Why Dog Food Matters More Than You Think
I'm a groomer, not a veterinarian. But after years of working with hundreds of dogs, I can tell you something with absolute certainty: I can feel what your dog eats the moment I put my hands on their coat.
Dogs on good food have soft, shiny coats that glide through the brush. Dogs on poor food have dull, brittle fur that breaks, mats easily, and often comes with flaky skin underneath. The difference is that obvious.
And it goes way beyond how they look on the grooming table.
What You Feed Your Dog Affects Everything
Dog food is not just fuel. It's the raw material your dog's body uses to build skin cells, grow coat, support joints, fight off infections, and maintain energy throughout the day. When that raw material is low quality, every system in your dog's body feels it.
Here's what nutrition directly impacts:
- Coat quality - A dog's coat is made almost entirely of protein. Without enough high-quality protein and essential fatty acids like omega-3 and omega-6, the coat becomes dry, thin, and prone to matting.
- Skin health - Itching, hot spots, chronic ear infections, and excessive shedding are often signs of nutritional gaps rather than allergies. Many owners spend hundreds at the vet before anyone asks what the dog is eating.
- Energy and behavior - Dogs on nutrient-poor food loaded with fillers and sugars can be sluggish, hyperactive in bursts, or generally "off." Proper nutrition supports steady energy and calmer behavior.
- Digestion - Cheap fillers like corn syrup, artificial colors, and unnamed meat byproducts are hard for dogs to digest. This leads to gas, loose stools, and poor nutrient absorption, which means even less of what they eat actually benefits them.
- Longevity - Studies have shown that dogs fed balanced, high-quality diets tend to live longer and develop fewer chronic health problems as they age.
When I groom a dog that's been switched to better food, I can usually tell within two or three visits. The coat gets thicker. The skin calms down. The shedding drops. It's one of the most visible health changes a dog owner can make.
What to Look For in Dog Food
You don't need a nutrition degree to pick decent dog food. But you do need to read the label, and you need to know what to look for.
Signs of Quality Dog Food
- Named protein as the first ingredient - "Chicken," "beef," or "salmon" should be listed first. Not "meat meal," not "animal byproducts," not "poultry." You should know exactly what animal it came from.
- Whole food ingredients you recognize - Sweet potatoes, peas, blueberries, flaxseed, chicken fat. If you can picture the ingredient, that's a good sign.
- Omega fatty acids - Look for fish oil, flaxseed oil, or named animal fats. These are what make your dog's coat shine and keep their skin healthy.
- No artificial colors or flavors - Your dog does not care if their kibble is red, yellow, or green. Dyes are there for you, not them, and some have been linked to health concerns.
- Transparent sourcing - Good brands tell you where their ingredients come from and how the food is made. If a company won't answer basic questions about sourcing, that's a red flag.
What to Avoid
The pet food industry is massive, and not all of it has your dog's best interest at heart. Some of the most heavily marketed brands are actually some of the worst when it comes to ingredient quality.
Red Flags on a Dog Food Label
- Corn, wheat, or soy as primary ingredients - These are cheap fillers that provide minimal nutritional value to dogs and are common allergens.
- Unnamed meat sources - "Meat meal," "meat byproducts," or "animal digest" could be anything. Literally anything. You have no idea what your dog is eating.
- BHA, BHT, or ethoxyquin - These are chemical preservatives that have raised health concerns in studies. Look for foods preserved naturally with tocopherols (vitamin E) instead.
- Added sugars or corn syrup - Some brands add sweeteners to make low-quality food more palatable. Dogs don't need sugar in their diet.
- Excessive ingredient lists - If the ingredient list is 40 items long and half of them are synthetic vitamins and minerals, it usually means the base ingredients are so nutrient-poor that everything has to be added back in artificially.
Sites like Dog Food Advisor are a great resource for researching specific brands and understanding ingredient quality ratings. They break down labels and rate foods based on what's actually in the bag, not what's on the marketing.
What I See on the Grooming Table
I groom the same dogs month after month. I know their coats. I know their skin. And I notice when something changes.
The dogs that eat well are easier to groom. Their coats don't mat as quickly between visits. Their skin doesn't flake when I brush them. They smell better. They have more energy during the groom without being anxious or wired.
The dogs on poor nutrition are the opposite. Their coats tangle within days of being groomed. Their skin is irritated, sometimes cracked. They shed excessively. And often, they're itchy and uncomfortable throughout the entire session.
I'm not judging anyone's budget. Good dog food costs more, and I understand that not everyone can afford the premium brands. But there are solid mid-range options that are worlds better than the cheapest bags on the shelf. Even a small upgrade in food quality can make a noticeable difference in your dog's coat and comfort.
The Grooming-Nutrition Connection
Here's something most people don't realize: grooming and nutrition work together. You can bring your dog to the best groomer in the world, but if the nutrition isn't there, the results won't last. The coat won't hold its shape. The skin will keep flaking. The matting will come back faster than it should.
On the flip side, a dog on excellent nutrition who gets regular grooming will have a coat that looks and feels incredible. The two things multiply each other's effects.
My Advice to Every Dog Owner
Talk to your vet about your dog's specific nutritional needs. Read the label on whatever you're feeding now. Compare it against a higher-rated food on Dog Food Advisor. And if you make a switch, do it gradually over 7 to 10 days by mixing the new food with the old.
Your dog can't choose what they eat. That's on us. And it's one of the most important decisions we make for them every single day.
It Starts in the Bowl
A beautiful coat starts with what goes into the bowl, not what happens on the grooming table. I can make any dog look great for a day. But if you want your dog to feel great every day, between grooms, for years to come, it starts with food.
Feed them well. They deserve it.
Ready to Book?
Give your pup the grooming experience they deserve.