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    Affordable limited ingredient dog food for Staffies

    This is a specific conversation about Dog food for sensitive stomachs — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    Sensitive stomach issues in dogs usually fall into a few categories — food intolerance, ingredient sensitivity, or a gut that just needs a simpler diet — and identifying which applies is the key to finding the right food. It sounds like you may already have a lead on the culprit, which is a good position to be in. To point you in the right direction: what breed and age is your dog, what symptoms are you seeing — loose stools, vomiting, gas, or something else — and what have you tried feeding them so far?
    He's a 5-year-old Staffordshire Bull Terrier. We figured out a while back that egg sets him off — loose stools, a bit of gurgling, and he gets really gassy. We've been avoiding egg but it's in so many foods. I want something with a short ingredient list so it's easier to check, but I don't want to spend a fortune on it.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a really common frustration — egg is used as a binder and protein source in a surprising number of mainstream dog foods, so even when you're reading labels carefully it keeps showing up. For a Staffy with a confirmed egg sensitivity, a limited ingredient grain-free food built around a single protein source is exactly the right approach. It keeps the ingredient list short, makes label-checking straightforward, and removes a lot of the usual triggers. What are you currently spending per month on food roughly, and is he on wet, dry, or a mix?
    He's on dry kibble. We're probably spending around £25–£30 a month at the moment and I'd like to stay around there if possible.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a workable budget for a Staffy — they're not a huge dog, so a good quality bag goes a reasonable distance. My recommendation is Wainwright's Grain Free Adult Dry Dog Food with Salmon and Potato. It's a genuinely short ingredient list built around a single protein, contains no egg, no grain, no artificial additives, and it's made for sensitive stomachs specifically. A 6kg bag typically comes in at around £18–£22 on Amazon UK, which for a Staffy should last you most of the month. The salmon and potato formula is one of the more digestible combinations you can find at this price point — potato is gentle on the gut and salmon gives you good omega content, which also helps with the skin issues Staffies can be prone to. It's not a premium boutique brand, but the formulation is clean and the egg-free status is consistent, so you won't be second-guessing the label every time they change the recipe.
    That sounds really promising. Is there anything I should watch out for when switching him over to it?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — transition slowly over about 10 days, mixing increasing amounts of the new food with decreasing amounts of the old. Even when a new food is better suited to a dog, switching too fast can cause loose stools on its own, which can muddy the picture if you're trying to assess whether it's working. Start at around 25% new food for the first three days, 50% for the next three, 75% for three more, then fully switch. If his symptoms clear up within two to three weeks of being fully on the new food, you've likely found your answer. If things don't improve, it's worth keeping a brief food diary and talking to your vet about whether there's a secondary sensitivity at play.
    Really helpful, thank you. I'll give it a go.
    inparticular.ai
    Good luck with it — Staffies tend to respond well once you remove the offending ingredient and simplify the diet. If the symptoms clear up but then drift back after a few months, it's worth rechecking the formula in case anything has changed, as manufacturers do occasionally update recipes. But for most dogs with a single known trigger like egg, this kind of switch makes a noticeable difference fairly quickly.

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

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