This is a specific conversation about Dog food — finding the right one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Choosing the right dog food is genuinely complicated — the best option depends on your dog's age, size, breed, and health, and the most expensive or heavily marketed bags are often not the right fit for every dog. To point you in the right direction: what breed and age is your dog, are there any health issues or sensitivities I should know about, and what are you currently feeding them?
He's a 6-year-old Rottweiler, no health problems that I know of. I'm currently feeding him a branded large breed dry food but honestly it's getting really expensive and I need to find something cheaper. He's about 50kg and very active.
inparticular.ai
That's helpful, thank you. A 50kg active Rottweiler at six is in his prime adult years — he doesn't need anything special like a senior formula yet, just solid nutrition with good protein, appropriate fat levels, and adequate joint support given his size and weight. Before I give you a specific suggestion, is he currently doing well on his food — good coat, solid stools, good energy? And roughly what are you spending per month at the moment?
Yeah he's doing great on his current food, no issues at all. I'm spending around £60-70 a month which just isn't sustainable for me right now. I'd love to keep him on something decent but I really need to bring that cost down.
inparticular.ai
Understood, and that's a very reasonable position — £60-70 a month for one dog adds up fast. Given that he's healthy and thriving, there's no reason you need to stay at that price point. The honest truth is that a lot of the premium branding is marketing rather than nutrition. My recommendation for your situation is Wagg Complete Adult Dry Dog Food — the large 17kg bag. It's a no-frills complete dry food with decent protein from chicken, added vitamins and minerals, and it's formulated for adult dogs. For a 50kg Rottweiler you'd be feeding roughly 500-600g a day depending on activity, so a 17kg bag lasts you around 28-30 days. You're looking at roughly £18-22 for that bag on Amazon, which brings your monthly cost down dramatically. It won't have the glossy ingredients list of your current food, but it's a legitimate complete diet and plenty of large breeds do very well on it. The main thing to watch when switching is to transition gradually over about a week — mix increasing amounts of the new food with the old to avoid any stomach upset.
That sounds like a huge saving. Is it actually nutritionally okay for a big dog like him though? I don't want to cut costs at the expense of his health.
inparticular.ai
It's a fair concern and the right question to ask. Wagg is a PFMA member and meets the standards for a complete adult dog food — meaning it's formulated to cover all your dog's daily nutritional requirements without needing anything added. For a healthy, active adult Rottweiler with no known sensitivities, it's genuinely adequate. The main difference between budget and premium foods is often ingredient sourcing and palatability rather than whether they meet nutritional requirements. If after a month or two you notice any changes — coat losing condition, energy dropping, loose stools that don't settle — that's your signal to reassess. But many owners on tighter budgets use Wagg long-term without issues. You're not compromising his welfare by making a practical choice here.
That's really reassuring. I'll give it a try. Thanks for being straight with me rather than just pushing something expensive.
inparticular.ai
That's what this is for. Transition him slowly, keep an eye on how he looks and feels over the first few weeks, and trust what you observe. He sounds like a well-looked-after dog — this change should work out fine.