Generic ingredients
Broad wording such as cereals, meat or derivatives makes the recipe harder to understand.
A practical hub to understand wording, claims and declared values on dog food labels. Always with sources, method and non-clinical caution.
How the score works9
Linked guides
6
Terms explained
7
Supported languages
Common label terms explained carefully and verifiably.
Broad wording such as cereals, meat or derivatives makes the recipe harder to understand.
The declared source matters: chicken, salmon, lamb or fish are clearer than vague wording.
They are not automatically negative: read species, percentage and the rest of the label.
It is a claim to verify: by itself it does not prove transparency or product coherence.
Check the whole ingredient list, including fats, broths and additives.
Protein, fat, fibre, ash and moisture should be read together with product format.
A clear look at generic ingredients in dog food to separate useful data, claims and missing information. Less specific wording makes the formula harder to understand.
IngredientiA clear look at dehydrated proteins and meals in dry dog food to separate useful data, claims and missing information. The technical name is not a score: source clarity matters.
IngredientiA clear look at meat or fish percentage in dry dog food to separate useful data, claims and missing information. Percentages help, but they should be read with ingredient form and moisture.
IngredientiA clear look at grain-free dog food to separate useful data, claims and missing information. Grain-free does not automatically mean more suitable.
CrocchetteA clear look at single-protein dry dog food to separate useful data, claims and missing information. The claim should be checked against the full ingredient list.
EtichetteHow to read protein in dog food using ingredients, declared values and available sources. The number should be read together with protein source and recipe.
EtichetteHow to read analytical constituents in dry dog food using ingredients, declared values and available sources. They are central data points, but they should always be read with ingredients.
EtichetteHow to read calories in dog food using ingredients, declared values and available sources. They help understand energy density, portions and real cost.
EtichetteHow to read complete or complementary dog food using ingredients, declared values and available sources. This wording changes the product's role in the bowl.
Good reading starts from context: format, life stage, available data and sources.
No. Bowlumo evaluates transparency, completeness and clarity of available data. It does not turn an ingredient into a health guarantee.
No. Grain free should be read in the context of the recipe, life stage, analytical values and available sources.
No. Diseases, persistent symptoms and dietetic foods require veterinary evaluation. Bowlumo remains informational and comparative.