Natural Dog Allergy Relief
In this article
Natural Dog Allergy Relief: How to Help Itchy Dogs with Skin and Stomach Issues
By Dr Duncan Houston
Quick Answer
Natural allergy relief for dogs starts with identifying the trigger, simplifying the diet, and reducing inflammation. Many itchy dogs improve with a properly managed elimination diet, limited ingredients, and support for both skin and gut health.
As a veterinarian, I see allergic dogs constantly, especially those with itchy skin, paw licking, recurrent ear infections, and soft stool that never quite seems to settle. The tricky part is that many owners are told to keep changing foods, when what usually works best is actually a simpler, stricter, more structured plan.
Why So Many Dogs Stay Itchy
When a dog is constantly scratching, licking, or getting repeated ear infections, there are usually a few main possibilities:
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Food allergy
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Food sensitivity
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Environmental allergy
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Flea allergy
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Secondary yeast or bacterial infections
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Skin barrier dysfunction
Food can absolutely be part of the problem, but it is not always the whole story.
Food Allergy vs Food Sensitivity
These are similar, but not identical.
Food allergy
A food allergy involves an immune response, most often to a protein the dog has been exposed to repeatedly.
Food sensitivity or intolerance
A food sensitivity tends to cause inflammation or digestive upset without the same immune mechanism.
Both can cause real symptoms such as:
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Itchy skin
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Paw licking
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Recurrent ear infections
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Vomiting
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Diarrhea
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Gas
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Red or inflamed skin
Common Food Triggers in Dogs
Some of the most common food ingredients linked to reactions include:
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Beef
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Chicken
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Dairy
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Wheat
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Egg
That does not mean these ingredients are bad for every dog. It just means they are common exposures and common triggers in dogs that are prone to food-related issues.
The Best Way to Work Out if Food Is the Problem
The gold standard is a proper elimination diet.
That means feeding:
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One carefully selected protein
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One simple carbohydrate if needed
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No random treats, chews, flavoured medications, or leftovers
This needs to be done consistently for at least 6 to 8 weeks, sometimes longer.
That part matters. A lot.
Because a diet trial that is 95 percent clean is often still a failed diet trial. One sneaky chicken-flavoured chew can ruin the whole detective story.
Best Natural Diet Options for Allergic Dogs
Novel proteins
A novel protein is one your dog is less likely to have eaten before.
Examples include:
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Kangaroo
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Venison
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Duck
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Rabbit
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Goat
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Fish
Using a protein your dog has had less exposure to can reduce the chance of triggering a reaction.
Simple carbohydrates
Not every allergic dog needs carbohydrates removed. In many cases, a simple, digestible carbohydrate works well during a diet trial.
Options may include:
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Sweet potato
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Pumpkin
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Oats
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Quinoa
The goal is not trendy. The goal is simple.
Whole Foods and Minimally Processed Diets
Many allergic dogs do well on natural, minimally processed diets because they:
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Make ingredient control easier
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Reduce unnecessary additives
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Allow more targeted feeding
That said, natural is not automatically allergy-friendly. A fresh food diet with the wrong protein is still the wrong diet.
The benefit comes from controlling ingredients properly, not from the label sounding fancy.
Gut Health Matters More Than People Realise
A lot of allergic dogs also have poor gut health.
That can show up as:
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Soft stool
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Gas
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Inconsistent appetite
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Chronic licking
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Skin flare-ups
The gut and immune system are closely linked, which is why supporting digestive health can help support the whole dog.
Prebiotics, probiotics, and postbiotics
A good gut support blend may help with:
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Stool quality
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Gut barrier support
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Microbiome balance
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Immune resilience
These are not magic fairy dust, but in the right dog they can be a very useful part of the plan.
Helpful Additions for Natural Allergy Support
Omega 3 fatty acids
These can help support:
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Skin barrier function
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Reduced inflammation
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Coat quality
Fish oil is often one of the most useful additions in itchy dogs.
Digestive support
Some dogs benefit from:
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Prebiotics
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Probiotics
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Postbiotics
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Digestive enzymes in selected cases
Gentle skin-supportive nutrition
Simple, balanced meals with the right fats and fewer irritants often help calm both the tummy and the skin.
What an Allergy Diet Might Look Like
A simple example could be:
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One novel protein such as kangaroo or rabbit
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One simple carbohydrate such as sweet potato
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Omega 3 support
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A properly balanced vitamin and mineral supplement if the diet is home prepared
The key is consistency. No extras, no cheats, no “just one little treat because he looked at me dramatically.”
And yes, they are all Oscar-worthy when treats are involved.
What to Avoid
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Changing diets too often
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Feeding treats that contain different proteins
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Giving table scraps
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Assuming grain free means allergy safe
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Using flavoured supplements or medications without checking ingredients
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Running an elimination diet for a week and declaring it a flop
Most failed allergy diets do not fail because the concept is wrong. They fail because the plan gets interrupted.
How Long Until You See Improvement?
A rough timeline looks like this:
Weeks 0 to 2
The gut may begin to settle, but itching can still continue.
Weeks 3 to 6
You may start seeing improvement in stool, ears, skin, and licking.
Weeks 6 to 8
You assess whether the diet has helped and whether structured reintroductions are appropriate.
Improvement is often gradual, not instant.
What If It Is Not Food?
This is common.
Many itchy dogs actually have:
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Environmental allergies
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Flea allergy dermatitis
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Secondary infections
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Yeast overgrowth
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Mixed allergy patterns
That is why a proper elimination diet is so useful. It helps rule food in or out instead of guessing forever and spending money on yet another “sensitive skin” bag that somehow still contains half the supermarket.
Final Thoughts
Natural allergy relief can work very well for itchy dogs, but only when it is done properly.
The biggest wins usually come from:
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Simplifying the diet
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Choosing ingredients carefully
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Supporting skin and gut health
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Being consistent long enough to get a real answer
The goal is not a perfect trendy diet. The goal is a calmer, less itchy, more comfortable dog.
FAQs
Can I cook at home for a dog with allergies?
Yes, but the diet needs to be simple, controlled, and properly balanced, especially if fed long term.
What if my dog improves a bit, but not completely?
Food may be part of the issue without being the whole issue. Environmental allergies are also very common.
Are hydrolysed diets always better?
Not always. They can work well, but some dogs improve just as much on a carefully selected natural limited-ingredient plan.
If you are tracking itching, ear flare-ups, stool changes, and diet ingredients, the ASK A VET™ app can help you keep everything organised and spot patterns more clearly.