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	<title>Puppy Nutrition &#8211; The Raw Dog Food Calculator</title>
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		<title>Weaning Puppies Onto Raw: A Safe UK Guide for 2026</title>
		<link>https://rawdogfoodcalculator.co.uk/weaning-puppies-onto-raw-a-safe-uk-guide-for-2026/</link>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Nutrition team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sun, 17 May 2026 18:28:44 +0000</pubDate>
				<category><![CDATA[Puppy Nutrition]]></category>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">https://rawdogfoodcalculator.co.uk/?p=2096</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[Weaning puppies onto raw food in the UK? Our 2026 guide covers timing, ratios, safe proteins and step-by-step tips. Start your puppy strong today.]]></description>
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        <div class="inline-block bg-brand-100 text-brand-700 px-4 py-2 rounded-full text-sm font-semibold mb-4">Puppy nutrition</div>
        <h1 class="text-4xl sm:text-5xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 leading-tight">Weaning Puppies Onto Raw: A Safe UK Guide for 2026</h1>
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            <div class="flex items-center gap-2"><i data-lucide="calendar" class="w-4 h-4"></i><span>17 May 2026</span></div>
            <div class="flex items-center gap-2"><i data-lucide="clock" class="w-4 h-4"></i><span>10 min read</span></div>
            <div class="flex items-center gap-2"><i data-lucide="user" class="w-4 h-4"></i><span>Nutrition Team</span></div>
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    <div class="mb-8 mt-4"><img decoding="async" src="https://rawdogfoodcalculator.co.uk/wp-content/uploads/2026/05/Flat-lay-of-fresh-raw-meat-organs-and-bone-for-weaning-puppies-onto-raw-food-on-a-wooden-surface.png" alt="Flat-lay of fresh raw meat, organs and bone for weaning puppies onto raw food on a wooden surface" class="w-full rounded-2xl shadow-lg" width="1376" height="768" loading="lazy"></div>
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        <p class="text-lg text-earth-700 mb-8">Weaning puppies onto raw food is one of the most rewarding ways to start a young dog&#8217;s life — and one of the easiest to get slightly wrong. This 2026 UK guide walks you through exactly when to begin weaning puppies onto raw, how to build a balanced first meal, the safest proteins to introduce, portion sizes for every breed size, and the common mistakes that catch new breeders and owners out. Whether you&#8217;re a breeder weaning a litter or an owner bringing home an 8-week-old pup, this is your step-by-step plan. For broader context, pair this with our <a href="/raw-feeding-puppies-uk-guide/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">UK puppy raw feeding guide</a> and our <a href="/pmr-guide/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">PMR guide</a>.</p>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">When To Start Weaning Puppies Onto Raw</h2>
            <p>Weaning puppies onto raw food typically begins between 3 and 4 weeks of age, when puppies start showing interest in their mother&#8217;s meals and their first teeth break through. The window for full transition runs from around week 3 to week 7 or 8, by which point pups should be eating four small raw meals a day independently.</p>
            <p class="mt-4">If you&#8217;re an owner collecting an 8-week-old pup that&#8217;s already weaned onto kibble, the principles still apply — you&#8217;ll simply use a slower, gentler transition rather than starting from milk. The <a href="https://www.pfma.org.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Pet Food Manufacturers&#8217; Association</a> recommends prioritising age-appropriate nutrition through every life stage, and a properly balanced raw diet meets those needs from the very first solid meal.</p>
            <table class="w-full border-collapse mb-2 mt-6 text-sm"><thead><tr class="bg-brand-100"><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">Puppy age</th><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">Stage</th><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">What to feed</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">0–3 weeks</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Milk only</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Mother&#8217;s milk or puppy milk replacer</td></tr><tr class="bg-brand-50"><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">3–4 weeks</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">First taste</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Finely minced raw chicken slurry, alongside milk</td></tr><tr><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">4–6 weeks</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Mostly raw</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Minced raw meals 3–4× daily, reducing milk</td></tr><tr class="bg-brand-50"><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">6–8 weeks</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Fully weaned</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">Complete raw meals, 4× daily</td></tr></tbody></table>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Why Raw From The Start Matters</h2>
            <p>Puppies fed a biologically appropriate diet from weaning enjoy a smoother microbiome transition than those switched from kibble months later. Their immature digestive systems learn to handle natural proteins, fats and bone without the inflammation many owners later associate with kibble. Studies cited by the <a href="https://www.bva.co.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">British Veterinary Association</a> highlight how early diet shapes lifelong gut health, joint development and immune function.</p>
            <p class="mt-4">Raw fed pups also tend to develop strong jaw muscles, cleaner teeth and steadier growth rates — particularly important for large and giant breeds where rapid weight gain on calorie-dense kibble is linked to skeletal problems. If you&#8217;re considering the BARF approach instead of PMR, our <a href="/barf-guide/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">complete BARF guide</a> explains the differences and how each model suits puppies. Weaning puppies onto raw also sets up taste preferences early — many kibble-only dogs later refuse raw, whereas pups raised on it accept new proteins enthusiastically for life.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">7 Easy Steps for Weaning Puppies Onto Raw</h2>
            <p>This is the proven sequence UK breeders use for weaning puppies onto raw safely over four weeks. Stick to one protein at a time and don&#8217;t rush — pups will tell you when they&#8217;re ready for the next stage.</p>
            <ol class="space-y-3 mt-4 mb-2">
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">1.</span> <span><strong>Days 1–3 (week 3):</strong> Offer a teaspoon of finely minced raw chicken breast, blended into a smooth slurry with warm water. Place it on a flat plate so multiple pups can investigate.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">2.</span> <span><strong>Days 4–7:</strong> Increase the slurry to one tablespoon per pup, twice a day. Add a pinch of finely ground egg yolk for fat and choline.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">3.</span> <span><strong>Week 4:</strong> Move to slightly chunkier minced chicken with finely ground bone (chicken wings minced through a grinder work well). Offer four small meals a day.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">4.</span> <span><strong>Week 5:</strong> Add a second protein — minced turkey or duck — on alternate days. Introduce a small amount of organ meat (around 5% liver) for the first time.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">5.</span> <span><strong>Week 6:</strong> Begin offering soft edible bone like minced chicken necks. Start to coarsen the mince so pups practise chewing.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">6.</span> <span><strong>Week 7:</strong> Move to chunked meat rather than mince. Add a red meat protein such as minced lamb or beef. Total daily food should sit at 8–10% of bodyweight.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">7.</span> <span><strong>Week 8 onwards:</strong> Fully weaned. Continue four meals a day until 12 weeks, then drop to three. Mother is no longer needed nutritionally.</span></li>
            </ol>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Building a Balanced Raw Meal for Weaning Puppies</h2>
            <p>When weaning puppies onto raw, every meal still follows the same 80/10/10 prey model ratios as adults — but with a slightly higher bone content (12–15%) to support growth, and care to keep liver under 5% of the meal in the early weeks. Here&#8217;s how a balanced meal breaks down:</p>
            <div class="bg-[#fee2e2] border-l-4 border-[#b91c1c] p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-6 mt-6"><h3 class="text-[#b91c1c] font-bold mb-2">Muscle meat — around 75%</h3><p>Lean muscle meat forms the bulk of every meal. Start with chicken breast, then introduce turkey, duck, lamb and beef one protein at a time over the first month. Avoid pre-seasoned or marinated supermarket meat.</p></div>
            <div class="bg-[#fef9c3] border-l-4 border-[#e3a925] p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-6"><h3 class="text-[#e3a925] font-bold mb-2">Edible bone — 12–15%</h3><p>Pups need more calcium than adults to fuel skeletal growth. Use finely minced chicken wings, necks or carcass mince. Never feed weight-bearing bones, and always grind bone for pups under 8 weeks. See our <a href="/raw-bones-for-dogs-uk/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">raw bones for dogs UK</a> guide for the safest options.</p></div>
            <div class="bg-[#f3e8ff] border-l-4 border-[#7e22ce] p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-6"><h3 class="text-[#7e22ce] font-bold mb-2">Liver — 5%</h3><p>Liver is dense in vitamin A, B vitamins and iron. Introduce just a pinch at week 5 and build up gradually — too much too soon can cause loose stools. Chicken or lamb liver are easiest on developing guts.</p></div>
            <div class="bg-[#e0e7ff] border-l-4 border-[#4f46e5] p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-6"><h3 class="text-[#4f46e5] font-bold mb-2">Other secreting organ — 5%</h3><p>Kidney, spleen or pancreas round out the mineral profile. Introduce after liver is well tolerated (around week 6). If your butcher only sells liver, you can run a slightly higher liver ratio temporarily.</p></div>
            <div class="bg-[#d2f8e3] border-l-4 border-[#058361] p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-6"><h3 class="text-[#058361] font-bold mb-2">Optional puppy extras</h3><p>A whole raw egg with shell (twice weekly) provides choline, healthy fat and natural calcium. A teaspoon of plain natural yoghurt or kefir supports the developing microbiome. Avoid vegetables until at least 12 weeks unless your vet advises otherwise.</p></div>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Portion Sizes During Weaning</h2>
            <p>Puppies eat a far higher percentage of bodyweight than adults — typically 8–10% during weaning, tapering down as they grow. Always split the daily total across four meals to keep blood sugar steady. The table below shows approximate daily totals for healthy pups.</p>
            <table class="w-full border-collapse mb-2 mt-6 text-sm"><thead><tr class="bg-brand-100"><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">Puppy weight</th><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">% bodyweight</th><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">Daily food</th><th class="text-left p-3 border border-brand-200">Per meal (×4)</th></tr></thead><tbody><tr><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">1 kg</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">10%</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">100 g</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">25 g</td></tr><tr class="bg-brand-50"><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">3 kg</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">10%</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">300 g</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">75 g</td></tr><tr><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">5 kg</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">8%</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">400 g</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">100 g</td></tr><tr class="bg-brand-50"><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">8 kg</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">8%</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">640 g</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">160 g</td></tr><tr><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">12 kg</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">7%</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">840 g</td><td class="p-3 border border-brand-200">210 g</td></tr></tbody></table>
            <p class="mt-4 font-semibold text-brand-700">Weigh weekly. Adjust portions by ±10% based on body condition — you should feel ribs easily without seeing them. When weaning puppies onto raw, portion accuracy matters far more than at any later life stage, so don&#8217;t eyeball it. For breed-specific projections, run the numbers through our <a href="/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">free raw dog food calculator</a>.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Safe First Proteins When Weaning Puppies Onto Raw</h2>
            <p>Not every protein is equal at this delicate stage. The safest first proteins for weaning puppies onto raw are lean, low-fat poultry that&#8217;s easy to mince finely. Save richer proteins for week 5 or later, once digestion has settled.</p>
            <ul class="space-y-3 mt-4 mb-4">
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Chicken breast (week 3):</strong> The textbook starter. Cheap, low-fat, easy to source from any UK supermarket. Around £4–£6 per kg.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Turkey mince (week 4):</strong> Slightly leaner than chicken, gentle on tummies. Look for plain mince with no added water.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Duck (week 5):</strong> A nutrient-rich novel protein. Richer in iron and zinc — ideal as a second protein.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Lamb (week 6):</strong> The first red meat in the rotation. Higher fat, so build up slowly.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Beef (week 7):</strong> Lean beef mince introduces another red protein. Avoid fatty cuts until pups are over 12 weeks.</span></li>
            </ul>
            <p>Avoid pork in the first month unless it&#8217;s pre-frozen for three weeks (UK guidance on Aujeszky&#8217;s disease, see the <a href="https://www.fsa.gov.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">Food Standards Agency</a>). Also hold off on oily fish like salmon and mackerel until 8 weeks, when whole sardines become a brilliant omega-3 addition.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Common Mistakes When Weaning Puppies Onto Raw</h2>
            <p>Most issues people report when weaning puppies onto raw come down to a handful of avoidable errors. Recognise them early and the whole transition becomes much smoother.</p>
            <ul class="space-y-3 mt-4 mb-2">
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Introducing too many proteins at once</strong> — start with chicken alone. Add a new protein only every 5–7 days.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Skipping bone or grinding it wrong</strong> — puppies on bone-less diets risk calcium deficiency within weeks. Always include 12–15% ground bone.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Feeding cold from the fridge</strong> — pups eat best at room temperature. Take meals out 20 minutes early or warm with a splash of hot water.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Over-feeding fat</strong> — duck legs and lamb mince contain more fat than chicken. Trim visible fat in the first month.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Free-feeding all day</strong> — leaving raw food out for hours grows bacteria and removes meal structure. Pups should finish each meal in 5–10 minutes.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span><strong>Forgetting to weigh</strong> — pups outgrow portions every week. A 5kg lab pup at 8 weeks may need 700g a day by 10 weeks.</span></li>
            </ul>
            <p class="mt-4">For more pitfalls common across all life stages, see our <a href="/common-raw-feeding-mistakes/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">10 common raw feeding mistakes</a> article.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Hygiene, Storage &amp; Safety</h2>
            <p>Weaning puppies onto raw means raw meat in the kitchen — and pups are messier than adult dogs. The <a href="https://www.pdsa.org.uk/" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">PDSA</a> emphasises the same kitchen hygiene rules whether you&#8217;re handling raw food for humans or pets. Apply common-sense practice:</p>
            <ul class="space-y-3 mt-4 mb-2">
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span>Defrost meals in the fridge for 12–24 hours. Never refreeze fully thawed raw meat.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span>Use stainless steel bowls or ceramic — easy to disinfect after each meal.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span>Wash hands and surfaces with hot soapy water immediately after preparing meals.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span>Keep a dedicated chopping board for raw pet food, ideally a different colour.</span></li>
                <li class="flex gap-3"><span class="text-brand-600 font-bold">•</span> <span>Portion meals into freezer-safe tubs in advance — a fortnight&#8217;s worth saves time and money.</span></li>
            </ul>
            <p class="mt-4">Vulnerable adults, young children or immunocompromised household members should not handle raw pet food directly.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded-r-lg mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">Frequently Asked Questions</h2>
            <h3 class="text-lg font-bold text-earth-900 mt-4 mb-2">At what age should I start weaning puppies onto raw?</h3>
            <p>Begin at 3 to 4 weeks of age, when puppies start showing interest in solid food and their first teeth emerge. Full transition should be complete by 7 to 8 weeks.</p>
            <h3 class="text-lg font-bold text-earth-900 mt-6 mb-2">Can I switch an 8-week-old kibble-fed puppy to raw?</h3>
            <p>Yes. Use a slow 7–10 day transition rather than a sudden swap. Start with 25% raw mixed with 75% kibble, increasing the raw portion every two days. Our <a href="/transition-dog-to-raw-food/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">transition guide</a> covers the full process.</p>
            <h3 class="text-lg font-bold text-earth-900 mt-6 mb-2">How much should a puppy eat when weaning onto raw?</h3>
            <p>Aim for 8–10% of current bodyweight per day, split across four meals. A 5kg pup needs roughly 400g daily. Reweigh weekly and adjust.</p>
            <h3 class="text-lg font-bold text-earth-900 mt-6 mb-2">Is weaning puppies onto raw safe for large breeds?</h3>
            <p>Yes — and often safer than calorie-dense kibble that drives rapid growth. Aim for steady, lean development by keeping calcium at 12–15% bone content and avoiding over-feeding fat.</p>
            <h3 class="text-lg font-bold text-earth-900 mt-6 mb-2">Do raw fed puppies need supplements?</h3>
            <p>A balanced 80/10/10 raw diet with whole eggs and occasional oily fish meets nearly all needs when weaning puppies onto raw. Many breeders add a small amount of green-lipped mussel powder for joints once pups are 12 weeks old.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-100 border-l-4 border-brand-600 p-6 rounded-r-lg mt-12 mb-8">
            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 mt-0">The Bottom Line</h2>
            <p>Weaning puppies onto raw food is straightforward when you follow a structured plan. Start with finely minced chicken at 3–4 weeks, build up through the prey model ratios over four weeks, and have pups fully transitioned by 7–8 weeks. Keep bone content at 12–15%, introduce proteins one at a time, weigh weekly, and stick to four meals a day until 12 weeks. Get those fundamentals right and you set your pup up for a lifetime of strong joints, clean teeth and steady, healthy growth.</p>
        </div>

        <div class="bg-brand-50 border-2 border-brand-200 p-8 rounded-lg my-12">
            <h3 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4">Calculate Your Puppy&#8217;s Daily Raw Portions</h3>
            <p class="mb-6 text-earth-700">Use our free UK raw dog food calculator to work out exactly how much muscle meat, bone and organ your puppy needs each day — adjusted automatically for age, weight and growth rate.</p>
            <a href="/" class="inline-block bg-brand-600 hover:bg-brand-700 text-white font-semibold px-8 py-3 rounded-lg transition">Try Our Free Calculator</a>
        </div>

        
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		<title>powerful Raw Feeding Puppies UK: The benefits 2026</title>
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		<dc:creator><![CDATA[Nutrition team]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 01 Apr 2026 10:11:23 +0000</pubDate>
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        <span>Raw Feeding for Puppies UK: A Complete Beginner&#8217;s Guide</span>
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            <div class="inline-block bg-brand-100 text-brand-700 px-4 py-2 rounded-full text-sm font-semibold mb-4">
                Puppy Nutrition
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            <h1 class="text-4xl sm:text-5xl font-bold text-earth-900 mb-4 leading-tight">
                Raw Feeding Puppies UK: Beginner&#8217;s Guide
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                    <span>1 April 2026</span>
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                    <span>9 min read</span>
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                    <span>Nutrition Team</span>
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            <p class="text-lg text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Raw feeding puppies is one of the best decisions you can make for their long-term health and development. Done correctly, puppies fed raw diets from a young age tend to have stronger immune systems, better dental health, clearer skin, and more stable energy levels than their kibble-fed counterparts. But puppy raw feeding does require attention to detail—growth is rapid, nutritional needs are higher, and the margins for error are smaller. This comprehensive guide walks you through everything you need to know. For detailed ratio guidance, see our <a href="/how-much-raw-food-should-i-feed-my-dog" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">comprehensive portion guide</a>.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">When Can Puppies Start Eating Raw Food?</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                The timing depends on your pup&#8217;s situation:
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Puppies Still with Mother (3-4 Weeks)</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                You can introduce small amounts of raw food from about 3-4 weeks whilst puppies are still nursing. At this stage, mum is still providing crucial antibodies and nutrition through milk, but puppies are increasingly interested in solid food. Introduce minced raw meat in tiny portions (a tablespoon at a time) alongside nursing.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Newly Weaned Puppies (6-8 Weeks)</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Most puppies are fully weaned and ready for raw feeding around 8 weeks old. If you&#8217;re bringing home a new puppy at 8-12 weeks, this is the ideal time to establish raw feeding. Even if they&#8217;ve had kibble or wet food from their breeder, switching to raw is straightforward at this age.
            </p>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                If you&#8217;re adopting or acquiring a puppy that&#8217;s already older (12+ weeks), they can transition to raw without difficulty, though you may want to do it gradually over 7-10 days to avoid digestive upset. Learn more from <a href="https://thekennelclub.org.uk" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">The Kennel Club</a>&#8216;s puppy guidance.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">The Sliding Scale: How Much to Feed by Age</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Puppy feeding is dramatically different from adult feeding. Puppies are growing rapidly and have much higher caloric and nutritional demands. This is where the &#8220;sliding scale&#8221; comes in—the percentage of body weight needed decreases as your puppy grows.
            </p>

            <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded my-8">
                <h3 class="font-semibold text-earth-900 mb-4">Puppy Feeding Percentages by Age</h3>
                <ul class="space-y-3 text-gray-800">
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">8-12 weeks:</span>
                        <span><strong>8%</strong> of body weight daily (4 meals)</span>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">3-4 months:</span>
                        <span><strong>6%</strong> of body weight daily (3 meals)</span>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">4-6 months:</span>
                        <span><strong>5-6%</strong> of body weight daily (3 meals)</span>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">6-9 months:</span>
                        <span><strong>4%</strong> of body weight daily (2-3 meals)</span>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">9-12 months:</span>
                        <span><strong>3%</strong> of body weight daily (2 meals)</span>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-3">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">12+ months:</span>
                        <span><strong>2-2.5%</strong> of body weight daily (transition to adult)</span>
                    </li>
                </ul>
            </div>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Why Such High Percentages?</h3>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                An 8-week-old puppy&#8217;s metabolism is vastly different from an adult dog&#8217;s. They&#8217;re not just maintaining their current body—they&#8217;re building bone, muscle, fur, organ tissue, and brain development, all simultaneously. A growing puppy can burn 2-3 times more calories per kilogram of body weight than an adult dog.
            </p>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                As your puppy grows, their absolute food consumption increases (because they&#8217;re getting heavier), but the percentage of body weight needed decreases. By adulthood, they&#8217;ll need just 2-2.5% of body weight, but they&#8217;ll be eating far more in grams because they&#8217;re much larger.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Practical Feeding Examples by Age</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Let&#8217;s make this concrete with real examples for a medium-breed puppy (Cocker Spaniel, predicted adult weight 25kg):
            </p>

            <div class="bg-white border border-gray-200 rounded-lg p-6 my-8">
                <h3 class="font-semibold text-earth-900 mb-4">8-10 Weeks Old (Puppy weight: 3kg)</h3>
                <p class="text-gray-700 mb-2">At 8%: 3kg × 0.08 = <strong>240g per day</strong></p>
                <p class="text-gray-700 text-sm text-gray-600">Feeding schedule: 60g × 4 meals = 240g daily</p>
            </div>

            <div class="bg-white border border-gray-200 rounded-lg p-6 my-8">
                <h3 class="font-semibold text-earth-900 mb-4">4 Months Old (Puppy weight: 8kg)</h3>
                <p class="text-gray-700 mb-2">At 6%: 8kg × 0.06 = <strong>480g per day</strong></p>
                <p class="text-gray-700 text-sm text-gray-600">Feeding schedule: 160g × 3 meals = 480g daily</p>
            </div>

            <div class="bg-white border border-gray-200 rounded-lg p-6 my-8">
                <h3 class="font-semibold text-earth-900 mb-4">6 Months Old (Puppy weight: 15kg)</h3>
                <p class="text-gray-700 mb-2">At 4%: 15kg × 0.04 = <strong>600g per day</strong></p>
                <p class="text-gray-700 text-sm text-gray-600">Feeding schedule: 300g × 2 meals = 600g daily</p>
            </div>

            <div class="bg-white border border-gray-200 rounded-lg p-6 my-8">
                <h3 class="font-semibold text-earth-900 mb-4">10 Months Old (Puppy weight: 22kg)</h3>
                <p class="text-gray-700 mb-2">At 3%: 22kg × 0.03 = <strong>660g per day</strong></p>
                <p class="text-gray-700 text-sm text-gray-600">Feeding schedule: 330g × 2 meals = 660g daily</p>
            </div>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Starting Proteins: Introduce Gradually</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                One of the most common raw feeding mistakes with puppies is introducing too much variety too quickly. A young puppy&#8217;s digestive system is still establishing its microbiome and needs time to adapt to raw feeding. Introduce proteins one at a time, waiting 5-7 days between introducing new proteins to monitor for sensitivities.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Recommended Protein Introduction Order</h3>

            <div class="bg-earth-50 rounded-lg p-6 my-8">
                <ol class="space-y-4 text-gray-700">
                    <li class="flex gap-4">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 text-lg flex-shrink-0">1.</span>
                        <div>
                            <p class="font-semibold">Chicken (weeks 1-2)</p>
                            <p class="text-sm text-gray-600">The most digestible and least allergenic protein. Feed ground or minced chicken with the skin on for easy consumption and better nutrient absorption.</p>
                        </div>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-4">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 text-lg flex-shrink-0">2.</span>
                        <div>
                            <p class="font-semibold">Turkey (weeks 3-4)</p>
                            <p class="text-sm text-gray-600">Similar digestibility to chicken. Ground turkey or turkey pieces work well. Still very gentle on developing digestive systems.</p>
                        </div>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-4">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 text-lg flex-shrink-0">3.</span>
                        <div>
                            <p class="font-semibold">Beef (weeks 5-6)</p>
                            <p class="text-sm text-gray-600">A richer protein. By this point (12-16 weeks), your puppy&#8217;s system is more established. Introduce ground beef or finely minced beef.</p>
                        </div>
                    </li>
                    <li class="flex gap-4">
                        <span class="font-bold text-brand-700 text-lg flex-shrink-0">4.</span>
                        <div>
                            <p class="font-semibold">Pork, Lamb, Game (weeks 7+)</p>
                            <p class="text-sm text-gray-600">Once the core proteins are established, explore other meats. Rotate between different proteins for nutritional variety and to build digestive robustness.</p>
                        </div>
                    </li>
                </ol>
            </div>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Bone Content for Growing Puppies</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Bones are crucial for puppies—they&#8217;re not just food, they&#8217;re building materials for growing skeletons. However, bone content needs careful management in puppies.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">The Right Bone Content</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Most raw feeding guidance recommends 10-15% bone content for puppies (slightly higher than the typical 10% for adults). This provides adequate calcium and phosphorus without excessive mineral loading on developing kidneys. Raw meaty bones like chicken wings, chicken necks, and lamb ribs are ideal.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Calcium to Phosphorus Ratio</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                This is critical for puppies. The calcium-to-phosphorus ratio should be roughly 1.2:1. Whole prey naturally provides this balance, but if you&#8217;re feeding individual components, monitor carefully. Too much phosphorus relative to calcium interferes with bone development. Too much calcium can cause joint and bone problems, especially in large-breed puppies.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Bone Types to Avoid for Young Puppies</h3>
            <ul class="space-y-2 my-4 text-gray-700">
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="x-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-red-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span><strong>Large weight-bearing bones</strong> (e.g., femurs, marrow bones) are too hard for young puppies and risk broken teeth</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="x-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-red-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span><strong>Cooked bones</strong> of any kind—they splinter and are dangerous</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="x-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-red-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span><strong>Very small bones</strong> that could be swallowed whole without grinding</span>
                </li>
            </ul>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Feeding Frequency by Age</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                As puppies grow, they can handle larger meals less frequently. This is crucial for owners—fewer meals means less preparation and monitoring.
            </p>

            <div class="overflow-x-auto my-8">
                <table class="w-full text-sm border-collapse">
                    <thead>
                        <tr class="bg-brand-100">
                            <th class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3 text-left font-semibold">Age</th>
                            <th class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3 text-left font-semibold">Meals Per Day</th>
                            <th class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3 text-left font-semibold">Typical Feeding Times</th>
                        </tr>
                    </thead>
                    <tbody>
                        <tr class="bg-white">
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">8-12 weeks</td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3"><strong>4 meals</strong></td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">8am, 12pm, 4pm, 8pm</td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr class="bg-earth-50">
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">3-6 months</td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3"><strong>3 meals</strong></td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">8am, 1pm, 6pm</td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr class="bg-white">
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">6-9 months</td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3"><strong>2-3 meals</strong></td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">Start transitioning to 2 meals</td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr class="bg-earth-50">
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">9-12 months</td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3"><strong>2 meals</strong></td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">8am, 6pm</td>
                        </tr>
                        <tr class="bg-white">
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">12+ months</td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3"><strong>1-2 meals</strong></td>
                            <td class="border border-gray-300 px-4 py-3">Many adults thrive on once-daily feeding</td>
                        </tr>
                    </tbody>
                </table>
            </div>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6 text-sm text-gray-600">
                Note: Two meals per day is recommended for most dogs to prevent bloat and promote stable digestion, even in adulthood. For more on managing raw feeding transition, see our <a href="transition-dog-to-raw-food" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">transition guide</a>.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Common Puppy Raw Feeding Mistakes to Avoid</h2>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">1. Introducing Too Much Variety Too Quickly</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Feeding chicken, beef, pork, and turkey all within the first two weeks overwhelms a young digestive system. Stick with one protein for 5-7 days before introducing the next. This lets you identify any sensitivities clearly.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">2. Neglecting Organ Meat</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Organ meats are essential for puppies—they&#8217;re nutrient-dense and crucial for development. Aim for 10% organ meat overall (5% liver, 5% other organs). If you skip this, you&#8217;re missing vital nutrients like vitamin A, iron, and taurine.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">3. Wrong Bone Content or Types</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Oversized bones can damage developing teeth. Undersized bones can be swallowed whole. Aim for soft raw bones (chicken wings, necks, ribs) that are appropriately sized for your puppy&#8217;s mouth. Ground raw bones or finely minced bone works well for very young puppies.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">4. Not Monitoring Growth Carefully</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Puppies grow rapidly, and portion needs change frequently. Weigh your puppy every 1-2 weeks for the first 6 months and adjust portions accordingly. A puppy that&#8217;s too thin or too fat sets them up for health problems throughout life.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">5. Feeding Only Muscle Meat</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Some new raw feeders feed almost exclusively muscle meat because it&#8217;s easier to source and less &#8220;weird&#8221; than organs. But organ meat is nutritionally irreplaceable. If your puppy gets mostly muscle meat, they&#8217;re missing crucial micronutrients.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Monitoring Puppy Growth and Body Condition</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Unlike adults, puppies are constantly changing. You need to assess and adjust more frequently.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Body Condition Scoring for Puppies</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Puppies should have visible ribs when looked at from above, but not excessively prominent. When you run your hand along their sides, you should feel the ribs easily without pressing hard, but not see them starkly. This is healthy body condition for growth—slightly more visible than adults. Consult <a href="https://rspca.org.uk" rel="noopener noreferrer" target="_blank">RSPCA guidance</a> on body condition scoring.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Signs Your Puppy Is Getting the Right Amount</h3>
            <ul class="space-y-2 my-4 text-gray-700">
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="check-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-green-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span>Steady growth week to week (consult your vet for breed-specific growth curves)</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="check-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-green-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span>Shiny coat and bright eyes</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="check-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-green-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span>Firm stools (may be slightly softer than kibble-fed puppies, but not runny)</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="check-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-green-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span>Good energy and enthusiasm</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-2">
                    <i data-lucide="check-circle" class="w-5 h-5 text-green-500 flex-shrink-0"></i>
                    <span>Muscles are developing visibly</span>
                </li>
            </ul>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Large Breed vs Small Breed Puppies</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Large and giant breed puppies need special consideration. They grow for much longer (up to 18-24 months) and their calcium and phosphorus requirements are more critical. Too much food—or specifically too much calcium—in the first year can cause orthopedic problems like hip dysplasia and elbow dysplasia.
            </p>

            <h3 class="text-xl font-semibold text-earth-800 mt-6 mb-3">Large Breed Considerations</h3>
            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Large breed puppies should grow slowly and steadily rather than rapidly. Feed at the lower end of the percentage range for your puppy&#8217;s age. Monitor bone content carefully—aim for exactly 10-12% rather than experimenting. Work with your vet to ensure calcium-phosphorus ratios are ideal.
            </p>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Many large breed puppy raw feeders recommend adding calcium supplementation (through finely ground eggshell or specific supplements) to maintain optimal ratios. Small breed puppies typically don&#8217;t need this if fed proper ratios.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">When to Switch to Adult Feeding Percentages</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                The transition happens gradually and varies by breed:
            </p>

            <ul class="space-y-3 my-6 text-gray-700">
                <li class="flex gap-3">
                    <span class="font-semibold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">Small breeds:</span>
                    <span>Around 9-10 months of age</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-3">
                    <span class="font-semibold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">Medium breeds:</span>
                    <span>Around 12 months of age</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-3">
                    <span class="font-semibold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">Large breeds:</span>
                    <span>Around 12-15 months of age</span>
                </li>
                <li class="flex gap-3">
                    <span class="font-semibold text-brand-700 flex-shrink-0">Giant breeds:</span>
                    <span>Around 18-24 months of age</span>
                </li>
            </ul>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Rather than switching abruptly, gradually reduce percentages over 2-4 weeks. If your 10-month-old puppy is currently eating 3.5% and should transition to 2.5%, reduce gradually—3.2%, then 2.8%, then 2.5%—and monitor body condition carefully.
            </p>

            <h2 class="text-2xl font-bold text-earth-900 mt-10 mb-4">Use Our Free Calculator for Puppy Feeding</h2>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Calculating exact portions for growing puppies at different ages can be complex. Our <a href="/" class="text-brand-700 font-semibold hover:text-brand-800 transition">free raw dog food calculator</a> includes a dedicated puppy mode that accounts for your puppy&#8217;s current age, breed size category, and expected growth trajectory.
            </p>

            <p class="text-gray-700 leading-relaxed mb-6">
                Simply enter your puppy&#8217;s details and select &#8220;Puppy&#8221; mode, and the calculator will provide exact daily portions, feeding frequency recommendations, and transition schedules to adult feeding. Update your puppy&#8217;s age monthly to keep recommendations current as they grow.
            </p>

            <div class="bg-brand-50 border-l-4 border-brand-500 p-6 rounded my-8">
                <p class="text-gray-800 mb-4"><strong>Get Exact Puppy Feeding Recommendations</strong></p>
                <a href="/" class="inline-block bg-brand-700 text-white px-6 py-3 rounded-lg font-semibold hover:bg-brand-800 transition">
                    Try Our Puppy Calculator
                </a>
            </div>
        </div>
</article>
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