From grooming and training to vet visits and exercise — everything you need to give your dog a long, happy, and healthy life.
A healthy dog needs more than just food. Explore the four pillars of great dog care below.
Regular grooming keeps your dog's coat, skin, ears, nails, and teeth in top condition. Most dogs need brushing 2–3× per week, with baths every 4–8 weeks depending on breed and lifestyle. In 2025, natural and hypoallergenic grooming products are trending for sensitive-skin dogs.
Prevents matting, distributes oils, and lets you check for lumps, ticks, or skin irritation.
Use a vet-approved ear cleaner. Watch for redness, odor, or excessive scratching.
Overgrown nails cause pain and posture problems. If you hear clicking on floors, it's time.
Dental disease affects 80% of dogs over 3. Daily brushing with dog-safe toothpaste is the gold standard.
A well-trained dog is a happy dog — and a safe one. Positive reinforcement training builds trust and confidence. Group training classes and doggy daycare are trending in 2025 as owners prioritize socialization alongside mental enrichment.
Begin basic commands (sit, stay, come) at 8 weeks. Early socialization shapes adult temperament.
Reward-based training is more effective and humane than punishment-based methods.
5–15 minutes, 2–3× daily. Puppies have short attention spans; keep it fun and positive.
Expose puppies to different people, animals, environments, sounds, and surfaces before 14 weeks.
Dogs need daily physical and mental exercise to prevent obesity, anxiety, and destructive behavior. The right amount varies enormously by breed, age, and health. In 2025, 59% of dog owners now take their dogs on foot for daily errands — up 6% from 2023.
Puzzle toys, scent work, and training games are just as tiring as physical exercise — especially for intelligent breeds. Aim for mental enrichment daily.
Preventive care is always more effective and less costly than reactive treatment. Annual or biannual vet wellness checks, up-to-date vaccinations, parasite prevention, and dental care are the foundation of a long, healthy life.
Adult dogs: once yearly. Puppies and seniors: every 6 months. Early detection saves lives.
Core vaccines: Rabies, Distemper, Parvovirus, Adenovirus. Lifestyle vaccines vary by risk exposure.
Monthly heartworm, flea, and tick prevention year-round. Many products now combine all three.
Reduces cancer risk, unwanted behaviors, and contributes to reducing pet overpopulation.