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    Best food for a 10-week-old Toy Poodle

    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
    Starting a Toy Poodle puppy off on the right food at ten weeks is genuinely one of the best things you can do — tiny breeds have small, fast-running digestive systems and can react to rich or complex ingredients more easily than larger dogs. Sensitive stomach issues generally fall into a few categories: food intolerance, ingredient sensitivity, or a gut that simply does better on a simpler, more targeted diet. At this age, the goal is usually prevention rather than solving an existing problem. Can you tell me what symptoms, if any, you're already seeing — loose stools, wind, anything like that — and what you've been feeding so far, even if it's just what the breeder used?
    She's 10 weeks old, female Toy Poodle, about 1.1kg right now. No real symptoms yet — the breeder was feeding her a generic supermarket puppy food and I want to switch to something better before any problems start. I'm mainly worried about getting the portions right for such a tiny dog and whether she might develop sensitivities.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a smart position to be in — switching proactively before problems develop is much easier than trying to fix an upset stomach later. At 1.1kg and still growing, she'll have a very small stomach capacity and a fast metabolism, so the two things that matter most right now are caloric density (she needs enough energy in small volumes) and ingredient simplicity (fewer novel proteins and fillers means less chance of triggering a sensitivity). What is she currently eating from the breeder — do you know the brand, or is it just a supermarket own-label?
    I think it was just Pedigree puppy wet food. She's been on it about three weeks with no issues so far, but I don't want to stick with it long term.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — no issues on Pedigree tells us her gut isn't already inflamed or reactive, which means you have a clean slate to transition onto something better. For a Toy Poodle puppy this age, I'd go with Royal Canin Toy Puppy dry food. It's specifically formulated for toy breeds under 10 months, and that matters in a concrete way here: the kibble size is tiny and designed for a small jaw, the calorie content is calibrated so the portion guide on the bag is actually accurate for a dog her size (rather than a rough estimate built for a Labrador), and the protein and fat ratios are set to support steady growth without overloading digestion. It also contains a prebiotic blend that supports gut flora from early on, which is exactly the prevention angle you're after. Transition her over seven days — mix roughly 25% new food with 75% old on days one and two, then 50/50, then flip it, then fully switch. Given she's currently on wet food, you can moisten the dry kibble slightly with warm water for the first week to make the texture change easier.
    View Royal Canin Size Health Nutrition Adult on Amazon
    That sounds good. How much should I actually be feeding her at this weight — the bag guidance always seems quite vague for tiny dogs.
    inparticular.ai
    Royal Canin Toy Puppy is one of the better ones for this — the feeding guide on the bag is broken down by current weight and expected adult weight, so for a Toy Poodle with an adult weight around 2–3kg, you'd be looking at roughly 30–40g per day at her current size, split across three meals. Weigh it on a kitchen scale rather than using the scoop by eye — at this scale, a few grams either way is a meaningful percentage of her daily intake. Adjust slightly over the coming weeks as she grows, and if her stools become firmer and well-formed within two weeks of the switch, you've found the right amount. If she seems hungry or loses condition, nudge it up by 5g; if stools get loose, bring it down slightly and check she's not getting extras from elsewhere.
    Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll order the Royal Canin Toy Puppy and start the transition this week.
    inparticular.ai
    That's the right call. One last thing worth knowing: Toy Poodles can be prone to hypoglycaemia at this age because of their size, so if you ever notice her seeming wobbly, glassy-eyed, or unusually lethargic — especially between meals — offer a small amount of food straight away and speak to your vet. Three meals a day until she's around four months helps prevent that. Beyond that, you're set up well — a calm, proactive start like this is the best foundation she can have.

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

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