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Natural Dog Food collection, fresh ingredients, naturally preserved.

Collection: Natural Dog Food

Most "premium" dog food sold in the UK is built around marketing rather than nutrition. The packaging shows happy dogs running through fields and the front label promises wholesome ingredients. Then you turn the bag over and find wheat, maize, or soy in the first three ingredients, with "meat and animal derivatives" listed somewhere below them. The word "premium" doesn't mean what most people think it means.

A genuinely natural dog food does the opposite. It names the protein clearly — freshly prepared chicken, deboned salmon, lamb meal — rather than hiding it behind generic terms. It puts meat first by weight, ideally between 50% and 80% of the recipe. It avoids the cheap fillers that bulk out mainstream foods at the expense of digestion, skin health, and long-term wellbeing. There are fewer ingredients on the label, and you can pronounce all of them.

Every food on this page is grain-free, traceably sourced, and chosen because we feed it to our own dogs first.

162 products

Symply Senior Feast wet dog food box with meadow-raised lamb, brown rice, carrots

Symply Senior Feast Wet Dog Food

Regular price From £2.99
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Symply Turkey Bake Adult Wet Dog Food box on orange background

Symply Turkey Bake Adult Wet Dog Food

Regular price From £2.99
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Symply Grain-Free Variety Pack Wet Dog Food Box with Salmon Oil

Symply Variety Pack Grain Free Wet Dog Food

Regular price £33.99
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Symply Variety Pack Wet Dog Food box with salmon oil, brown rice, green packaging and dogs

Symply Variety Pack Wet Dog Food

Regular price £33.99
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Tribal’s Fresh Pressed Adult Chicken Dog Food Bag

Tribal Fresh Pressed Adult Chicken

Regular price From £21.49
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Tribal’s Fresh Pressed Adult Salmon cold pressed digestible kibble

Tribal Fresh Pressed Adult Salmon

Regular price From £23.49
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Tribal Fresh Pressed grain free dog food with fresh turkey flavor
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Adult Turkey

Regular price From £21.49
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Puppy Chicken bag with fresh chicken flavor
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Puppy Chicken

Regular price From £20.99
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Puppy Turkey bag of grain free fresh turkey dog food
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Puppy Turkey

Regular price From £21.49
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Senior Light dog food bag with cold pressed fresh chicken flavor
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Senior/Light chicken

Regular price From £21.49
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Senior Light Dog Food bag with cold pressed fresh turkey and green-white design
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Senior/Light Turkey

Regular price From £21.49
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Small Breed Duck cold-pressed complete dog food bag
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Tribal Fresh Pressed Small Breed Duck

Regular price From £15.99
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Yora Dog Active Bar 35g with Hermetia Illucens Larvae Protein

YORA Dog Active Bar 35g

Regular price £2.99
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Yora Dog Adult All Breeds bag with grubs and Hermetia illucens larvae for healthy joints

YORA Dog Adult All Breeds

Regular price From £14.99
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Yora Dog grain-free insect-powered nutrition bag with Yora’s Grubs for all breeds

YORA Dog Adult Grain Free

Regular price From £15.99
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Yora Dog Adult Large Breed bag with Yoras grubs and hypoallergenic slow release nutrition

YORA Dog Adult Large Breed

Regular price From £14.99
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Yora Dog Adult Small Breed with yora’s grubs for fussy dogs

YORA Dog Adult Small Breed

Regular price From £15.49
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Yora Dog Light/Senior bag with blue/white packaging, insect imagery for joint care and brain health

YORA Dog Light/Senior

Regular price From £14.99
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Yora Dog Pate Beetroot balanced insect based wet food box with colorful fruit and vegetable illustrations on blue background

YORA Dog Pate Beetroot & Swede 390g

Regular price £2.99
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Yora Dog Pate Carrot 390g: Insect-Based Wet Food with Balanced Diet

YORA Dog Pate Carrot & Potato 390g

Regular price £2.99
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Yora Dog Pate Parsnip and Apple 390g with insect based wet food on blue background

YORA Dog Pate Parsnip & Apple 390g

Regular price £2.99
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Yora Puppy food bag with hypoallergenic Hermetia illucens larvae nutrition

YORA Puppy

Regular price From £15.49
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Buying Guide 

What to look for in natural dog food

Most "premium" dog food sold in the UK is built around marketing rather than nutrition. The packaging shows happy dogs running through fields, the front label promises wholesome ingredients, and the price suggests quality. Then you turn the bag over and find wheat, maize, or soy in the first three ingredients, with "meat and animal derivatives" listed somewhere below them.

A genuinely natural dog food does three things differently:

It names the protein clearly. Look for "freshly prepared chicken" or "deboned salmon" rather than "meat and animal derivatives" or "poultry meal". If you can't tell what animal the protein came from, the manufacturer probably doesn't want you to know.

It puts meat first, by weight. Dogs are descended from wolves and thrive on a meat-based diet. The first listed ingredient should be a named protein, ideally with a percentage. Anything below 30% meat content is closer to a cereal-based food with meat flavouring.

It avoids fillers. Wheat, maize, and soy are cheap bulking ingredients with limited nutritional value for dogs and high allergenic potential. They're in mainstream foods because they're cheap, not because they help your dog.

Cold-pressed dry food

Cold-pressed dry food

Cooked at low temperatures to preserve nutrients, doesn't swell in the stomach, and is gentler on sensitive digestive systems than traditional kibble. Better for dogs prone to bloat, sensitive stomachs, or fussy eaters. Tribal is the established UK option.

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Traditional grain-free kibble

Traditional grain-free kibble

Extruded at high heat but built around high-quality named meat sources with vegetables and botanicals replacing grains. The most convenient option for everyday feeding. Canagan, Eden, and our own Aflora range sit in this category.

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Natures Variety Delicious Freeze Dried Dog Foods

Freeze-dried raw

The closest you can get to feeding raw without the freezer logistics. Raw meat with the moisture removed, single-protein options, shelf-stable. Best for owners curious about raw feeding but wanting practicality. Natures Menu's freeze-dried range is well-established here.

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Eden Natural Wet Food for Working and Sporting Dogs: Country Cuisine

Wet food

Higher moisture content, often used to add variety to a dry diet or for dogs who don't drink enough water. Most natural brands offer wet recipes alongside their dry ranges.

Shop Wet Dog Food

How much to feed

Feeding amounts depend on weight, age, activity level, and the calorie density of the specific food. As a rough starting guide for adult dogs:

  • Toy breeds (under 5kg): 50–100g per day
  • Small breeds (5–10kg): 100–180g per day
  • Medium breeds (10–25kg): 180–350g per day
  • Large breeds (25–40kg): 350–500g per day
  • Giant breeds (over 40kg): 500–700g per day

These are starting points. Each food has its own feeding guide on the bag based on its calorie content. Adjust based on your dog's body condition — you should be able to feel ribs without pressing hard, and there should be a visible waist when viewed from above.

Frequently asked questions

What does "grain-free" actually mean, and is it always better?

Grain-free means the food contains no wheat, maize, rice, oats, or barley. Grains are replaced with vegetables and pulses such as sweet potato, peas, or lentils. For dogs with grain sensitivities — itchy skin, recurring ear infections, loose stools — grain-free can make a meaningful difference. For dogs without those sensitivities, grain-free isn't automatically better, but high-quality grain-free foods tend to also be higher in meat content, which is the more important factor.

How much meat should be in a good dog food?

The minimum standard for a genuinely natural dog food is around 30% meat content, but the better foods sit between 50% and 80%. Eden's 80/20 range contains 80% meat and is one of the highest on the market. Aflora is 60–65%. Canagan is around 50%. Anything below 30% is more accurately described as a cereal-based food with meat flavouring. Always look for the percentage stated on the bag, and check that it refers to fresh meat rather than meat meal.

What's the difference between cold-pressed and extruded dog food?

Extruded food is cooked at high temperatures and pressures, which is the standard kibble manufacturing method. It's efficient but can destroy nutrients and creates kibble that swells in the stomach when wet. Cold-pressed food is cooked at much lower temperatures, preserving more of the original nutrient content and producing a kibble that breaks down slowly without expanding. Cold-pressed is gentler on sensitive stomachs and dogs prone to bloat. Both can be excellent — the right choice depends on your dog.

How do I switch my dog to a new food without upsetting their stomach?

Always transition gradually over 7–10 days. Start with 25% new food mixed with 75% old food for two days, then 50/50 for two days, then 75/25, then fully on the new food by day 7 or 8. If your dog has a particularly sensitive stomach, extend each stage to 3–4 days. Sudden food changes are the most common cause of digestive upset in dogs — slow transitions almost always solve the problem before it starts.

What are "meat derivatives" and why should I avoid them?

"Meat derivatives" or "animal by-products" are catch-all terms used when the manufacturer doesn't want to specify what animal the meat came from or which parts were used. They can legally include feet, beaks, hooves, and tissues that contribute very little nutrition. A reputable natural dog food names its protein source clearly: "freshly prepared chicken", "deboned salmon", "lamb meal". If you can't identify the animal, you're paying for filler, not nutrition.

Is hypoallergenic dog food the same as grain-free?

Not quite. Grain-free means no grains. Hypoallergenic means the food avoids ingredients commonly known to trigger allergic reactions in dogs — typically wheat, soy, beef, dairy, and sometimes chicken. A grain-free food may not be hypoallergenic if it still contains other common allergens. A truly hypoallergenic food uses limited, novel proteins (lamb, duck, fish) and avoids the most common triggers. If your dog has confirmed sensitivities, look specifically for "hypoallergenic" or "limited ingredient" descriptions, not just "grain-free".

How do I know if a dog food is actually working for my dog

Give any new food at least 6–8 weeks before judging it. Look for: shinier coat, firmer stools, more stable weight, calmer digestion, more consistent energy. The signs of a food not working are usually obvious within a few weeks: itchy skin, ear infections returning, loose or inconsistent stools, weight gain or loss without portion changes, lethargy, or fussy eating. If your dog has been on a food for two months and shows ongoing issues, the food probably isn't right for them — even if the label looks perfect.