⚠️ Educational only · Not veterinary advice

Information from public internet sources. Always consult your veterinarian β€” especially before changing your Frenchie's diet.

πŸ“‹ Quick Summary β€” 5 things to check on every bag
  • βœ… Named protein first (chicken, salmon, lamb) β€” not "meat" or "by-product"
  • βœ… Protein 25-30%, fat 12-15% on dry-matter basis
  • βœ… "AAFCO feeding tests" (NOT just "formulated to meet")
  • ❌ Avoid corn, wheat, generic "by-product"
  • ❌ Avoid peas / lentils in top 10 (FDA DCM concern)

Step 1 β€” Read the First Ingredient Like a Hawk

The first ingredient by weight should be a named animal protein:

  • βœ… chicken, beef, salmon, lamb, turkey, duck
  • ❌ "meat", "meat meal", "animal by-products", "poultry by-product meal", anything generic

Note on "meal": "Chicken meal" (named species + meal) is actually fine β€” concentrated, water-removed protein. Whole Dog Journal: preferable for top-two slots because fresh chicken is ~70% water that boils off during kibble extrusion.

So "chicken" listed first PLUS "chicken meal" in top 3 = stronger protein backbone than "chicken" alone.

Step 2 β€” Check the Macros (Dry-Matter Basis)

The Guaranteed Analysis on the bag is "as-fed" β€” to compare honestly, do dry-matter conversion (subtract moisture, divide).

Targets for an adult Frenchie:

  • Protein: 25-30% (AAFCO minimum 18% β€” that's a floor, not a target)
  • Fat: 12-15% β€” Frenchies are pancreatitis-prone, so lower end. Pancreatitis history: <10% DM
  • Carbs: prefer whole grains (oats, brown rice, barley) over white potato or excessive legumes
  • Fiber: ~3-5% β€” supports stool quality, especially anal-gland prone breeds

Step 3 β€” FDA DCM Caution (Still Active 2024-2025)

The FDA paused public updates, but the link between grain-free diets high in peas, lentils, chickpeas, and other pulses and dilated cardiomyopathy is NOT closed.

2025 review (Veterinary Sciences MDPI) + Tufts Petfoodology:

  • Avoid peas/lentils/legumes in the top 10 ingredients
  • Especially when substituting for animal protein
  • 2018-2019 FDA data: 93% of reported DCM cases involved peas and/or lentils

Watch for Protein-Splitting

"Pea protein" + "pea fiber" + "pea starch" + "lentils" stacked in the top 10 = padding the protein number with plant sources. Walk away.

Step 4 β€” Read the AAFCO Statement (CRITICAL)

Two statements exist on bags. They are NOT equal:

πŸ₯‡ GOLD STANDARD

"Animal feeding tests using AAFCO procedures substantiate that [Product] provides complete and balanced nutrition…"

= Food was actually fed to real dogs and tested.

πŸ₯ˆ WEAKER

"Formulated to meet the nutritional levels established by the AAFCO Dog Food Nutrient Profiles…"

= Lab math only. No live dog ever ate it for verification.

Always pick "feeding tests" when you can. Most boutique brands cannot afford feeding trials β€” that itself is diagnostic information.

Step 5 β€” The WSAVA Filter (Ask the Manufacturer)

World Small Animal Veterinary Association criteria:

  1. Full-time qualified nutritionist with PhD in animal nutrition or board certification (ACVN in US, ECVCN in Europe)? "Consults with a vet" is NOT the same.
  2. Who formulates the recipes + their credentials?
  3. Where it's manufactured β€” own facility or co-packer? Own = more QC.
  4. What QC protocols? Ingredient testing for contaminants, finished-product nutrient verification, microbiological testing.
  5. Will they share full nutrient analysis beyond the guaranteed analysis on the label, including caloric density and average nutrient values?
  6. Do they publish peer-reviewed research? Major manufacturers contribute to journals. Boutique brands typically don't.

If a company won't answer these in writing, that IS your answer.

Step 6 β€” Country of Origin (Less Critical Than You Think)

A bag stamped "Made in USA" with no nutritionist on staff is WEAKER than a transparent EU brand with a board-certified ECVCN nutritionist + full QC disclosure.

Provenance is a marketing word; manufacturing rigor is what matters.

Step 7 β€” The 75/20/5 Topper Approach

πŸ“ A common nutritionist recommendation

This 75/20/5 ratio is a popular feeding recommendation cited by independent canine nutritionists and Whole Dog Journal β€” it is not a peer-reviewed clinical guideline. Some research suggests adding fresh whole food alongside kibble may be associated with health benefits, but exact ratios are not standardized.

Common owner formula:

  • 75% high-quality kibble base
  • 20% fresh real food (lean cooked chicken/turkey, sardines in water, scrambled egg, plain canned pumpkin, blueberries, steamed green beans)
  • 5% functional add-on (bone broth, fish oil, plain kefir)

Stay under ~25% topper to avoid imbalancing the nutritionally complete kibble base.

Step 8 β€” How to Read a Bag in 60 Seconds

  1. First three ingredients β€” named meats, no anonymous "by-products"
  2. AAFCO statement β€” feeding test or formulated-only?
  3. Top 10 ingredients β€” count the legumes; more than two = yellow flag
  4. Guaranteed Analysis β€” protein high enough, fat in range
  5. Manufacturer name β€” Google "[brand] WSAVA full-time nutritionist"

If the answer to that last Google check is a website with a real PhD photo and credentials = contender. If it's a marketing page with "we love dogs" = keep walking.

πŸ“– Sources & References

  1. WSAVA Selecting Pet Food guide (Tufts). Tufts.edu
  2. AAFCO Nutrient Profiles. AAFCO.org
  3. Whole Dog Journal β€” Best Dry Dog Food criteria. Whole-Dog-Journal.com
  4. FDA DCM investigation. FDA.gov
  5. Tufts Petfoodology DCM update. Tufts.edu
  6. 2025 DCM narrative review (MDPI). MDPI.com

⚠️ Disclaimer

This page is educational only. We are not veterinarians. Information from publicly available internet sources.

Nothing on this website replaces a veterinary consultation.
  • Never give your dog supplements or change their diet without veterinary approval, especially with health conditions.
  • Frenchies have unique health risks β€” work with a vet experienced in brachycephalic breeds.