Best budget dog food 2026: the best value-for-money rated A to E
There is a persistent myth in the pet food world: feeding your dog well costs a lot. That myth is false. It is maintained by manufacturers who want you to believe that the price per kilo is the only quality indicator, and by premium brands that justify high prices by equating "premium" with "expensive". The reality is more nuanced - and it is favourable to your wallet.
You can feed a 20 kg dog A-grade food for under 2 EUR per day. You can even get below 1.70 EUR per day. This guide presents the complete ranking of the best budget dog foods by value-for-money, explains why the "EUR/day" metric is the only one that matters, and dismantles the false economy myth of low-grade kibble. French version available: Meilleures croquettes pas chères 2026.
The price-per-kilo problem
It starts with an apparent comparison: Pedigree kibble at 3.80 EUR/kg versus Ultra Premium Direct at 5.50 EUR/kg. The conclusion seems obvious: Pedigree is cheaper. It is wrong.
Kibble where 60 percent of the composition consists of cereals, by-products and poorly specified vegetable matter has low nutritional density and reduced digestibility. To meet the daily protein and energy needs of a 20 kg dog, you need to give more. A lot more. The Pedigree recommended daily portion for this dog size is 340 to 400 g/day.
Kibble where protein is predominantly from fresh animal sources, with limited or no cereals, has high digestibility. The dog's body absorbs it better. The necessary portion is smaller - between 260 and 320 g/day for the same dog.
The real calculation, the one manufacturers prefer to avoid, is the cost per day:
| Brand | Grade | Price/kg | Daily portion (20 kg) | Daily cost | Monthly cost |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pedigree Adult | D (42/100) | 3.80 EUR | 380 g | 1.44 EUR | 43.20 EUR |
| Royal Canin Medium Adult | C (61/100) | 5.80 EUR | 330 g | 1.91 EUR | 57.30 EUR |
| Hill's Science Plan | B (72/100) | 6.20 EUR | 310 g | 1.92 EUR | 57.60 EUR |
| Ultra Premium Direct | A (85/100) | 5.50 EUR | 290 g | 1.60 EUR | 47.80 EUR |
| Brit Care Lamb | A (84/100) | 5.20 EUR | 295 g | 1.53 EUR | 46.00 EUR |
| Naturea Atlantic | A (84/100) | 7.50 EUR | 260 g | 1.95 EUR | 58.50 EUR |
| Taste of the Wild Pacific | A (88/100) | 6.40 EUR | 275 g | 1.76 EUR | 52.80 EUR |
| Acana Heritage Adult | A (86/100) | 7.80 EUR | 265 g | 2.07 EUR | 62.10 EUR |
| Orijen Original | A (89/100) | 9.50 EUR | 240 g | 2.28 EUR | 68.40 EUR |
This table reveals several major counter-intuitions.
Pedigree D costs less per day than Royal Canin C (1.44 EUR vs 1.91 EUR). That is the only point where Pedigree wins. But this saving of 0.47 EUR/day comes with poor-quality nutrition that affects long-term health.
Ultra Premium Direct A costs less per day than Royal Canin C (1.60 EUR vs 1.91 EUR), less per day than Hill's B (1.60 EUR vs 1.92 EUR), and less per month than both (47.80 EUR vs 57.30 and 57.60 EUR). You pay less for better food. This is the most glaring case of inverted false economy in our database.
Brit Care A is even cheaper than everyone in this table except Pedigree D: 1.53 EUR/day, 46.00 EUR/month, with an A grade (84/100).
Our top 5: best A-grade kibble with the best value-for-money
1. Ultra Premium Direct (UPD) - A (85/100) - 1.60 EUR/day
Ultra Premium Direct is a French direct-to-consumer brand, which eliminates intermediaries and allows competitive pricing for a genuinely high-end product.
Flagship composition (Medium Adult): Fresh chicken (30%), dehydrated chicken (18%), sweet potato, peas, potato, chicken fat, dehydrated herring, chicory (FOS), brewer's yeast.
What places UPD at the top of this ranking:
- 48 percent animal-origin proteins on dry matter, predominantly fresh or dehydrated
- Grain-free: zero wheat, zero corn, zero soy
- French traceability: the chicken comes from France, the herring from the North Atlantic
- Online personalisation: UPD allows ordering a recipe adapted to your dog's size, age and activity level
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Proteins | A (88/100) |
| Nutrition | A (84/100) |
| Undesirables | A (90/100) |
| Transparency | A (87/100) |
| Adaptability | B (78/100) |
The only limitation: ordering happens online with delivery. For those who prefer buying in a physical pet store, this is not the right option.
Purchase price: 5.50 EUR/kg on the official site, sometimes 5.20-5.30 EUR/kg with recurring subscriptions.
2. Brit Care Lamb and Rice - A (84/100) - 1.53 EUR/day
Brit Care is a Czech brand distributed throughout Europe, available on Zooplus, Amazon and in many physical pet stores.
Composition (Lamb and Rice Adult Medium): Dehydrated lamb (26%), brown rice (23%), chicken fat, salmon meal (10%), peas, brewer's yeast, salmon oil, chicory.
Key strengths:
- 36 percent animal proteins on dry matter (lamb + salmon)
- Lamb as the main protein: excellent for dogs that have developed sensitivity to chicken or beef
- Very competitive price per kilo: 5.20 EUR/kg in 15 kg pack
- Wide availability: in physical pet stores and online
The presence of brown rice means this is not a grain-free kibble - but brown rice is the least problematic cereal for most dogs (relatively low glycaemic index, good digestibility). For coeliac or cereal-hypersensitive dogs, opt for the Brit Care grain-free version.
Sub-scores:
| Criterion | Score |
|---|---|
| Proteins | A (84/100) |
| Nutrition | A (82/100) |
| Undesirables | A (88/100) |
| Transparency | B (78/100) |
| Adaptability | A (82/100) |
3. Taste of the Wild Pacific Stream - A (88/100) - 1.76 EUR/day
Taste of the Wild is the highest-scoring kibble in this ranking (88/100), and its daily cost remains very accessible thanks to exceptional digestibility that significantly reduces the portion.
Composition: Salmon (25%), sweet potato, peas, smoked salmon meal (8%), canola oil, flaxseed, salmon oil, dehydrated vegetables.
Key strengths:
- Grain-free, no wheat, no corn, no soy
- Main protein: salmon - excellent for dogs allergic to land proteins (beef, chicken)
- Added probiotics: lactobacilli and bifidobacteria cultures for intestinal health
- Natural antioxidants: blueberries and raspberries
- High omega-3 from salmon and salmon oil
TOTW is also one of the best kibbles for dogs with digestive issues: the grain-free formula based on sweet potato and peas is very well tolerated by dogs with sensitive digestion.
The price per kilo (6.40 EUR) is slightly higher than UPD and Brit Care, but the reduced portion almost entirely compensates: 275 g/day for a 20 kg dog versus 380 g for Pedigree.
| Sub-score | Grade |
|---|---|
| Proteins | A (90/100) |
| Nutrition | A (88/100) |
| Undesirables | A (92/100) |
| Transparency | A (84/100) |
| Adaptability | A (86/100) |
4. Naturea Atlantic - A (84/100) - 1.95 EUR/day
Naturea is a Portuguese brand less well known in the UK and France, but which deserves attention. Its Atlantic range is formulated from marine proteins (anchovies, sardines, tuna) with ancient grain carbohydrates (millet, oats).
Key strengths:
- Unique marine proteins: ideal for dogs that have never consumed fish (elimination diet or rotational feeding)
- MSC certification for the fish used (sustainable fishing)
- Very high omega-3: anti-inflammatory profile
- No beef, no chicken, no lamb in the Atlantic version
The price per kilo (7.50 EUR) is the highest in this ranking, which explains the slightly higher daily cost (1.95 EUR). But for owners seeking MSC-certified sustainable marine protein at an affordable price, there are not many alternatives at this quality level.
5. Brit Care Chicken without Grain - A (84/100) - 1.58 EUR/day
The grain-free version of Brit Care deserves a separate entry. It suits dogs intolerant to cereals or owners who prefer a grain-free formula for the whole canine household.
Composition: Dehydrated chicken (30%), fresh chicken (15%), peas, potato, chicken fat, salmon meal (7%), brewer's yeast, salmon oil.
At 5.40 EUR/kg and 1.58 EUR/day for a 20 kg dog, this is the cheapest A-grade grain-free kibble in our database.
The false economy myth: the real cost of low-grade kibble
Buying D or E kibble to save on the food budget is a false economy. Here is why, with supporting figures.
The veterinary factor
Chronic skin diseases, recurrent digestive issues, and poorer long-term health outcomes are associated with lower-quality diets containing synthetic additives, refined cereals and unspecified by-products. Veterinary consultation fees for allergic dermatitis cost between 70 and 150 EUR. Chronic treatment (antihistamines, Apoquel, medicated baths) costs 30 to 80 EUR per month. A gastrointestinal episode requiring consultation: 70 to 120 EUR.
The saving of 0.40 EUR/day on kibble rapidly becomes a deficit when faced with 2 to 3 additional veterinary consultations per year.
The calculation over 10 years for a 20 kg dog
| Scenario | Food cost/year | Estimated vet costs/year | Total/year | Total 10 years |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Pedigree D | 525 EUR | 420 EUR | 945 EUR | 9,450 EUR |
| Royal Canin C | 699 EUR | 280 EUR | 979 EUR | 9,790 EUR |
| UPD A | 584 EUR | 150 EUR | 734 EUR | 7,340 EUR |
| Brit Care A | 562 EUR | 150 EUR | 712 EUR | 7,120 EUR |
| TOTW A | 642 EUR | 140 EUR | 782 EUR | 7,820 EUR |
Vet cost estimates are based on national averages for dermatological and digestive consultations and treatments, weighted by observed frequency in comparative studies.
The result is clear: Brit Care A costs 2,330 EUR less over 10 years than Pedigree D, even accounting for a price per kilo almost 40 percent higher.
How to choose the right budget kibble for your dog
Selection criteria
1. Animal proteins at the top of the list. The first protein must be a named meat or fish (chicken, lamb, salmon - not "meat" or "animal sources"). Ideally, the first two or three ingredients are animal proteins.
2. No added sugar. Sugar (sucrose, glucose syrup, molasses) has no nutritional value for dogs and contributes to obesity and dental disease. Its presence in kibble is a red flag.
3. No artificial colourants. Red 40, Yellow 6, Blue 2 - these colourants target humans, not dogs. They have zero nutritional purpose.
4. Specified or absent by-products. Vague "poultry by-products" is borderline acceptable. "Meat and animal by-products" without a named species is the most negative signal.
5. Use cost per day, never price per kilo. Check the manufacturer's recommended ration for your dog's weight, multiply by the price per kilo, divide by 1,000. That is the only calculation that matters.
By dog size
Small dog (under 10 kg):
| Product | Score | Price/kg | Cost/day |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brit Care Mini Chicken | A (84/100) | 5.80 EUR | 0.70 EUR |
| Acana Small Breed | A (85/100) | 8.20 EUR | 0.80 EUR |
| UPD Small Adult | A (85/100) | 5.50 EUR | 0.66 EUR |
For the best small dog food, our dedicated ranking goes further on morphological specifics (kibble size, bone density, parodontal risk).
Medium dog (10 to 25 kg): the main table in this guide applies. UPD and Brit Care remain the best choices.
Large dog (over 25 kg):
| Product | Score | Price/kg | Cost/day (35 kg) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Brit Care Large Chicken | A (83/100) | 5.10 EUR | 2.09 EUR |
| TOTW High Prairie Adult | A (88/100) | 6.40 EUR | 2.37 EUR |
| UPD Large Adult | A (85/100) | 5.50 EUR | 2.20 EUR |
By special requirement
Senior dog: protein needs remain high (contrary to popular belief), but phosphorus should be moderated and omega-3 increased. See our best senior dog food ranking.
Puppy: calcium, DHA and protein needs are specific to growth. See our best puppy food 2026.
Overweight dog: the portion must be reduced but nutritional density maintained. Our best dog food 2026 ranking covers weight management options with full scores.
Allergic dog: if your dog has chronic itching or digestive issues, the protein matters more than the price. See our hypoallergenic dog food guide.
Brands to absolutely avoid
Some mainstream brands are sold massively, often on promotion, sometimes recommended by profit-driven pet shops. Their scores in our database:
| Brand | Score | Price/kg | Why to avoid |
|---|---|---|---|
| Pedigree Adult | D (42/100) | 3.80 EUR | Beef in position 4, added sugar, colourants |
| Eukanuba Adult | D (44/100) | 5.10 EUR | Rice and corn in positions 1 and 2, few named proteins |
| Frolic | E (28/100) | 3.40 EUR | Semi-moist, sugar in position 3, artificial colourants |
| Cesar Dry | D (41/100) | 6.20 EUR | Cereals first, vague by-products |
These products receive poor scores not because they "poison" dogs - animals can survive on them - but because they do not cover nutritional needs optimally, generate high portions, and contribute to chronic health problems in the medium term.
Our complete best dog food 2026 ranking
This guide focuses on value-for-money. Our main best dog food 2026 ranking covers all criteria without budget filtering, with full scores for the entire database. For owners who can allocate a budget above 2.50 EUR/day, Orijen (89/100) and Acana (86/100) offer additional quality that is fully justified.
The real cost of dog food over 12 years
Our complete dog food cost guide establishes the full calculation over 12 years (average lifespan of a medium-sized dog), including veterinary costs, opportunity cost of preventable diseases, and comparison by body size.
The main conclusion of that guide applies here: the food budget should not be the first area of financial cuts. It is the most direct lever on your dog's health and longevity.
FAQ: budget dog food
Can you make good kibble for under 4 EUR/kg? No, not with an A-grade composition. Below 4.50-5 EUR/kg, industrial margins impose compromises on protein quality. The only possible exception: brands on exceptional promotion in very large formats (15-20 kg packs).
Are vet-clinic kibble brands worth the price? Depends on the brand. Royal Canin veterinary and Hill's Prescription are formulated for specific medical conditions (kidney, joints, weight) and score B to A in those categories. For a healthy dog, they are too specialised and often too expensive for what they deliver.
Are own-brand (store brand) dog foods worth buying? Rarely. Own-brand foods are generally produced by industrial manufacturers that also make mainstream low-grade brands. Their compositions are rarely transparent and scores in our database fall between D and C.
Should you rotate kibble regularly? Rotation is beneficial in principle (protein diversification, avoiding sensitisation). But an abrupt change can trigger digestive upsets. See our transition diet guide for recommended protocols.
Where to buy the cheapest A-grade kibble? Zooplus and Bitiba consistently offer the lowest prices for major brands (Brit Care, TOTW, Farmina). UPD and DTC brands must be ordered from the official site. Physical pet stores typically charge 15 to 30 percent more.
Further reading for smart dog food budgeting
To go further in optimising your dog food budget without compromising nutrition:
- Brit Care honest review - full analysis of the Brit Care range with all sub-scores
- Carnilove honest review - another mid-price A-grade brand worth considering
- Edgard and Cooper honest review - fresh-meat brand with wider retail availability
- Animal vs plant protein in pet food - understanding why animal protein density matters for ration size
Conclusion
"Budget" and "quality" are not mutually exclusive in pet food. The proof is in the numbers: Brit Care A-grade at 1.53 EUR/day beats Royal Canin C-grade at 1.91 EUR/day on every measure - cost, nutritional quality, and long-term health. Ultra Premium Direct A-grade at 1.60 EUR/day beats Hill's B-grade at 1.92 EUR/day in the same register.
The fundamental lesson: always look at cost per day, never price per kilo. And remember that every euro saved on poor-quality kibble is often spent two or three times over at the vet.
Sources
- Mueller RS et al. "Critically appraised topic on adverse food reactions of companion animals." BMC Veterinary Research, 2016. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12917-016-0633-8
- FEDIAF. "Nutritional Guidelines for Complete and Complementary Pet Food." 2024. https://www.fediaf.org/self-regulation/nutrition.html
- National Research Council. "Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats." National Academies Press, 2006. https://nap.nationalacademies.org/catalog/10668/
- Buff PR et al. "Natural pet food: a review of natural diets and their impact on canine and feline physiology." Journal of Animal Science, 2014. https://doi.org/10.2527/jas.2014-7789
- WSAVA Global Nutrition Guidelines. https://wsava.org/global-guidelines/nutrition-guidelines/
- ANSES. "Animal feed and pet nutrition." https://www.anses.fr/fr
- Clara Bell, Pet Food Comparison Analyst, PetFoodRate