issue — not topping up a good diet. No issue to target? Save your money.
The ones that tend to be worth it
Omega-3 oil — skin, coat & inflammation
The most universally useful. A dull coat or itchy skin often improves within weeks with Wild Salmon Oil.
Probiotics — sensitive stomachs
Loose stools, gas or a sensitive gut? Gastro Pro Plus can rebalance digestion.
Joint support — large breeds & seniors
Glucosamine and chondroitin (Joint Support Plus) support cartilage. Start before stiffness sets in.
Dental support — the dog who won't tolerate brushing
A daily topper like Plaque Control reduces tartar and breath odor.
When to skip — or ask your vet first
Stacking products that duplicate the same nutrients.
Adding supplements your dog shows no need for.
Any supplement for a pregnant dog, a dog on medication, or with a health condition — check with your vet.
Introduce one supplement at a time and give it 3–4 weeks. If you can't tell whether it's helping, it probably isn't the right one.
The honest bottom line: Supplements should target a real need — coat, gut, joints, dental — not pad out a good diet. Add one at a time, and loop in your vet.