Shop Natural Dog Treats by Type
If you need something longer-lasting than a treat, see our natural dog chews collection — bone chews, meat chews, and dental chews for dogs who need more than a quick reward.
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Why Natural Dog Treats
Whether you're after small training treats that won't cause problems at volume, something longer-lasting for a dog who needs to be occupied, or single-ingredient options for a sensitive dog — everything here tells you exactly what you're feeding.
Our natural dog treats range includes brands we genuinely rate — JR Pet Products, Denzels, NAW — alongside our own Natural Cornish Dog Treats, made from Cornish whitefish and nothing else. We chose them the same way you're choosing now: by reading the label and deciding we were happy with what it said.
Based in Hayle, Cornwall, we've been sourcing natural pet food and treats since 2018. If you want help decoding an ingredient on any treat — ours or anyone else's — Decode the Label is free to use.
Natural Dog Treats — Frequently Asked Questions
What makes a dog treat natural?
What makes a dog treat natural?
A natural dog treat should contain ingredients you can identify — named meat sources, whole vegetables, or single-ingredient proteins with nothing added. The problem is that 'natural' isn't a regulated term in UK pet food labelling, so it can appear on products that still contain artificial preservatives, flavour enhancers, or anonymous 'meat and animal derivatives.' The most reliable way to check is to read the ingredient list: if you can't tell which animal the protein came from or what each ingredient is, the treat isn't as natural as the packaging suggests.
Are natural dog treats better for dogs with sensitive stomachs?
Are natural dog treats better for dogs with sensitive stomachs?
Generally yes, particularly single-ingredient treats where the protein source is clearly named. Many digestive reactions in dogs are caused by additives, preservatives, or undeclared ingredients rather than the meat itself. A treat made from 100% chicken or 100% lamb gives you a clean result — if your dog reacts, you know exactly what caused it. If they don't, you can build from there. Treats with long ingredient lists make elimination diets significantly harder to manage.
What are the best natural dog treats for dogs with allergies?
What are the best natural dog treats for dogs with allergies?
Single-ingredient treats made from novel proteins are the most useful starting point. Novel protein means a meat source your dog hasn't been regularly exposed to — ostrich, venison, rabbit, and duck are the most common options in the UK. Because there's no prior exposure, there's no established immune response to the protein. This doesn't mean the dog can never develop a sensitivity, but it's a genuinely clean starting point. Avoid treats that list 'poultry', 'meat', or 'animal derivatives' without specifying the species — these make it impossible to do proper elimination work.
What is a novel protein and why does it matter for dog treats?
What is a novel protein and why does it matter for dog treats?
A novel protein is a meat source a dog hasn't been regularly fed before. Most UK dogs have eaten chicken, beef, and lamb repeatedly from puppyhood — which means they've had repeated exposure and a higher chance of developing a sensitivity to those proteins. Ostrich, venison, rabbit, and duck are less commonly used in mainstream pet food, making them genuinely novel for most dogs. If you're trying to identify what's causing a skin, coat, or digestive reaction, switching to a novel protein treat is part of the diagnostic process.
Can I use natural dog treats for training?
Can I use natural dog treats for training?
Yes, and the format matters as much as the ingredient list. Training treats need to be small enough to use in volume without overfeeding, consistent enough in texture that they don't crumble mid-session, and valuable enough that the dog stays motivated. Single-ingredient soft treats — beef coins, chicken coins, venison sticks — work well because they're high in protein, low in fat, and don't cause digestive upset at the volumes needed for a full training session. Avoid anything with added sugars or high fat content if you're training daily.
Are natural dog treats grain free?
Are natural dog treats grain free?
Not automatically — 'natural' and 'grain free' are separate claims. A treat can be natural but still contain oats, barley, or rice as a binder. If your dog is on a grain-free diet due to sensitivity or a vet recommendation, check the ingredient list directly rather than relying on the 'natural' label. Most single-ingredient meat treats are grain free by definition — there's nothing to add grain to — but baked treats and training biscuits often contain grain even when they're marketed as natural.
What natural dog treats are good for dental health?
What natural dog treats are good for dental health?
Longer-lasting chews that require sustained jaw work provide the most meaningful dental benefit — the mechanical action of chewing helps reduce plaque build-up on tooth surfaces. Braided chews, ostrich bones, beef tails, and natural rubber chews all work differently and suit different chewing styles. Softer treats and small training treats have minimal dental benefit regardless of their ingredients. If dental health is a priority, look for chews with a texture your dog has to work at rather than treats that are consumed in seconds.
How many natural treats should I give my dog per day?
How many natural treats should I give my dog per day?
The standard guideline is that treats should make up no more than 10% of your dog's daily calorie intake. In practice this varies significantly by treat type — a small soft training treat is a fraction of the calories in a long-lasting bone chew. High-fat treats like ears and trachea should be limited further for dogs prone to weight gain or with a history of pancreatitis. If you're using treats heavily in training, reduce the main meal slightly to compensate. Single-ingredient treats with declared analytical constituents make this calculation easier because you know what the fat content actually is.
What's the difference between natural dog treats and raw dog treats?
What's the difference between natural dog treats and raw dog treats?
Natural dog treats are a broad category covering any treat made from minimally processed, recognisable ingredients — which includes air-dried, freeze-dried, baked, and dehydrated products. Raw dog treats specifically refer to unprocessed or minimally processed meat that hasn't been heat-treated. Air-dried treats occupy a middle ground: the drying process removes moisture and extends shelf life without the high heat of baking, preserving more of the natural protein content than conventional baked treats while being safer to handle than raw meat products.
Are natural dog treats safe for puppies?
Are natural dog treats safe for puppies?
Most are, but the format matters. Soft treats and small training rewards are suitable from weaning. Hard bone chews and dense meat chews should be introduced gradually and only once a puppy's teeth are developed enough to handle them — most manufacturers specify a minimum age, typically 12 weeks, and sometimes older for harder products. Supervise puppies with any chew product and introduce new treats one at a time so you can identify any reactions early. Puppy stomachs are more sensitive than adult dogs, so starting with single-ingredient treats makes it easier to manage.
What should I avoid in dog treats?
What should I avoid in dog treats?
The main things to look for and avoid: artificial preservatives (BHA, BHT, ethoxyquin), artificial colours (listed as E numbers in the 100–180 range), propylene glycol (a humectant used to keep treats soft, not permitted in cat food in the EU but still found in some dog treats), and added sugars or syrups. 'Meat and animal derivatives' as an ingredient declaration without species specification means you don't know what's in the treat. 'Natural flavouring' can mean almost anything. The shorter and more specific the ingredient list, the less there is to be concerned about.
Can natural dog treats help with anxiety?
Can natural dog treats help with anxiety?
Chewing itself has a calming effect on dogs — sustained rhythmic chewing releases endorphins and can reduce cortisol levels. This is why longer-lasting chews are often recommended for anxious dogs, dogs left alone, or dogs in high-stress situations like fireworks or vet visits. Some treats also contain specific calming ingredients — chamomile, valerian, L-tryptophan — which have evidence behind them at the right doses. The chewing mechanism works regardless of ingredients; the calming ingredients add a secondary layer for dogs who need more support. See our calming treats and supplements collection for options specifically formulated for anxiety.
How do I know if a natural dog treat is good quality?
How do I know if a natural dog treat is good quality?
Three things to check: first, is the protein source named (beef, chicken, ostrich) rather than categorised (meat, poultry, animal derivatives)? Second, are the analytical constituents declared — protein percentage, fat percentage, ash? Third, is the country of origin or sourcing information available? A brand confident in its sourcing will tell you where the meat comes from. One that won't is usually protecting flexibility to change suppliers without reformulating the label. If you want to check a specific ingredient, use our freeDecode the Label tool.

