Your dog can't tell you the food isn't working. But their body does โ constantly, through signals most owners either miss or attribute to something else. Chronic scratching gets blamed on allergies. Loose stools get dismissed as a passing thing. Dull coat gets chalked up to the season. Often, the real cause is simpler: the food.
Here are the signs that your dog's current diet isn't serving them well โ and what each signal actually means nutritionally.
1. Chronic Itching and Skin Problems
Skin is the largest organ, and it's one of the first places nutritional deficiencies and food intolerances show up. If your dog is constantly scratching, licking paws, rubbing their face, or has recurring hot spots, the diet is a serious suspect.
What it usually means: Food allergy or sensitivity (most commonly to beef, chicken, dairy, wheat, or eggs) โ or omega-3 deficiency. Try an elimination diet โ our sensitive stomach guide covers the full protocol under vet guidance, or switch to a novel protein โ explained in detail in our sensitive stomach article food (duck, venison, or salmon). Add fish oil and assess within 8 weeks.
When it's not food: Environmental allergies (grass, pollen, dust mites) produce similar symptoms but are typically seasonal. If itching is year-round and worse after eating, suspect food first.
2. Persistent Loose Stools or Diarrhea
One loose stool after a dietary change is normal. Chronic loose stools โ more than 2 weeks โ are not. Neither is mucus in stool, blood-streaked stools, or stools that are consistently very soft even without obvious dietary changes.
What it usually means: Poor ingredient quality, too much fat for that individual dog, a specific ingredient intolerance, or insufficient fiber. Some dogs do poorly on certain protein sources regardless of quality. Switching proteins often resolves chronic digestive issues without any other change.
Red flag: Black or very dark stools indicate possible upper GI bleeding โ see a vet immediately regardless of diet.
3. Dull, Dry, or Brittle Coat
A healthy dog's coat should be shiny, smooth, and soft. Dullness, excessive shedding beyond seasonal norms, brittle fur, or a coat that looks "wiry" when it shouldn't are all dietary signals.
What it usually means: Omega-3 fatty acid deficiency (extremely common), zinc deficiency, or poor overall protein quality. The fix is usually fish oil supplementation โ 1,000mg EPA/DHA per 10kg body weight daily. Results typically visible within 4โ6 weeks.
4. Excessive Gas
Some gas after eating is normal. Constant, severe flatulence is not. If your dog clears the room regularly, their digestive system is telling you something is wrong with what they're eating.
What it usually means: Highly fermentable ingredients (certain legumes, soy, or fillers), poor ingredient digestibility, or a specific food intolerance. Dogs are not evolved to digest large amounts of plant matter โ foods heavy in pea protein, lentils, or chickpeas often cause significant gas in sensitive dogs.
5. Constant Hunger (Food Obsession)
A dog who finishes meals instantly and then acts ravenous 20 minutes later may not be overeating โ they may be malnourished by a food that's filling their stomach without meeting their nutritional needs.
What it usually means: Food too low in protein or fat, which doesn't trigger the satiety response properly. Or insufficient total calories for their activity level. Check the caloric density of your current food and compare to recommendations for your dog's weight and activity.
Exception: Labradors carry a genetic mutation that suppresses satiety signals. They'll always seem hungry. Don't interpret this as a dietary problem without other corroborating signs.
6. Low Energy and Lethargy
A dog who was previously energetic and playful but now seems flat, slow to get up, or disinterested in play could be underfuelled, not just aging.
What it usually means: Caloric deficit, poor macronutrient balance (too few fats for energy), or deficiency in B vitamins that support cellular energy production. Rule out medical causes first (thyroid, pain, anemia), then evaluate diet.
7. Unexplained Weight Changes
Weight gain without increased food intake, or weight loss despite a good appetite, are both dietary red flags โ though medical causes must be ruled out first.
Weight gain: Food too calorie-dense for their activity level, or portions creeping up. Recalculate daily calorie needs for current weight and activity.
Weight loss despite eating: Could be EPI (especially in German Shepherds), parasites, malabsorption, or food with inadequate caloric density. Get a vet check before assuming it's dietary.
โ ๏ธ Always rule out medical causes firstMany of these signs overlap with genuine medical conditions โ hypothyroidism, allergies, IBD, parasites, kidney disease. Don't change diet instead of seeing a vet. Change diet AND see a vet if symptoms persist more than 2โ3 weeks.
How to Switch Foods Correctly
Once you've identified the problem and chosen a new food, the transition matters. Switching too fast causes digestive upset that can mask whether the new food is actually better.
- Days 1โ3: 75% old food, 25% new food
- Days 4โ6: 50/50
- Days 7โ9: 25% old food, 75% new food
- Day 10+: 100% new food
Allow 8โ12 weeks on the new food โ our feeding guide explains how to calculate correct portions on the new food before evaluating coat changes. Digestive improvements should be visible within 2โ4 weeks.
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Generate Your Dog's Plan โThe Bottom Line
Your dog communicates nutritional problems through their skin, coat, stool, energy, and weight. Chronic itching, loose stools, dull coat, excessive gas, constant hunger, lethargy, and unexplained weight changes are all dietary signals worth taking seriously. Rule out medical causes, then systematically evaluate the food. The right diet change often resolves what months of symptomatic treatment couldn't.