You want to cook for your dog because you love them and you’ve read one too many recall notices. I get it.
Here’s an uncomfortable truth: 95% of homemade dog food recipes fail to meet basic AAFCO nutrient profiles, according to UC Davis research published in the Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association. That includes recipes from veterinary textbooks, not just random internet sources.
Believe me, I am not saying this to shame anyone. That’s not my intention here.
Canine nutrition requires 37 different nutrients in precise ratios, and even educated, well-intentioned owners get it wrong without professional help. The difference between “healthy whole foods” and “nutritionally complete diet” requires math, supplements, and ongoing monitoring.
Let’s talk about what it actually takes to feed homemade safely.
Why 95% of Homemade Diets Fail Nutritionally

That UC Davis study analyzed recipes from veterinary textbooks, pet care books, and nutrition-focused websites. Only 5% provided all essential nutrients in adequate amounts. The most common deficiencies: calcium (33% below requirements), vitamin D (54% below), vitamin E (63% below), zinc, and B vitamins.
AAFCO nutrient profiles for dogs include minimum requirements for 37 different nutrients. You need specific amounts of linoleic acid, choline, copper, manganese, selenium, and nutrients most people have never heard of like pantothenic acid.
Even grass-fed beef, organic vegetables, and wild-caught fish don’t contain adequate levels of certain nutrients dogs need.
This is where the “wolves eat whole prey” argument falls apart. Domestic dogs aren’t wolves, and you’re not feeding whole prey with bones, organs, and stomach contents in the correct ratios anyway.
Bottom line: Whole foods alone cannot meet all 37 AAFCO nutrient requirements. Supplements aren’t optional, they’re essential for any homemade diet.
The Calcium-Phosphorus Crisis

The calcium-to-phosphorus ratio in your dog’s diet must fall between 1.2:1 and 1.4:1. Not approximately. Precisely within that range.
An imbalanced ratio causes developmental orthopedic disease in growing dogs: hip dysplasia, osteochondrosis, and other painful skeletal abnormalities that cannot be reversed. Research published in the Journal of Veterinary Orthopedics shows that excess phosphorus relative to calcium disrupts normal bone formation during growth.
Meat is high in phosphorus and low in calcium. A meat-based homemade diet without calculated calcium supplementation typically runs a ratio closer to 1:15. Adding yogurt or cheese doesn’t fix this.
For a 50-pound adult dog eating a typical homemade diet, you need to add 1,800-2,000 mg of elemental calcium daily. That’s a calculation based on the phosphorus content of your specific ingredients, not a guess.
Micronutrients You Cannot Provide Through Whole Foods

Vitamin D is essentially impossible to provide through whole foods unless you feed significant amounts of fatty fish daily, which creates other nutritional imbalances. Dogs cannot synthesize vitamin D from sunlight like humans. AAFCO minimum for adult dogs is 500 IU per 1,000 kcal. One cup of salmon provides 570 IU but also 400+ calories, meaning you’d need to feed mostly salmon to meet vitamin D requirements.
Vitamin B12 is found almost exclusively in animal products, but amounts in muscle meat are insufficient. A 2018 study in the Journal of Animal Science found that homemade diets without organ meat supplementation had B12 levels 60% below requirements. You need liver and kidney in specific quantities, or supplementation.
Zinc bioavailability is compromised by phytates in plant-based ingredients. Even meat-based diets often fall short because zinc in muscle meat isn’t as bioavailable as zinc oxide or zinc proteinate forms used in commercial pet foods.
Vitamin E requirements depend on fat content and type in your recipe. More polyunsaturated fats mean higher vitamin E needs. Whole foods rarely provide enough unless you add wheat germ oil or specific supplements.
What Happens When Dogs Eat Homemade Diets: The Research
A 2019 JAVMA study examined 48 homemade diet recipes. None met all AAFCO nutrient requirements. Not one. This included recipes from board-certified veterinary nutritionists that were missing key nutrients, though these were significantly more complete than recipes from non-veterinary sources.
A University of California, Davis School of Veterinary Medicine study followed dogs eating homemade diets over 12 months. Bloodwork revealed subclinical deficiencies in taurine, vitamin D, and several B vitamins even when owners believed they were following complete recipes. Most dogs showed no clinical signs yet. The deficiencies were only caught through routine blood testing.
The American College of Veterinary Nutrition’s position statement is unambiguous: homemade diets should only be fed when formulated by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist and when owners are willing to follow recipes precisely and monitor their dog’s health through regular veterinary care.
Raw vs. Cooked: The Safety Trade-offs

Cooking reduces some B vitamins and vitamin E by 10-30%, not the dramatic destruction raw advocates claim. You compensate by slightly increasing those nutrients in your recipe formulation.
What cooking definitely does is eliminate pathogens. A 2017 study in Veterinary Microbiology found that 80% of raw-fed dogs shed Salmonella in their feces, even when showing no signs of illness. That’s a public health risk, especially in households with young children, elderly individuals, or immunocompromised people.
The supposed benefits of raw feeding (shinier coat, better digestion, cleaner teeth) have never been demonstrated in controlled studies. What has been demonstrated is increased pathogen risk. The American Veterinary Medical Association and CDC both advise against raw diets.
The FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine documented that 25% of raw pet food samples tested positive for Salmonella, compared to less than 2% of commercial dry foods.
Safe Food Handling Protocols
If you’re batch-cooking and freezing portions, cool food rapidly (within 2 hours from cooking to refrigeration) and freeze within 3-4 days. Frozen homemade food maintains quality for about 3 months, though nutritional degradation of certain vitamins starts earlier.
Cross-contamination is your biggest risk. Use separate cutting boards for your dog’s food and your family’s food. If feeding raw, use disposable gloves, separate food prep areas, and immediate cleanup with hand washing.
Required Supplements: What the Science Says You Need
No whole-food homemade diet is complete without supplements. Here’s what board-certified veterinary nutritionists say you actually need:
| Supplement | Typical Dose | Why It’s Essential |
|---|---|---|
| Calcium carbonate or citrate | 800-1,000 mg per pound of food | Achieve 1.2:1 to 1.4:1 calcium-phosphorus ratio |
| Vitamin D | 100-150 IU per pound of food | Cannot be provided adequately through whole foods |
| Vitamin E | 1-2 IU per pound of food | Requirements increase with polyunsaturated fat content |
| B-complex vitamins | Per product instructions | Even organ meats don’t provide adequate B12, folate |
| Zinc | 7-10 mg per pound of food | Bioavailability issues with whole food sources |
| Copper | 0.7-1 mg per pound of food | Often deficient in meat-based homemade diets |
| Omega-3 (EPA/DHA) | Per veterinary nutritionist calculation | Unless feeding fatty fish multiple times weekly |
Multivitamin supplements marketed for dogs often don’t provide nutrients in the ratios needed for homemade diets. You typically need individual supplements dosed specifically for your recipe.
Toxic Ingredients and Dangerous Preparation Mistakes

Never feed: Onions and garlic (hemolytic anemia, even in small amounts), grapes and raisins (kidney failure), macadamia nuts (neurological symptoms), xylitol (life-threatening hypoglycemia), chocolate (theobromine toxicity), raw yeast dough (gastric dilatation and alcohol toxicity), cooked bones (intestinal perforation).
Limit liver to 5% of diet by weight. Liver is nutrient-dense, but excessive amounts cause vitamin A toxicity.
High-fat diets require gradual transition. Suddenly switching to a high-fat homemade diet can trigger pancreatitis, especially in dogs with a history of the condition.
Preparation mistakes that destroy nutrients: overcooking vegetables until they’re mush (destroys water-soluble vitamins), using excessive water and discarding it (nutrients pour down the drain), storing prepared food too long (B vitamins and vitamin E degrade over time).
Working with a Board-Certified Veterinary Nutritionist
If you’re serious about homemade feeding, you need a board-certified veterinary nutritionist with ACVN credentials. Not a regular vet unless they have additional nutrition certification. Not a pet nutritionist with an online certificate.
These specialists complete a veterinary degree, a clinical residency in nutrition, publish original research, and pass rigorous board examinations. There are fewer than 100 in the United States.
What they do: formulate recipes that meet AAFCO nutrient profiles based on your dog’s specific needs (age, breed, activity level, health conditions), calculate exact supplement amounts, provide feeding guidelines based on caloric needs, and adjust recipes as your dog ages or if health issues develop.
Cost: $200-500 for initial recipe formulation, $100-200 for follow-up adjustments. Compare this to treating nutritional deficiency diseases like rickets, anemia, or dilated cardiomyopathy from taurine deficiency, which run thousands of dollars and cause irreversible suffering.
Find board-certified veterinary nutritionists through the American College of Veterinary Nutrition website. Some offer remote consultations.
Required Health Monitoring
Even with a veterinary nutritionist-formulated recipe, you need ongoing monitoring. Nutritional deficiencies don’t announce themselves until they’re advanced.
Bloodwork schedule: Complete blood count and chemistry panel every 6 months for the first year, then annually if stable. You’re monitoring for anemia (iron, B12, folate deficiency), elevated liver enzymes (potential vitamin E deficiency or toxicity), abnormal calcium and phosphorus levels, and protein markers (albumin, total protein).
Some veterinary nutritionists recommend taurine testing, especially for breeds predisposed to dilated cardiomyopathy. Whole blood taurine should be above 200 nmol/mL.
Body condition scoring monthly: You should feel your dog’s ribs easily but not see them prominently. Visible waist when viewed from above, tucked abdomen from the side. Homemade diets are easy to overfeed or underfeed because caloric density varies with ingredients.
Coat and skin quality: Dull coat, excessive shedding, or dry flaky skin can indicate fatty acid deficiencies or zinc deficiency before bloodwork shows abnormalities.
Stool quality: Should be formed but not rock-hard. Chronic diarrhea or constipation suggests the diet needs adjustment.
The Real Cost: Time and Money
Let’s talk about what homemade feeding actually costs, because the Instagram posts don’t mention this part.
Time investment: 2-4 hours weekly for shopping, food prep, and portioning if batch-cooking. Daily prep adds 30-45 minutes per day. Over a year, you’re looking at 100-200 hours.
Financial breakdown for a 50-pound dog:
| Expense Category | Cost | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Veterinary nutritionist consultation | $200-500 | Initial, then $100-200 for adjustments |
| Quality ingredients | $3-6 per pound of prepared food | $120-180 monthly |
| Required supplements | $30-60 | Monthly |
| Bloodwork monitoring | $150-300 per panel | Every 6-12 months |
| Total monthly cost | $150-250 | Plus monitoring and consultation fees |
| Premium commercial diet (comparison) | $80-120 | Monthly, already complete and balanced |
Homemade diets typically cost 2-3 times more than premium commercial foods without nutritional advantages for healthy dogs.
The honest question: What are you gaining? If your dog has specific health conditions requiring a custom diet, or severe food allergies making commercial options impossible, homemade feeding makes sense. If you’re doing it because you think it’s “more natural” or “healthier,” the research doesn’t support that assumption.
So, Here’s What You Should Actually Do
High-quality commercial foods undergo feeding trials, have consistent nutrient profiles, and are formulated by teams of veterinary nutritionists. They’re not perfect, but they’re nutritionally complete in ways that homemade diets rarely achieve.
If you’re willing to pay for veterinary nutritionist consultation, follow recipes precisely, invest in quality supplements, weigh every ingredient, and commit to regular health monitoring, homemade feeding can work. It’s not superior to quality commercial diets, but it can be adequate if executed correctly.
If you’re thinking about homemade feeding because you saw a cute Instagram post or want to avoid “big pet food,” reconsider. Your dog doesn’t care about the origin story of their food. They care about getting complete nutrition that keeps them healthy.
The 95% failure rate for homemade diets isn’t a challenge to overcome with good intentions. It’s a warning that this is genuinely difficult to get right.
Here’s what to do: If your dog has specific health conditions requiring a custom diet, or severe food allergies making commercial options impossible, contact a board-certified veterinary nutritionist through the American College of Veterinary Nutrition website. Budget $200-500 for initial consultation, $150-250 monthly for food and supplements, and $150-300 every 6-12 months for bloodwork monitoring.
If your dog is healthy and you’re considering homemade feeding for general health reasons, choose a high-quality commercial diet that meets AAFCO standards through feeding trials (not just formulated-to-meet). Look for brands that employ veterinary nutritionists and publish their nutritional adequacy statements. You’ll save money, time, and reduce the risk of nutritional deficiencies.
Your dog’s long-term health depends on nutrition, not on whether their food was made in your kitchen or a manufacturing facility. Make the choice that actually serves their needs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can I make nutritionally complete homemade dog food without supplements?
No. Research consistently shows it’s virtually impossible to meet all AAFCO nutrient profiles using whole foods alone. You’ll fall short on calcium (unless feeding appropriate amounts of raw ground bone), vitamin D, vitamin E, B vitamins, and several trace minerals. The bioavailability of nutrients in whole foods also varies significantly. Every board-certified veterinary nutritionist will tell you the same thing: supplements aren’t optional for homemade diets.
How much does it cost to safely feed homemade dog food?
Including veterinary nutritionist consultation ($200-500 initial, $100-200 for adjustments), required supplements ($30-60 monthly), quality ingredients ($3-6 per pound of prepared food), and increased veterinary monitoring ($150-300 per bloodwork panel every 6-12 months), homemade diets typically cost 2-3 times more than premium commercial foods. For a medium-sized dog, expect $150-300 monthly, plus several hundred dollars in startup costs.
Is raw homemade food safer than cooked?
No. Raw diets carry significantly higher pathogen risks, with studies showing that 80% of raw-fed dogs shed Salmonella in their feces even when healthy. The FDA and American Veterinary Medical Association both advise against raw feeding due to public health concerns. There are no proven nutritional advantages to raw feeding over properly cooked homemade diets. Cooking actually improves digestibility of proteins and starches. The slight reduction in heat-sensitive vitamins from cooking is easily compensated for in recipe formulation.
How often should I test my dog’s blood on a homemade diet?
Every 6 months for the first year, then annually once stable, assuming your veterinarian doesn’t identify concerns. You’re monitoring for deficiencies in B vitamins (particularly B12), minerals (calcium, phosphorus, zinc), protein markers (albumin, total protein), and signs of anemia. Some veterinary nutritionists also recommend taurine testing, especially for breeds at risk for dilated cardiomyopathy. This monitoring isn’t optional. Nutritional deficiencies often don’t show clinical signs until they’re advanced.
Can puppies eat homemade food safely?
Only with a recipe formulated specifically for growth by a board-certified veterinary nutritionist. Growing puppies have stricter nutritional requirements than adult dogs, particularly for calcium, phosphorus, and the calcium-phosphorus ratio. Getting this wrong causes developmental orthopedic disease that cannot be reversed. Large and giant breed puppies are especially vulnerable. The risk-benefit calculation for homemade feeding puppies is heavily weighted toward risk. One mistake during critical growth periods can cause lifelong skeletal problems.
What’s the biggest mistake people make with homemade dog food?
Assuming they can balance nutrients intuitively or by following general guidelines. The calcium-phosphorus ratio alone requires precise calculation based on the specific ingredients you’re using. You cannot eyeball it or approximate it. Most people drastically underestimate the complexity of meeting all 37 AAFCO nutrient requirements simultaneously. They think “healthy whole foods” equals “complete nutrition,” but those are entirely different things. The second biggest mistake is not weighing ingredients, which makes it impossible to know if you’re actually following your recipe correctly.
This article is for informational purposes and should not replace professional veterinary advice. Always consult with a board-certified veterinary nutritionist before formulating a homemade diet, and work with your veterinarian to monitor your dog’s health through regular examinations and bloodwork. Dogs with existing health conditions require individualized nutritional assessment.


