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    Boston Terrier regurgitation: best tilted bowl fix

    This is a specific conversation about Dog bowls and feeders — more important than you think — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Frequent regurgitation in a Boston Terrier is really common and almost always comes down to how they eat rather than what they eat — that flat face means they're scooping air with every mouthful, and a standard deep bowl makes it worse. Tilted bowls have genuinely helped a lot of brachycephalic dogs by changing the angle of approach, but the bowl depth and width matter just as much as the tilt. Before I point you toward anything specific, can you tell me a bit more about what's happening — how often is the regurgitation occurring, does it happen during eating or shortly after, and what bowl are you using right now?
    It happens pretty much every meal, usually within a few minutes of finishing. She eats really fast and then brings it back up. She's using a normal stainless steel bowl at the moment, just on the floor.
    inparticular.ai
    That pattern — fast eating followed by regurgitation within minutes — is very typical for Boston Terriers and it's telling you two things: she's swallowing too much air because of her anatomy, and she's eating faster than her oesophagus can manage. A flat bowl on the floor is probably the worst combination for her specifically. The angle means she's straining her neck down and scooping, which pulls in more air. Has she been seen by a vet about this, or is it something you've been managing at home? I want to make sure we're not dealing with something like megaoesophagus before recommending a fix.
    The vet checked her out about six months ago and said it's likely just her breed and the way she eats — no structural issues found. They mentioned trying a different bowl but didn't get specific.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — that's reassuring, and it means a bowl change is exactly the right next step. For a Boston Terrier with her exact profile — fast eater, brachycephalic, post-meal regurgitation — I'd go with the Neater Pet Brands Neater Feeder Express for small dogs. It's not a tilted bowl in the traditional sense, but it has a raised, angled feeding position that keeps her head at a slightly elevated angle rather than nose-down, and it has built-in overflow channels so any spilled water doesn't create a wet mess. More importantly, it slows the eating pace just enough through the positioning change without using raised maze-style obstacles that can frustrate flat-faced dogs. It's widely available on Amazon UK, solidly built, and the raised height means less air gulping. Pair it with feeding smaller portions two or three times a day instead of one full meal and you should see a real improvement within a week.
    View Neater Feeder Express on Amazon
    That sounds promising. Would a dedicated slow feeder bowl not be better though? I've seen those maze ones advertised a lot.
    inparticular.ai
    Honestly, for most dogs yes — but for Boston Terriers specifically, maze slow feeders often cause frustration and don't solve the core problem, which is air intake due to anatomy rather than pure speed. With a flat-faced dog, the issue is the angle of eating and the depth of the bowl as much as the pace. Maze feeders also tend to be deep, which forces a brachycephalic dog to push their face down into the ridges — that actually increases air swallowing. If you want to slow her down further, licki mats work brilliantly for that without any of those downsides, and they can complement the Neater Feeder nicely. But for the regurgitation specifically, fixing the angle and position is the higher-priority change.
    That makes a lot of sense. I'll give the Neater Feeder a go and maybe pick up a licki mat too. Thanks — this has been really helpful.
    inparticular.ai
    Great — I think you'll notice a difference quickly, especially combined with smaller more frequent meals. Give it a couple of weeks to see the full effect, since she'll need a few days to adjust to the new setup. If the regurgitation continues at the same frequency after that, it's worth going back to the vet just to rule out anything else, but for most Boston Terriers in exactly her situation, this combination sorts it out. Good luck with her.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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