Updated 05 Dec 2023
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Symply Adult Review

Type of food

Complete dry extruded

Dog types

Pet dogs

Breed sizes

Suitable for toy breed dogs
Adult weight 1-4kg. e.g. Chihuahua, Pomeranian, Yorkshire Terrier
Suitable for small breed dogs
Adult weight 4-10kg. e.g. Beagle, Dachshund, Jack Russell
Suitable for medium breed dogs
Adult weight 10-25kg. e.g. Border Collie, Staffie, Springer, Vizsla
Suitable for large breed dogs
Adult weight 25-45kg. e.g. Boxer, Labrador, Greyhound
Suitable for giant breed dogs
Adult weight 45kg+ e.g. Bernese, Great Dane, Mastiff

Dog ages

From 12 months to 7 years

Pack sizes

2kg, 6kg & 12kg bags

RRP

12kg bags = £65.99

AADF rating

68%

At a glance

Natural: Free from added artificial preservatives, antioxidants, colourings, flavourings or other controversial synthetic ingredients
High meat content: Contains at least 30% meat ingredients (on a dry matter basis)
Hypoallergenic: Free from wheat, maize, dairy products, soya products and artificial additives
Clearly labelled: Free from wheat, maize, dairy products, soya products and artificial additives
Certified nutritionally complete: This food complies fully with the complete food nutrient tolerances as recommended by FEDIAF and/or AAFCO

Price per day

£

Nutrition

Composition

Mixing bowl:

Turkey 45.5% (Fresh Turkey 26%, Dried Turkey 15%, Turkey Fat 3%, Turkey Gravy 1.5%), Sweet Potato (16%), Whole Oats (13%), Potato (11%), Pea Starch, Peas, Alfalfa, Salmon Oil (0.8%), Whole Egg, Prebiotics Fructooligosaccharides (0.04%), Apple, Broccoli, Carrot, Cranberry, Marigold Flower, Spinach, Bilberry.

As fed (BETA):

Nutritional additives (per kg)

Vitamin a 16230 Iu/kg, Vitamin D3 1925 Iu/kg, Vitamin E 240 mg/kg (as Alpha Tocopherol), Zinc (Zinc Sulphate Monohydrate) 100 mg/kg, Iron (Iron II Sulphate Monohydrate) 80 mg/kg, Manganese (Manganous Sulphate Monohydrate) 45 mg/kg, Copper (Copper II Sulphate Pentahydrate) 5 mg/kg, Iodine (Calcium Iodate) 1.5 mg/kg, Selenium (Sodium Selenite) 0.15 mg/kg.

Typical Analysis

Energy

0.0 kcal/100g

Dry weight nutrients

Above average

Average

Below average

Pricing

12kg bags RRP

£65.99

Grams per day

g

Cost per day

£

Approved supplier:

Symply store finder:

Store finder

Company

Manufacturer's product description

Company info
Company name:
HQ: United Kingdom
Brands: Symply 1818 Symply foods listed
Canagan 1919 Canagan foods listed 33 Canagan treats listed
Piccolo 22 Piccolo foods listed
Product country of origin: United Kingdom

Symply Review

Take a look at our latest Symply review.

@allaboutdogfood Replying to @Elena My quick review of Symply dry dog food. Not a bad choice for the price! #allaboutdogfood #dogfoodreview #dogfood #dogsoftiktok ♬ original sound - AllAboutDogFood

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Comments

10 Comments AADF Privacy Policy Sign in to comment
Alan gsd 4 months ago
Only just joined and seen your question. As a dog trainer for 50 plus years I certainly think puppys and young adults get a carbohydrate rush after a meal especially after the evening meal. I have fed Symply for many years I use the Turkey and sweet potato
Matthew Randell 8 months ago
Hi there! I love your website! Can I ask a question?? We have recently moved our 14 month old sprocker onto Symply (salmon). Her resting has changed completely. She’s barely sleeping during the day and settling down at night about 3 hours later than she used to. Could it be the large amount of Carbohydrates in the Symply, as listed on your website? We had her on Carnilove previously and she seemed much more relaxed. She receives over an hour per day at least of active walking
hrutterADWCCC 10 months ago
For nearly three weeks, I had started my dog on the Symply light/senior fresh chicken (grey bag), and very pleased to say she has lost weight from 32kg to now weighing 28 plus odd! I am ordering another pack and once she has gone down to the ideal weight, I will start to introduce her to her old food less an amount of this senior food.
Krobbo 2 years ago
Hi I changed my 18 month cockapoo to Symply wet & dry food after having sloppy poos. This has improved greatly but he now eats grass every walk he has. Has the Symply food enough fibre in as I read that it can be a sign of low nutrients?
Shirley 10 years ago
Hi, I have just started my itchy westie on the salmon & potato food as this food is supposed to guarantee the itching to stop. I have just finished a 2kg bag but she has yet to stop itching. We have been to the vets and she has had to have multiple treatments for the itching like steroid creams and tablets which made her quite ill. I have called symply themselves and found them not to be as helpful as I was hoping they'd be. They couldn't answer any of my questions with a valid answer and kept referring to others in the background who also could not answer my questions. I have decided to continue feeding my westie on this food and as they have just started to produce a wet food I am going to combine wet with dry as my dog prefers it. If this does not work I think I will be forced to try an elimination diet. Do you know of anyone who has tried this? I have tried many other foods which I know is not ideal but I am at a loss of what to do. Do you have any suggestions for me?
Team AADF Shirley 10 years ago
Hi Shirley. I'm sorry to hear about your Westie's upsets. Unfortunately, Westies are notorious for skin problems but almost all can be vastly improved, if not cured entirely, just with diet. It can take a while for the changes to work through - often as much as 8-12 weeks, so I would certainly suggest sticking with it for now. Take a look at our guide on feeding dogs with skin problems and please let us know how he gets on. http://www.whichdogfood.co....
Shirley Team AADF 10 years ago
Hello Again,
I have had a look at your guide, as suggested, and also read the article on elimination diets.. I didn't think you could use commercial dog food for the elimination diet? I thought it had to be one source of meat which they've not eaten before + veg, or am I wrong?
If so, what foods would you recommend I've tried salmon and potato varieties, in fact, most of them with no luck at all, or perhaps I'm just not leaving her long enough on them to have any effect.
I have read that Westies are not supposed to have more than 10% protein, as it's mainly a too high intake of protein that can cause the skin conditions for them, the problem is, most foods contain 20% and above.
Also do you think it would benefit giving her a glucosamine supplement as the vet thinks she has dislocating patella's on both her back legs?
Shirley Shirley 10 years ago
I forgot to ask will you be reviewing symply's new wet food??
Team AADF Shirley 10 years ago
Hi Shirley - apologies for the slow reply, I somehow missed your post.I'll answer your questions in turn:1. An elimination diet can be any diet that excludes all of the ingredients she is used to. For example, if your dog has been experiencing problems on a food with chicken, rice and peas, an effective exclusion diet would be lamb, potato and carrots. While on the exclusion diet, it's also important to cut out all treats and tid-bits until the cause has been identified. It can take a while so make sure you stick with any new diet for at least 8-12 weeks.2. I think the 10% protein figure probably refers to wet foods. For dry foods, less than 20% is generally regarded as low protein but quality is much more important than quantity so try to look for foods that only contain meat proteins and are not topped up with vegetable/cereal protein supplements.3. A lot of dog owners report improved mobility on glucosamine so there's certainly there's no harm in giving it a try.4. I'll get Symply's new wet food online as soon as I can.I hope that helps.
JayL4 Shirley 2 years ago
Hi, just wanted to say that I have the same issue my my Dachshund and I believe it is the chicken. Canagan dog food brand (non- chicken) has worked for us (worth checking ingredients though because food could be labelled as Turkey but it will also contain chicken..). Just though I could be useful.

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