Can your dog's stools tell you whether its food is working?

Quick answer

Partly. Well-formed, regular stools of modest volume point to good digestive tolerance and decent digestibility. But stools say nothing about nutritional balance or quality control. They are a useful indicator, not a proof of overall quality (Tufts Petfoodology, 2023).

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General documentary information. For an individual animal, a veterinarian's advice takes precedence over any online content.

Detail

What stools genuinely reveal

Stool quality reflects the digestibility and digestive tolerance of a food. High digestibility leaves fewer residues, so the stools are more compact and less bulky (Tufts Petfoodology, 2023). Bulky or loose stools can flag lower digestibility, an excess of fibre [fiber] or a transition made too fast. The striking part for a curious owner: a highly digestible food can noticeably shrink stool volume at a comparable amount eaten, which is one reason makers and vets watch this sign closely.

The limits of this indicator

Stools say nothing about whether needs are met, whether a board-certified nutritionist was involved, or how tightly quality is controlled (WSAVA, 2021). A food can produce handsome stools while being unbalanced over the long run. Passing diarrhoea [diarrhea] during a food change usually belongs to the transition, ideally spread over 7 to 10 days, rather than to a fault in the product (FEDIAF, 2021). Persistently abnormal stools call for a veterinary opinion.

At a glance
Stool appearancePossible interpretationLimit
Formed, low volumeGood digestibilityDoes not prove balance
Loose, frequentTolerance or transitionMany possible causes
Sudden changeTransition or disorderVet if it persists
The Petipedia angle

Petipedia places stools among the signals of tolerance, spelling out what they measure and what they do not.

Sources

Tufts Petfoodology (2023); WSAVA, Global Nutrition Guidelines (2021); FEDIAF, transition guidance (2021).