The best food for a working dog is a complete, energy-dense recipe built around plenty of quality named meat or fish, with enough good fat to fuel sustained activity and enough protein to repair muscle. You judge that by the ingredients, not the marketing on the front of the bag. Whether your dog is a gundog, a sheepdog, a search-and-rescue partner, or your canicross teammate, the principles are the same. Here's what an active dog's body actually needs, how to choose well, and how to feed safely around hard work.
A hard-working dog burns through energy in a way a snoozy sofa dog never will, and the food has to keep up. Here's what matters, in plain terms.
Energy density. An active dog needs more energy from the same-sized bowl, not just a bigger pile of low-energy food. Richer, meatier recipes pack more fuel into each mouthful.
Fat as the main fuel. Dogs are brilliant at burning fat for steady, long-lasting energy, which is exactly why active dogs tend to thrive on richer, higher-meat food.
Quality protein. Hard work breaks muscle down, and good-quality protein is what repairs and maintains it between outings.
Vitamins, minerals, and omega-3. These support recovery, joints, and a weatherproof coat, all of which take a battering in a working dog.
We're deliberately not throwing numbers at you here, because the right balance depends on the individual dog. The sensible benchmark is food built to recognised standards, like the FEDIAF nutritional guidelines that complete dog foods are formulated to meet (FEDIAF, 2024). Get the quality right and the food does the heavy lifting, a point our ambassador and TV vet Dr Scott Miller makes often.
Here's a nuance most guides skip: working dogs aren't all doing the same job, and their fuel needs differ. It's worth feeding for the work in front of you.
A dog doing short, intense bursts, think a gundog with a sprint-and-rest kind of day, has slightly different demands from an all-day endurance worker like a hill shepherd's dog or a canicross partner. Endurance workers lean even more heavily on fat for stamina, because that slow-burning fuel is what keeps them going mile after mile. The simple rule of thumb: the harder and longer the work, the more energy-dense the diet needs to be, always adjusted to the individual dog in front of you.
Weather plays its part too. A dog working outdoors through a cold, wet British winter burns extra energy just staying warm, on top of the work itself, so the same dog can genuinely need more food in January than in June. Cold, hard-working days are exactly when an energy-dense, meatier recipe earns its keep.
If your dog is a genuinely high-output endurance athlete, it's worth a chat with your vet about whether a specialist higher-energy formula is the right call. There's no shame in asking, and it's the responsible way to fuel a dog working at the top end.
This is where a bit of label literacy pays off. Turn the bag over and you can spot quality fast. Here's the checklist.
A named meat or fish as the main ingredient, like chicken, lamb, or salmon, rather than vague "meat and animal derivatives."
A high overall meat content, because that's where the quality protein and fat your dog runs on come from.
Complete for your dog's life stage and made to FEDIAF standards, so it's nutritionally sound as a full diet.
Free from fillers and artificial nasties, which add bulk but not much fuel.
Built-in omega-3 and joint support, ideally, to look after hard-working bodies.
The throughline is simple: read the back of the bag, not the front. If you'd like a shortcut, our Working Dog Food collection is built around exactly these principles.
This is the bit that genuinely matters for safety, and it's one too many guides leave out. How you feed around exercise can be a serious health issue, not just a performance one.
Don't feed a big meal right before or right after hard exercise. Eating and then exerting, or gulping food and water around activity, is linked to bloat, also known as GDV (gastric dilatation-volvulus), a life-threatening condition where the stomach fills with gas and can twist (PDSA). It's most associated with deep-chested breeds, but it's worth every working-dog owner understanding. A few practical habits lower the risk:
Leave a gap of about an hour or more either side of hard work before a full meal.
Feed smaller meals across the day rather than one big bowl.
Slow down fast eaters with a slow feeder or by scattering food.
Keep fresh water available, but don't let your dog gulp a huge amount in one go around exercise.
One thing to be crystal clear on: GDV is an emergency. If you see a swollen, hard belly, unproductive retching, drooling, or obvious distress, call your vet straight away. Minutes matter.
Peak performance comes from a lean dog, not a bulked-up one. Carrying extra weight strains joints and saps stamina, which is the last thing a working dog needs.
Aim for lean. You should be able to feel the ribs easily under a light covering, with a visible waist when you look down from above. That's the at-a-glance condition check (PDSA).
Feed to the workload. A dog in a hard winter or a busy working season may need a little more, while the off-season usually calls for less. Feeding the same amount all year round is how working dogs quietly gain or lose condition.
Adjust by feel, not habit. Use the feeding guide on the pack as a starting point, then tune it to the dog and check in with your vet if you're unsure.
It's worth thinking about rest days, too. A working dog that's flat out on Saturday but resting on Sunday doesn't need the same bowl both days, so easing the portion back on quiet days helps keep condition steady. After a really big day, a gentle way to top up is to spoon a little wet food over dinner, which tempts a tired dog who's gone off their food and adds a bit of moisture and extra fuel for recovery.
We're keeping this light on exact amounts on purpose, because the right quantity depends on your dog, the season, and the work. The feeding guide on the pack and your vet are your best reference.
Here's our honest steer. Our recipes are built on exactly what active dogs need: at least 50% freshly prepared meat and fish, human-grade ingredients from farmers we know and trust, no nasties and no fillers. That's nourishment that may help support strong muscles and steady energy through a hard day's work.
If you're after a quick pointer, these are the ones we'd reach for:
Everyday favourites: Bowl Lickin' Goodness in chicken or lamb, solid all-rounders for active dogs.
For dogs braving the elements: salmon dry dog food salmon, with salmon oil to help support skin and coat.
For active dogs with sensitive tummies: fish dry dog food fish, built around easily digestible white fish.
For picky eaters: duck dry dog food, with a tasty homemade duck gravy.
For larger breeds: Big Foot, with bigger kibble and added joint support.
For the ultimate dinner: a slow-cooked wet dog food pouch spooned on top.
Browse the full Working Dog Food collection to find the right fit, and keep a few rewards from our range of dog treats handy for training. No hard sell, just proper food for hard-working dogs.
Leave a gap of about an hour or more either side of hard work before a full meal, and avoid one big bowl in favour of smaller meals across the day. It's also wise to stop your dog gulping a large amount of water right around activity.
Both matter, but fat is the main fuel for sustained activity, so active dogs do well on richer, meatier recipes. Protein's job is repair, and quality counts more than simply piling it higher.
Feed to body condition rather than a fixed amount: you should feel the ribs easily and see a waist. Nudge the portion up a little in a hard working season and back down in the off-season.
Not automatically. What matters is a high-quality, energy-dense recipe with named meat or fish, whether or not it contains grain. Some working dogs do perfectly well on good grain-inclusive food, so choose on overall quality.
Often the support is already built into a good food, so extra supplements aren't a given. If your dog is older, very high-output, or showing stiffness, ask your vet before adding anything rather than guessing.
A complete puppy food appropriate to their eventual size, fed for steady growth rather than rapid bulk, which protects developing joints. Resist the urge to over-supplement or over-exercise a growing pup, and bring in working-level nutrition as they mature.
FEDIAF. (2024). Nutritional guidelines for complete and complementary pet food for cats and dogs. European Pet Food Industry Federation. https://europeanpetfood.org/self-regulation/nutritional-guidelines/
PDSA. (n.d.-a). GDV (gastric dilatation volvulus) in dogs. https://www.pdsa.org.uk/pet-help-and-advice/pet-health-hub/conditions/gdv-gastric-dilatation-volvulus-in-dogs
PDSA. (n.d.-b). Your dog's diet. https://www.pdsa.org.uk/pet-help-and-advice/looking-after-your-pet/puppies-dogs/your-dogs-diet
Here's what an active dog's body actually needs, how to choose well, and how to feed safely around hard work.
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