Food Allergy In Dogs – The Reality
Food allergy is a real but often misunderstood condition in dogs:
- Prevalence: ~10-20% of allergic dogs (vs atopic dermatitis 70-80% of allergic cases)
- Most common allergens: BEEF (most common), dairy, chicken, lamb, fish, wheat, soy
- Grain allergy is RARE despite the marketing (and grain-free diets have FDA-investigated DCM concerns)
- Diagnosis requires elimination diet — blood/saliva “allergy tests” are NOT validated and produce unreliable results
- Signs: cutaneous (itching, ear infections, hot spots, perianal); some have GI signs (chronic diarrhoea, vomiting); often year-round (vs seasonal atopic)
This calculator tracks your dog’s 8-12 week elimination diet trial.
The Gold Standard – Elimination Diet
Protocol Overview
8-12 weeks of STRICT adherence to either:
- Novel protein — single protein the dog has NEVER eaten before
- Hydrolysed prescription diet — protein chemically broken into peptides too small to trigger immune response
Why 8-12 Weeks?
- Most dogs respond by week 4-8
- Some need full 12 weeks for highest diagnostic sensitivity
- 2-week adaptation period at start where signs may not improve (or transiently worsen)
- Strict adherence essential — single accidental exposure RESETS the clock
Diet Options
Hydrolysed Prescription Diet (Generally Preferred)
Protein broken into fragments too small for immune system to recognize:
- Most reliable for elimination trials
- Consistent and predictable ingredients
- No risk of cross-reactivity with novel proteins
Major products:
- Hill’s Prescription Diet z/d — common, hydrolysed chicken liver
- Hill’s z/d Ultra Allergen Free — newer formulation
- Royal Canin Hypoallergenic HP — hydrolysed soy
- Royal Canin Anallergenic — ultra-hydrolysed (smaller fragments)
- Purina Pro Plan HA — hydrolysed chicken
Cost: USD 60-120/month for medium dog (significant ongoing expense if long-term).
Novel Protein Diet
Single protein the dog has never eaten:
- Kangaroo (Australian/USA)
- Venison
- Rabbit
- Single-protein fish (e.g., whitefish only)
- Duck
- Less common: horse, ostrich, alligator
Challenges:
- Truly novel difficult — many commercial diets now contain exotic proteins
- Home-cooked formulation challenging — needs veterinary nutritionist
- Cross-contamination at processing plants
- More expensive than typical commercial food
Home-Cooked Elimination Diet
Single-protein + single-carb home-cooked:
- Requires veterinary nutritionist consultation
- Balanced formulation challenging
- Time-intensive preparation
- More accurate in some ways but logistically demanding
STRICT ADHERENCE Rules
Trial validity depends on absolute compliance:
Allowed
- Only the elimination diet for 8-12 weeks
- Water
- Approved treats matching diet (some prescription diets have matching treats)
NOT Allowed
- No treats unless approved by vet
- No table scraps
- No flavored medications (heartworm pills typically flavored — check or use unflavored)
- No rawhides or chew toys containing food
- No flavored toothpaste during trial
Environmental Exposure
- Other pets’ food — separate feeding
- Kids’ dropped food — strict supervision
- Dog park treats from other owners
- Dropped food at home
Single accidental exposure RESETS the clock — trial must continue 8-12 weeks from last exposure.
What Makes A Trial Valid
Pre-Trial Setup
- Treat secondary infections first (Malassezia, pyoderma, ear infections cause independent itching)
- Pause anti-pruritic meds ideally 2-4 weeks before trial (Apoquel, Cytopoint, steroids)
- Maintain flea control (flea allergy can mimic food allergy)
- Baseline PVAS itch score (0-10) for objective comparison
- Photograph affected skin areas for visual record
During Trial
- Weekly PVAS tracking
- Photograph monthly for visual comparison
- Vet rechecks at weeks 4, 8, 12
- Manage secondary infections if they occur
- Document any compliance lapses with dates
Key Tools
- PuppaDogs PVAS (Itch Severity Calculator)
- PuppaDogs Allergy Flare Diary for tracking
- CADESI-4 lesion score (vet-administered)
Response Interpretation
Significant Improvement (≥3 point PVAS reduction)
Food allergy strongly supported:
- Continue diet
- Consider re-challenge to identify specific allergens
- Or continue elimination diet long-term
Moderate Improvement (2-point reduction = MCID)
Likely food allergy but milder:
- Continue diet
- Run trial full 12 weeks for confirmation
- Consider re-challenge protocol
Mild Improvement (1 point or less)
Below MCID:
- Continue trial
- Address compliance issues
- Check for secondary infections
- May not be food allergic
No Change At 12 Weeks (Strict)
Food allergy unlikely:
- Investigate atopic dermatitis (PuppaDogs Itch Severity + Allergy Diary)
- Consider intradermal/serology allergy testing for environmental allergens
- ASIT (allergen-specific immunotherapy) option
- Investigate: parasitic (sarcoptes), flea allergy, endocrine, primary seborrhoea
Re-Challenge Protocol
After successful 8-12 week elimination:
Why Re-Challenge
- Identifies specific food allergen
- Allows return to normal commercial food avoiding identified allergens
- More cost-effective than lifelong prescription diet (sometimes)
Method
- Add ONE NEW INGREDIENT to elimination diet (e.g., chicken)
- Maintain otherwise strict elimination
- Watch for sign recurrence for 1-2 weeks per ingredient
- If no return of signs → ingredient is SAFE
- If signs return → that ingredient is an ALLERGEN
- Wash out 1-2 weeks before testing next ingredient
Common Allergens To Test First
- BEEF (most common in dogs)
- CHICKEN
- DAIRY
- LAMB
- FISH
- WHEAT
- SOY
- CORN (less common than popular myth)
Document Each Test
- Ingredient tested
- Start and end dates
- Reaction/no reaction
- Severity
Build personal allergen profile for the dog’s lifetime.
Alternative: Skip Re-Challenge
Continue elimination diet long-term:
- Acceptable if quality of life good on prescription diet
- Avoids risk of triggering reaction during re-challenge
- Cost trade-off: prescription diet USD 60-120/month vs commercial USD 30-60/month for medium dog
What Food Allergies Are NOT
NOT “Grain Allergy” Typically
- Grains are less common allergens than meats
- “Grain-free” marketing is largely fad
- FDA-investigated link between grain-free / boutique / exotic-protein diets and DCM in dogs
NOT Same As Atopic Dermatitis
- Both cause itching but:
- Atopic = environmental allergens (pollen, dust mites, mold)
- Food allergy = food protein
- Atopic is more common (70-80% of allergic dogs)
- Atopic typically seasonal initially (food allergy year-round)
NOT “Sensitive Stomach” Alone
- Chronic GI may be food allergy OR may be:
- IBD (inflammatory bowel disease)
- EPI (exocrine pancreatic insufficiency)
- Parasites (giardia, hookworm)
- Infectious causes
NOT Cured By Switching Commercial Brands
- Same proteins often recurring across brands
- “I tried 5 different foods” rarely valid trial without strict adherence
Concurrent Treatment During Trial
Secondary Infections
Treat Malassezia, pyoderma, ear infections alongside diet trial:
- They cause itching independent of allergy
- Confound results if not addressed
- See PuppaDogs Pyoderma + Malassezia calculators
Anti-Pruritic Meds
Ideally minimize to see true diet response:
- Some specialists pause Apoquel/Cytopoint 2-4 weeks before
- Others continue and look for whether dose can decrease
- Steroids pause ideal but check with vet
Flea Control
Maintain rigorous flea control:
- Flea allergy dermatitis mimics food allergy
- Continue monthly preventive during trial
- Isoxazoline class (Bravecto, NexGard, Simparica, Credelio) ideal
Parasite Workup If GI Signs
- Rule out giardia, hookworm, etc.
- Faecal exam before/during trial
- Treatment as appropriate
Cost Considerations
Prescription Diet Long-Term
- $60-120/month for medium dog
- $720-1,440/year
- Lifetime if continued: substantial
Trial Costs
- Diet for 12 weeks: $180-360
- Vet visits: $200-500 for trial monitoring
- Total trial cost: $400-800
After Successful Trial
- Continue prescription diet: substantial ongoing cost
- Successful re-challenge: may allow return to commercial avoiding identified allergens
After Positive Trial – Options
1. Continue Elimination Diet Long-Term
- Acceptable if quality of life good
- Some dogs maintain on prescription diet permanently
- Avoids re-challenge risk
2. Re-Challenge To Identify Specific Allergens
- Allows return to normal commercial food avoiding identified allergens
- More work but more flexibility
- Cost savings if commercial food can be used
3. Annual Re-Check
- Monitor with vet
- Adjust as needed
- Some dogs develop new allergies over time
After Negative Trial – Investigation
Atopic Dermatitis Workup
- Serology or intradermal allergy testing
- ASIT (allergen-specific immunotherapy) — 60-80% response rate
- PuppaDogs Itch Severity Calculator
- Multimodal management: Apoquel/Cytopoint/cyclosporine
Flea Allergy Dermatitis
- Rigorous flea control
- Monthly preventive
Parasitic
- Sarcoptes (zoonotic, intensely itchy)
- Demodex in some cases
Endocrine
- Cushing’s disease
- Hypothyroidism
Primary Seborrhoea
- Genetic predisposition
- Lifelong management
Honest Caveats
- Trial demands patience — 8-12 weeks of strict adherence is hard
- Owner compliance is the major variable
- Family education critical — children, visitors, other family members
- Cost of prescription diet significant ongoing
- Re-challenge can be uncomfortable for dog
- Some dogs need lifelong prescription diet — accept this as outcome
- Multiple food allergens complicate re-challenge significantly
Conclusion
Food allergy elimination diet is the gold standard for diagnosing food allergies in dogs — blood/saliva tests are NOT validated. 8-12 weeks of STRICT adherence to hydrolysed prescription diet (Hill’s z/d, Royal Canin HP, Purina HA) or novel protein (kangaroo, venison, rabbit, duck). Single accidental exposure RESETS the clock. PVAS itch tracking weekly for objective response monitoring. Most allergic dogs respond by week 4-8; continue to 12 weeks for highest sensitivity. Most common allergens: beef, dairy, chicken, lamb, fish, wheat (grains less common than myth). Re-challenge protocol after successful elimination identifies specific allergens for long-term commercial food selection. No response at 12 weeks strict = food allergy ruled out; investigate atopic dermatitis, flea allergy, parasites, endocrine. Lifelong management common — prescription diet permanent for many food-allergic dogs.
Frequently Asked Questions
How do I do an elimination diet for my dog?
PROTOCOL: 8-12 WEEKS STRICT adherence to elimination diet (most accurate at 12 weeks). DIET OPTIONS: (1) HYDROLYSED PRESCRIPTION DIET (PREFERRED) – protein chemically broken into peptides too small to trigger immune response; brands Hill’s Prescription Diet z/d, Royal Canin Hypoallergenic HP and Anallergenic, Purina Pro Plan HA; (2) NOVEL PROTEIN – single protein dog has NEVER eaten before (kangaroo, venison, rabbit, single-protein fish, duck). STRICT RULES – NO treats unless prescription-approved; NO table scraps; NO flavored medications (heartworm pills typically flavored – use unflavored); NO rawhides/chew toys with food; ONE accidental exposure RESETS the clock. WEEKLY PVAS itch tracking for objective measurement. RESPONSE typically week 4-8; continue full 12 weeks for confirmation.
How long does an elimination diet take?
MINIMUM 8 WEEKS, RECOMMENDED 12 WEEKS for highest diagnostic sensitivity. TIMELINE: WEEKS 0-2 adaptation phase – signs may NOT improve yet (and may transiently worsen during transition); WEEKS 2-6 early trial – sign improvement typically begins this phase if food-allergic; WEEKS 6-8 most responsive dogs show significant improvement; WEEKS 8-12 some dogs need full 12 weeks. STRICT adherence absolutely critical – single accidental food exposure RESETS the clock and trial must continue 8-12 weeks from last exposure. After successful trial, OPTIONAL RE-CHALLENGE protocol to identify specific allergens takes additional 1-2 weeks per ingredient tested. TOTAL COMMITMENT – up to 6-9 months from start to allergen identification if doing full re-challenge.
What food are dogs most allergic to?
MOST COMMON FOOD ALLERGENS in dogs by frequency: (1) BEEF – most common; (2) DAIRY; (3) CHICKEN; (4) LAMB; (5) FISH; (6) WHEAT; (7) SOY; (8) CORN (less common than popular myth). MISCONCEPTIONS: ‘GRAIN ALLERGY’ is RARE – grains less common allergen than meats; ‘grain-free’ marketing is largely fad and may have DCM risks (FDA investigation). SAME PROTEINS RECUR across commercial brands – ‘I tried 5 brands’ rarely a valid trial without strict adherence. ATOPIC DERMATITIS (environmental allergies – pollen, dust mites, mold) is MUCH MORE COMMON than food allergy – 70-80% of allergic dogs are atopic vs 10-20% food allergic. SIGNS – both cause itching but atopic typically seasonal initially while food allergy is year-round; food allergy may include GI signs (chronic diarrhoea, vomiting).
Should I use hydrolysed or novel protein diet?
HYDROLYSED PRESCRIPTION DIET GENERALLY PREFERRED for elimination trials. WHY HYDROLYSED: (1) MOST RELIABLE – protein broken into peptides too small to trigger immune response; (2) CONSISTENT and predictable ingredients; (3) NO RISK of cross-reactivity with novel proteins; (4) HIGH QUALITY CONTROL; (5) MANUFACTURED IN DEDICATED FACILITIES. BRANDS: Hill’s Prescription Diet z/d, Hill’s z/d Ultra Allergen Free, Royal Canin Hypoallergenic HP, Royal Canin Anallergenic (ultra-hydrolysed), Purina Pro Plan HA. NOVEL PROTEIN ALTERNATIVES: kangaroo, venison, rabbit, single-protein fish, duck. CHALLENGES with novel: (1) truly novel difficult – many commercial diets now contain exotic proteins; (2) cross-contamination at processing plants; (3) home-cooked formulation challenging without veterinary nutritionist; (4) more expensive than typical commercial. COST hydrolysed: USD 60-120/month medium dog substantial ongoing expense.
Can I give my dog treats during elimination diet?
ONLY treats specifically formulated for the elimination diet you’re using. EACH PRESCRIPTION DIET typically has MATCHING treats – Hill’s z/d treats compatible with z/d main food; Royal Canin Anallergenic treats; Purina HA treats. Cost more than regular treats. ALTERNATIVES: small pieces of the elimination diet food itself can be used as ‘treats’ – same nutritional profile, no compliance risk; some owners use single-ingredient treats matching their novel protein (e.g., kangaroo jerky for kangaroo diet) – check with vet that source is appropriate. ABSOLUTELY AVOID during trial – commercial dog treats (any flavor); rawhides/chew toys containing food; flavored medications (most heartworm preventives flavored – use unflavored versions or pill pockets compatible with diet); table scraps (any human food); dropped food in environment. STRICT RULE – if treat not specifically diet-compatible, DON’T give it.
What if elimination diet doesn’t work?
If 12 weeks STRICT adherence + treated secondary infections + no significant improvement (PVAS less than 2 point reduction), FOOD ALLERGY RULED OUT. NEXT STEPS: (1) ATOPIC DERMATITIS workup – much more common 70-80% of allergic dogs; serology (Greer, Heska panels) or intradermal allergy testing identifies specific environmental allergens (pollen, dust mites, mold); ASIT (allergen-specific immunotherapy) 60-80% response rate; (2) FLEA ALLERGY DERMATITIS – rigorous monthly isoxazoline prevention (Bravecto, NexGard, Simparica, Credelio); (3) PARASITIC – sarcoptes scabies (zoonotic, intensely itchy) requires deep skin scraping or empirical isoxazoline treatment; demodex requires skin scraping; (4) ENDOCRINE – Cushing’s disease (PuppaDogs calculator), hypothyroidism (PuppaDogs calculator); (5) PRIMARY SEBORRHOEA in predisposed breeds (Cocker, Westie, Basset). MULTIMODAL MANAGEMENT for atopic – Apoquel, Cytopoint, cyclosporine, topical chlorhexidine bathing, omega-3, environmental allergen reduction.
Allergy Elimination Diet Support
Prescription elimination diets and supportive products for food allergy diagnosis and management. Hydrolysed diets are gold standard for elimination trials.
Related PuppaDogs Calculators
Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:
- Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
- Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
- Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
- Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)
References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- Olivry T, Mueller RS, Prelaud P. Critically appraised topic on adverse food reactions of companion animals. BMC Veterinary Research.
- Mueller RS, Olivry T, Prelaud P. Critically appraised topic on adverse food reactions in dogs: pathophysiology. BMC Veterinary Research.
- Olivry T, Mueller RS. Critically appraised topic on adverse food reactions of companion animals (3): prevalence of cutaneous adverse food reactions in dogs and cats.
- Hand MS et al. Small Animal Clinical Nutrition, 5th ed. Mark Morris Institute.
- AAHA Dermatology Guidelines for Cats and Dogs.
- Hill’s Prescription Diet z/d clinical information.
- Royal Canin Hypoallergenic and Anallergenic veterinary information.
- PuppaDogs. Itch Severity Calculator, Allergy Diary, Malassezia Calculator, Pyoderma Calculator. puppadogs.com.















