This is a specific conversation about Dog supplements — what's actually worth it — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
An 11-year-old Pomeranian with dental problems — that's a specific situation that actually does make supplement form matter quite a lot. Before I point you anywhere, let me say upfront: the supplement market for dogs is enormous and mostly unnecessary. Most healthy dogs on a complete diet don't need them, and the ones that do usually need something targeted rather than a broad multivitamin. But a senior small breed with dental issues is one of those cases where something specific can genuinely help. So tell me — what's prompting the interest right now? Is it joints, coat, energy levels, or something else you've noticed? And has your vet flagged anything at her last check?
She's slowing down a lot — struggles to get up from lying down, seems stiff in the mornings. The vet mentioned her joints but didn't really recommend anything specific. She can't really chew anything anymore because of her teeth so tablets and those chewy treats are out.
inparticular.ai
That morning stiffness and trouble rising is very typical joint deterioration in older small breeds — Pomeranians are prone to it, and at 11 she's genuinely senior. The good news is that joint support is one of the few supplement categories where there's decent evidence, particularly for omega-3s and glucosamine. The form issue you've raised is real and important — a lot of joint supplements come as chews or large tablets, which are useless to you here. What I'd want to know: is she still eating wet food happily, or is she off her food generally? And is she on any medication from the vet, just so I'm not pointing you toward anything that could interact?
She eats wet food fine, no problem there. No medication, the vet just said to keep an eye on it and come back if she gets worse.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — wet food is actually your best friend here because you can stir a liquid supplement straight in and she'll never know it's there. Given what you've described — senior Pomeranian, joint stiffness, dental issues ruling out chews — I'd go with YuMOVE Senior Liquid. It's made specifically for older dogs, combines glucosamine, green-lipped mussel, and omega-3s in one liquid dose, and you just add it to her food. The senior formula has higher concentrations than the standard version, which is what you want at her age. It's widely available on Amazon UK, reasonably priced for a monthly supply, and the liquid format means no wrestling with tablets or worrying about whether she's actually swallowing a chew. Give it a consistent 6 weeks before judging — joint supplements don't work overnight, but the evidence behind green-lipped mussel in particular is solid enough that it's worth the trial.
That sounds really practical. Is there anything else I should be adding, or is that enough on its own?
inparticular.ai
Honestly, start with just that one thing. The instinct to pile on supplements is understandable when you're worried about an older dog, but more isn't better — it muddies the water and you won't know what's actually helping. YuMOVE Senior Liquid covers joint support and has omega-3s included, so you're not missing anything obvious. The one thing I'd circle back to with your vet is the dental situation itself — pain from teeth can make dogs look more lethargic and reluctant to move than their joints alone would explain. If the dental issues are being managed, great. If not, that might be worth addressing because it can genuinely affect her overall quality of life and make everything else harder to assess.
Really good point about the teeth — I'll bring that up. Thanks, this has been really helpful.
inparticular.ai
Good luck with her. At 11 with a small breed you've likely got more good years ahead than you think — Pomeranians are tough little dogs. The liquid supplement should make life easier for both of you, and getting the dental pain properly addressed could make a noticeable difference to how she moves and feels day to day. Hope she's more comfortable soon.