Assorted dog supplements, capsules, and chews on a wooden surface

The supplement aisle at a pet store now rivals what you'd find for humans. The evidence behind these products ranges from solid to nonexistent.

The pet supplement market shares an uncomfortable trait with the human supplement market: label claims can outrun the evidence, and manufacturers are not required to prove a product works before selling it. The FDA regulates dog supplements as "animal feed," not drugs. That means no pre-market approval and no guarantee the finished product contains what the label says.

None of that means supplements are useless. Some have clinical evidence behind them. Others are plausible in theory but lack controlled trial support. And some are selling hope rather than biochemical effect.

The starting premise matters: a healthy adult dog eating a complete and balanced commercial diet is, by definition, nutritionally complete. Supplementing on top of that doesn't add more nutrients, it adds excess. Excess fat-soluble vitamins (A, D, E, K) accumulate in tissue and can cause toxicity. Excess calcium in growing large-breed puppies is linked to skeletal abnormalities. More is not neutral when nutrition is already adequate.

Fish Oil and Omega-3s: The Strongest Case

Omega-3 fatty acids, EPA and DHA from fish oil, have the most consistent evidence base of any pet supplement category. The mechanisms are understood: EPA and DHA modulate inflammatory pathways, compete with arachidonic acid for cyclooxygenase enzymes, and reduce prostaglandin production. The clinical applications are real.

For dogs with osteoarthritis, a 2010 study in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association found that omega-3 supplementation improved weight-bearing on affected limbs and owners' assessments of pain and mobility, versus dogs on omega-6-rich diets. For dogs with chronic kidney disease, the National Research Council and multiple veterinary nephrology specialists recommend omega-3 supplementation as part of management. For atopic dermatitis, the evidence is positive but less consistent, with some studies showing meaningful improvement in itch scores and others showing modest effect.

The practical requirements: the dose needs to be therapeutic, not cosmetic. Most chewable "joint and skin" products on pet store shelves contain far less EPA and DHA than the doses used in clinical studies. Dr. Joseph Wakshlag at Cornell recommends approximately 40 mg of EPA per kilogram of body weight per day for anti-inflammatory effect. For a 25-kg dog, that's 1,000 mg EPA daily. Most combination chews provide 50 to 150 mg total. Capsules of concentrated fish oil, dosed to match the research, are more likely to reach clinical targets.

Glucosamine and Chondroitin: Evidence Softer Than the Marketing

Glucosamine and chondroitin are the best-selling joint supplements for dogs, generating hundreds of millions of dollars annually. The theory is sound: they're precursors to glycosaminoglycans, components of joint cartilage, and supplementing them in theory supports cartilage health.

The clinical evidence is less tidy. The human GAIT trial, a 2006 NEJM study of 1,583 patients, found glucosamine and chondroitin did not reduce knee pain versus placebo overall, though a subset with moderate-to-severe pain showed some benefit. Canine-specific studies are fewer and smaller. A 2007 Veterinary Comparative Orthopaedics and Traumatology study found some objective gait improvement in dogs with osteoarthritis, but methodological limitations made conclusions uncertain.

"I don't tell clients glucosamine doesn't work. I tell them the evidence is modest, the doses in most products are too low to replicate the studies, and we should set realistic expectations."

Dr. Natasha Olby, veterinary neurologist and rehabilitation specialist, NC State

The practical reality: glucosamine and chondroitin appear safe at standard doses. If there's a benefit, it's more likely to slow cartilage degradation than rebuild what's already lost, meaning they may be more useful as prevention in high-risk breeds than as treatment for established arthritis. Prescription-strength products (Cosequin DS, Dasuquin) at label doses are more likely to approach clinical study dosing than generic grocery store versions.

Probiotics: Promising but Strain-Specific

Canine gut microbiome research has grown since 2015. The gut-immune axis is real, the connection between microbiome diversity and health outcomes is well documented, and the concept of supporting microbial health with probiotics has sound biological backing.

The problem with the probiotic market is specificity. Probiotic effects are strain-specific, not species-generic. A study showing that Lactobacillus acidophilus ATCC 4356 improves diarrhea resolution time tells you nothing about whether a different strain of L. acidophilus does the same thing. Most commercial pet probiotic products don't specify strain and don't have clinical trials behind that specific product.

Purina's Pro Plan Veterinary Supplements FortiFlora is the most clinically studied commercial canine probiotic. Multiple peer-reviewed studies support its use for acute diarrhea reduction and fecal quality improvement. It's a reasonable first choice when clinical probiotic use is warranted. Most other pet probiotics trade on FortiFlora's credibility without comparable evidence of their own.

Supplements with Weak or No Evidence

Coconut oil: Marketed for coat quality and cognitive function. The main active component, lauric acid, has shown some antimicrobial properties in vitro. No peer-reviewed controlled trials support meaningful clinical benefit in dogs for any of these claims. At high doses, it's a dense saturated fat that contributes to caloric excess and pancreatitis risk.

Apple cider vinegar: Popular in natural-rearing communities for everything from ear infections to flea prevention. No peer-reviewed evidence supports any of these applications in dogs. Its pH could disrupt the skin's acid mantle with repeated topical application.

Turmeric/curcumin: Curcumin has genuine anti-inflammatory properties demonstrated in cell culture and rodent studies. Canine bioavailability is poor without bioavailability-enhancing compounds (piperine, phosphatidylcholine). Most commercial turmeric products do not contain bioavailability enhancers. Whether achievable blood levels in dogs produce meaningful anti-inflammatory effect is unestablished. This one may earn better evidence in time, but it isn't there yet.

When Supplements Are Warranted

Supplements cross from nice-to-have to necessary in specific clinical situations. Dogs with documented deficiencies from blood testing. Dogs eating nutritionally incomplete diets (home-cooked without professional formulation, or certain raw diets). Dogs with chronic diseases where supplementation is part of the management protocol: omega-3s for kidney disease, B vitamins for dogs with GI malabsorption, vitamin D for dogs with confirmed deficiency. Senior dogs whose absorption efficiency has declined on lab work.

The starting point is always a veterinary assessment, and where possible, a nutritional history review by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist. Supplementing without bloodwork on top of a complete and balanced diet is unlikely to help and has real potential to harm.

For owners who want to do more for their dog's health, the highest-value interventions remain unglamorous: maintain lean body weight and schedule regular wellness exams to catch the conditions that affect most dogs before they become expensive problems. No supplement delivers that return.