Feeding Dogs with Allergies Naturally
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Feeding Dogs with Allergies Naturally: Best Diet Tips for Itchy Dogs
By Dr Duncan Houston
Quick Answer
Dogs with food allergies or food sensitivities can often improve on a simple, natural diet built around limited ingredients and a properly managed elimination trial. The goal is not to keep changing foods randomly. It is to use a controlled plan that helps identify triggers and reduce inflammation.
As a veterinarian, I see allergic dogs all the time, especially those with itchy skin, recurrent ear infections, paw licking, and chronic digestive upset. One of the biggest problems is not the allergy itself. It is the confusion created by constant diet switching, too many ingredients, and trialling foods without a proper plan.
Food Allergy vs Food Sensitivity
These terms are often used interchangeably, but they are not exactly the same.
Food allergy
A food allergy involves an immune response, most commonly to a protein source.
Food sensitivity or intolerance
A sensitivity usually causes digestive upset or inflammation without the same immune mechanism.
Both can cause real problems, and both can make dogs miserable.
Common Signs Your Dog May Have a Food-Related Issue
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Itchy skin
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Paw licking or chewing
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Recurrent ear infections
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Vomiting
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Diarrhea
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Excess gas
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Soft or inconsistent stool
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Red, inflamed skin
These signs can overlap with environmental allergies, which is why a proper diet trial matters.
The Most Common Food Triggers in Dogs
Common ingredients associated with food 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 foods are bad for all dogs. It just means they are common repeat exposures and common triggers in susceptible dogs.
The Best Way to Diagnose a Food Allergy
The gold standard is a strict elimination diet.
This means feeding:
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One novel or carefully selected protein
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One compatible carbohydrate if needed
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No extra treats, chews, flavoured medications, or random add-ons
This usually needs to be done for 6 to 8 weeks, sometimes longer depending on the case.
There is no shortcut here. If the diet is not strict, the results are unreliable.
Best Natural Diet Options for Allergic Dogs
Novel proteins
These are proteins your dog is less likely to have eaten before, such as:
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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
These are often good starting points for a natural elimination or limited-ingredient plan.
Simple carbohydrate sources
Not every allergic dog needs carbs removed, but simple 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 key is simplicity, not just choosing trendy ingredients.
Whole Foods and Minimally Processed Diets
Many allergic dogs do well on natural, minimally processed diets because they:
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Reduce unnecessary additives
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Make ingredient control easier
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Allow a more targeted feeding plan
That said, natural is not automatically hypoallergenic. A fresh diet with the wrong protein is still the wrong diet.
The benefit comes from simplicity and control, not just the label.
Helpful Additions for Dogs with Allergies
Omega 3 fatty acids
Omega 3s can help support:
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Skin barrier health
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Reduced inflammation
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Coat quality
Fish oil is often one of the most useful additions in allergic dogs.
Gut support
A good prebiotic, probiotic, and postbiotic blend may help support:
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Gut barrier function
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Stool consistency
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Immune balance
The gut and immune system are closely linked, so digestive support can be helpful in some allergy cases.
Digestive enzymes
These may help in selected dogs with concurrent digestive sensitivity, though they are not a cure for true allergies.
Example of a Simple Allergy Diet Structure
A natural allergy-supportive meal might include:
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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 chosen vitamin and mineral supplement if the diet is home prepared
This kind of plan needs to stay consistent during the trial period.
What to Avoid During an Elimination Diet
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Changing foods too soon
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Giving treats that contain different proteins
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Feeding table scraps
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Assuming grain free means allergy friendly
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Using flavoured medications or supplements without checking ingredients
This is where most elimination diets fail.
Owners often do 90 percent of the work properly, then one chew or treat wrecks the whole thing. Classic dog allergy sabotage.
How Long Does It Take to See Improvement?
A rough guide:
Weeks 0 to 2
Digestive system begins settling, but skin signs may still be present
Weeks 3 to 6
Stool, skin, and ears may begin to improve
Weeks 6 to 8
You assess whether the trial has helped and consider structured reintroductions if appropriate
Improvement is often gradual, not instant.
What If It Is Not a Food Allergy?
This is very common.
Many itchy dogs actually have:
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Environmental allergies
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Yeast overgrowth
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Flea allergy
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Skin barrier issues
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Secondary infections
That is why the elimination diet is so useful. It helps rule food in or out instead of just guessing.
Final Thoughts
Feeding allergic dogs naturally can work very well, but only when the plan is structured.
The answer is not throwing random expensive foods at the problem and hoping one wins.
It is about:
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Choosing simple ingredients
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Being consistent
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Giving the diet enough time
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Looking at the whole dog, not just the food bowl
FAQs
Can I cook at home for a dog with allergies?
Yes, but it needs to be simple, limited, and properly balanced, especially if fed long term.
What if my dog improves but does not get fully better?
That may mean food is part of the problem, but not the whole problem. Environmental allergies are also common.
Are hydrolysed diets always better?
Not necessarily. They can work well, but some dogs do just as well on a carefully selected natural limited-ingredient diet.
If you want to track ingredients, stool, itching, ears, and diet changes all in one place, the ASK A VET™ app can help you monitor patterns and make more confident decisions.