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Kirkland Signature Dog Food — Complete Review

Bestie Paws, May 4, 2026May 4, 2026
🐾🛒
AAFCO Verified · Diamond Pet Foods · FDA Reviewed · Vet Nutrition Research

What’s actually inside Costco’s private-label dog food, who makes it, how it compares to Blue Buffalo, Purina Pro Plan, and Hill’s Science Diet, what veterinary nutritionists say, and everything you need to know before buying the big bag.

🩺 Always Confirm With Your Veterinarian

Every dog has unique health needs. This review covers general nutrition facts, AAFCO standards, and independently verified ingredient data. It does not replace personalized veterinary advice. Dogs with kidney disease, heart conditions, diabetes, obesity, or allergies may need a prescription or condition-specific formula. If your dog has any diagnosed health condition, ask your vet before changing foods. For specialist guidance, find a board-certified veterinary nutritionist (DACVN) at acvn.org/find-a-nutritionist.

📋 10 Key Facts — Kirkland Signature Dog Food

Kirkland Signature Dog Food is Costco’s private-label pet food line — and it may be the best-kept secret in dog nutrition. Manufactured by Diamond Pet Foods, a U.S.-based company operating since 1970, Kirkland offers real-meat-first kibble, AAFCO-compliant nutrition, and built-in probiotics at a price that undercuts comparable premium brands by 50–78% per pound. Available exclusively at Costco warehouses (and at higher prices on Costco.com), it routinely ranks among the top consumer-rated dog foods for value, palatability, and digestive tolerability. But “great value” doesn’t mean “right for every dog” — and understanding what’s inside the bag matters as much as the price tag. Here are the 10 most important facts every dog owner should know before buying Kirkland.

  • 1
    Is Kirkland Signature dog food actually good quality? YES — it is genuinely good-quality food for a maintenance-level kibble; Kirkland meets AAFCO nutritional adequacy standards, lists real meat as the first ingredient in every formula, contains no corn, wheat, or soy, and includes active probiotics — competing nutritionally with brands costing 50–78% more per pound
    Kirkland Signature’s Adult Chicken, Rice & Vegetable Formula, its flagship product, starts with fresh chicken as the first ingredient and follows with chicken meal — a concentrated animal protein source with higher protein density than whole chicken alone. The formula is rounded out with whole grain brown rice, cracked pearled barley, egg product, chicken fat, fish meal, flaxseed, dried chicory root (a natural prebiotic), and an Active9™ probiotic blend of five strains naturally found in the canine gastrointestinal tract. The Chicken & Rice formula’s guaranteed analysis shows a minimum 26% crude protein and 16% crude fat — both comfortably exceeding the AAFCO adult maintenance minimums of 18% protein and 5% fat on a dry matter basis. The food avoids corn, wheat, soy, artificial colors, artificial flavors, and artificial preservatives, aligning it with the ingredient standards of brands selling at two to three times the price. Where it falls short of ultra-premium brands: Kirkland is manufactured to a broad AAFCO formulation standard rather than to the more rigorous AAFCO feeding trial standard, and it lacks the breed-specific or condition-specific precision of Royal Canin or Hill’s. For a healthy adult dog without special medical needs, the quality-to-cost ratio is difficult to match.
  • 2
    Who makes Kirkland dog food? Diamond Pet Foods, Inc. — a family-owned U.S. manufacturer founded in 1970 and based in Meta, Missouri, operating five company-owned facilities across Arkansas, California, South Carolina, Missouri, and Oklahoma; Diamond also produces Taste of the Wild, 4Health, Diamond Naturals, and numerous other brands from the same facilities under the same safety protocols
    Costco owns the Kirkland Signature brand and controls the formulation specifications — every ingredient list, nutritional target, and quality standard is set by Costco’s own standards team. Diamond Pet Foods owns and operates the manufacturing plants where the food is actually produced, applying its own quality-control infrastructure to every batch. This arrangement means Kirkland is produced in the same Diamond facilities under the same safety protocols as Taste of the Wild, a premium brand that retails for 30–40% more per pound. Diamond Pet Foods has been in operation for over five decades and is one of the largest pet food manufacturers in the United States. The company-owned manufacturing model — where Diamond controls its own facilities rather than contracting out to co-packers — is considered a quality-control advantage by many veterinary nutrition observers, since accountability remains consistent within one corporate structure. The tradeoff is that recalls affecting Diamond’s manufacturing operations can simultaneously touch Kirkland and all the other brands Diamond produces, as occurred in 2012.
  • 3
    How does Kirkland dog food compare to Blue Buffalo? Kirkland is 50–75% cheaper per pound ($0.77–0.85/lb in-store vs. Blue Buffalo’s $1.80–2.50/lb on Chewy), delivers equal or higher protein (26% vs. 24%), and uses the same real-meat-first, no corn/wheat/soy philosophy; Blue Buffalo adds its proprietary LifeSource Bits antioxidant blend and has wider availability outside Costco; Kirkland wins decisively on value, Blue Buffalo wins on retail access and marketing transparency
    The nutritional comparison between Kirkland Adult Chicken & Rice and Blue Buffalo Life Protection Formula Chicken & Brown Rice is closer than most dog owners expect — and the price difference is much wider. Kirkland’s 26% protein and 16% fat outperform Blue Buffalo’s 24% protein and 14% fat on paper, though both meet AAFCO adult maintenance standards comfortably. Both use real deboned chicken as the first ingredient, both avoid corn, wheat, soy, and by-product meals, and both include real fruits and vegetables alongside prebiotic fiber. Kirkland adds a five-strain Active9™ probiotic blend that Blue Buffalo’s Life Protection Formula does not include. Blue Buffalo counters with its LifeSource Bits — a cold-formed blend of antioxidants, vitamins, and minerals — a differentiator that Kirkland does not have an equivalent for. Where the comparison diverges sharply: a 40-pound bag of Kirkland in-store costs approximately $31–33 at Costco ($0.77–0.85 per pound), while a comparable Blue Buffalo 34-pound bag on Chewy costs approximately $65–75 ($1.90–2.20 per pound). Over a year feeding a 50-pound dog, that gap can exceed $400. Both are safe, nutritionally adequate choices for healthy adult dogs; the primary decision factor is whether the Blue Buffalo LifeSource Bits and retail convenience are worth double the cost.
  • 4
    Do vets recommend Kirkland dog food? Generally yes for healthy dogs — veterinary nutritionists widely consider it solid AAFCO-compliant nutrition at an exceptional price point; however, most veterinarians more frequently recommend Purina Pro Plan, Hill’s Science Diet, or Royal Canin because those brands have more extensive feeding trial data and peer-reviewed research backing; Kirkland is rarely criticized as nutritionally inadequate — the hesitation is about relative evidence, not safety
    Kirkland does not fund peer-reviewed feeding trials or publish nutritional research the way Purina, Hill’s, and Royal Canin do. This absence of published research — not any documented nutritional failing — is the primary reason some veterinarians default to those brands rather than Kirkland. The World Small Animal Veterinary Association (WSAVA) guidelines recommend that pet owners prioritize foods made by companies that employ full-time veterinary nutritionists and conduct their own feeding trials; Kirkland/Diamond meets some but not all of these criteria. That said, many veterinary nutritionists publicly note that Kirkland’s formulas are nutritionally sound and appropriate for healthy dogs, and several online veterinary forums (including those moderated by DACVN-certified nutritionists) rate Kirkland favorably for value-conscious pet owners. The practical reality: for a healthy adult dog on a maintenance diet with no medical conditions, the nutritional gap between Kirkland and the most-recommended premium brands is small and unlikely to affect the dog’s long-term health outcomes. Kirkland’s limitation is that it lacks both the breed-specific precision of Royal Canin and the therapeutic formula range of Hill’s — meaning dogs with specific health conditions will need to look elsewhere regardless of budget.
  • 5
    Is Kirkland Nature’s Domain grain-free safe — and what about DCM? The FDA opened an investigation in 2018 into a potential link between grain-free foods high in peas, lentils, and legumes and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs; Kirkland’s Nature’s Domain grain-free line uses peas and potatoes as primary carbohydrates and appeared in DCM case tallies; no causal relationship has been scientifically established, but most veterinary cardiologists recommend grain-inclusive diets for dogs without confirmed grain allergies as a precaution
    The FDA’s investigation into a possible diet-associated DCM link, announced in July 2018, specifically flagged dry dog foods where peas, lentils, other legume seeds, or potatoes appeared as primary ingredients — precisely the profile of Kirkland’s Nature’s Domain grain-free formulas (Salmon & Sweet Potato, Turkey & Sweet Potato, Beef & Sweet Potato). Between 2014 and 2020, the FDA received over 1,100 DCM reports mentioning specific brands, with several grain-free Kirkland/Diamond products cited. Importantly, the FDA’s 2020 update confirmed that no clear causal relationship between grain-free diets and DCM has been established — the science remains complex and actively contested. Current understanding suggests that nutrient interactions (particularly taurine metabolism) rather than grain-free status alone may be the relevant variable. Kirkland’s 2026 grain-inclusive Super Premium line now includes supplemental taurine and methionine to address this concern. For the majority of healthy adult dogs without diagnosed grain allergies, the grain-inclusive Kirkland Super Premium line avoids the DCM concern entirely and is the safer default choice according to most veterinary cardiologists. Dogs with a confirmed need for grain-free feeding should discuss the evidence with their veterinarian before committing to Nature’s Domain long-term.
  • 6
    Has Kirkland dog food ever been recalled? Yes — Kirkland has had two significant recall events: April 2007 (wet food only, melamine contamination from a Chinese ingredient supplier) and May 2012 (multiple dry food varieties, Salmonella Infantis contamination traced to Diamond’s South Carolina plant); no major recalls affecting Kirkland dry food have been reported since 2012; always check fda.gov/animal-veterinary for current status
    The 2012 recall is the most significant in Kirkland’s history and the one most relevant to today’s buyers. Between April and May 2012, Diamond Pet Foods issued seven recalls affecting products manufactured at its Gaston, South Carolina facility due to Salmonella Infantis contamination. The Kirkland products involved included the Super Premium Adult Chicken & Rice, Lamb & Rice, Mature Dog, Healthy Weight, and Nature’s Domain Salmon formulas — a broad list covering most of the dry dog food line at the time. The contamination was traced to a specific production run with confirmed human illnesses (at least 16 confirmed cases according to the CDC) and two confirmed canine infections per the FDA. Diamond subsequently shut down the South Carolina facility for cleaning, implemented additional quality control protocols, and later resumed production. Two years later, in 2014, a class-action lawsuit resulted in Diamond paying $2 million in damages to affected pet owners. The 2007 recall was limited to a 24-pack wet food variety pack and related to the broader melamine contamination crisis affecting multiple pet food brands that year — it did not involve the dry kibble line. Since 2012, no Kirkland dry dog food recalls have been documented. Diamond Pet Foods has significantly upgraded its safety infrastructure in the intervening years. To verify current safety status, check fda.gov/animal-veterinary directly.
  • 7
    How much does Kirkland dog food cost and where can you buy it? In-store at Costco: approximately $0.77–0.85 per pound for a 40-pound bag of Super Premium adult formulas — making it 50–78% cheaper per pound than comparable premium kibbles on Chewy or Amazon ($1.50–3.44/lb for Blue Buffalo, Hill’s, or Purina ONE); Kirkland is Costco-exclusive — you must have a Costco membership or shop with a member; online prices at Costco.com are significantly higher due to shipping markups
    The in-store price structure makes Kirkland one of the most cost-competitive dog foods available at any quality level. Based on verified 2026 pricing, a 40-pound bag of the Adult Chicken, Rice & Vegetable formula sells in Costco warehouses for approximately $30–33, equating to roughly $0.77–0.83 per pound. The Healthy Weight formula in a 40-pound bag runs approximately $28–30 ($0.70–0.75/lb). Nature’s Domain grain-free formulas, typically sold in 25-pound bags, run slightly higher at approximately $0.85–1.05/lb. By comparison, a 34-pound bag of Blue Buffalo Life Protection on Chewy averages $2.21/lb; Hill’s Science Diet 30-pound bags average $2.80/lb; and Purina Pro Plan is the closest competitor at $1.20–1.50/lb. The math is significant for owners of large dogs: feeding a 60-pound dog costs approximately $35–40/month on Kirkland versus $75–100/month on Blue Buffalo or Hill’s — a savings of $480–720 per year without a measurable change in nutritional completeness for a healthy adult dog. Critical caveat: always purchase Kirkland dog food in-store. Costco.com consistently prices the 25-pound bag at $49.99 or more — far above the per-pound in-store rate — and Amazon marketplace sellers charge a premium for a Costco-exclusive brand. A basic Costco Gold Star membership ($65/year) pays for itself within two months of dog food savings for a medium or large breed owner.
  • 8
    What is Active9™ Probiotics and is it actually effective? Active9™ is a nine-strain probiotic blend (more recent formulations use five key strains) naturally found in the canine GI tract — including Lactobacillus acidophilus, Lactobacillus plantarum, Bacillus subtilis, Enterococcus faecium, and Bifidobacterium animalis — processed under strict standards to ensure live, viable organisms at the time of manufacture; research consistently supports probiotic supplementation for digestive balance, immune function, and coat health in dogs
    Diamond Pet Foods developed the Active9™ probiotic system for use across multiple brands including Kirkland and Taste of the Wild. Unlike cheaper probiotic additives, Active9™ uses strains specifically selected from those naturally occurring in healthy canine intestinal tracts, which is scientifically relevant because probiotic effectiveness can be species-dependent. The strains are processed under human-grade standards and guaranteed to be live and active at the time of manufacturing. Whether sufficient viable organisms survive bag storage, retail handling, and the kibble-to-bowl journey to meaningfully affect the microbiome remains an open question in veterinary nutrition. Most peer-reviewed research on canine probiotics uses direct-supplement delivery (separate chews or powders) rather than food-integrated delivery. That said, the presence of chicory root (a natural prebiotic fiber that feeds beneficial gut bacteria) alongside the Active9™ strains creates a synbiotic combination that is generally viewed as better than either ingredient alone. Many Kirkland owners report improved stool consistency and reduced digestive upset compared to prior foods — consistent with what probiotic literature predicts. The added probiotic and prebiotic fiber combination is a genuine nutritional differentiator, particularly notable at Kirkland’s price point where many comparable-cost foods include neither.
  • 9
    How much Kirkland dog food should I feed my dog per day? Per the feeding guide printed on the bag for the Adult Chicken & Rice formula: up to 10 lbs → ¾ cup/day · 11–20 lbs → ¾ to 1½ cups/day · 21–35 lbs → 1½ to 2¼ cups/day · 36–50 lbs → 2¼ to 3 cups/day · 51–75 lbs → 3 to 4 cups/day · 76–100 lbs → 4 to 5 cups/day · Over 100 lbs → 5 cups + ⅓ cup per additional 10 lbs; always use a standard 8 oz measuring cup and adjust based on your dog’s actual body condition
    The feeding guidelines on Kirkland’s bag are a starting point calibrated for a moderately active adult dog of average metabolism — not a fixed prescription. Individual dogs vary significantly in caloric need based on activity level, metabolic rate, whether they are spayed or neutered, age, and body composition. Kirkland’s Adult Chicken & Rice formula delivers approximately 393 kcal per cup (3,754 kcal/kg as calculated metabolizable energy per Costco’s official product page). A sedentary 50-pound dog living a typical indoor lifestyle may maintain healthy weight at the lower end of the range or slightly below; a working or highly active 50-pound dog may need the upper end or slightly above. The most reliable approach is to start at the mid-range of the recommended amount, weigh your dog monthly, and assess body condition score (ribs should be easily felt but not visibly prominent). If your dog gains weight over four weeks, reduce the daily portion by 10–15%. If your dog loses weight or seems low-energy, increase slightly. Split the daily amount into two meals for most adult dogs. Dogs prone to bloat (deep-chested large breeds like German Shepherds, Great Danes, and Dobermans) benefit from three smaller meals per day and slower eating — the regular-size kibble in the standard Kirkland formula may benefit from a slow-feeder bowl for these breeds. Always transition to Kirkland gradually over 7–10 days if switching from another food.
  • 10
    Is Kirkland dog food good for senior dogs? YES — Kirkland offers a dedicated Mature Dog Chicken, Rice & Egg Formula for dogs 7+ that maintains strong protein (24% min), includes glucosamine and chondroitin for joint support, and reflects current veterinary guidance that healthy senior dogs should not have protein arbitrarily restricted; senior dogs with diagnosed medical conditions (kidney disease, heart disease, cognitive decline) require prescription therapeutic diets instead
    Kirkland’s Mature Dog formula is specifically designed for dogs seven years and older, incorporating glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate for joint support — particularly relevant as arthritis incidence rises sharply in dogs past seven. The formula maintains a 24% minimum crude protein, consistent with updated veterinary nutrition consensus that healthy senior dogs benefit from maintained or even elevated protein to help preserve muscle mass (sarcopenia) as they age. The older practice of blanket protein restriction in senior dogs has been largely retired by mainstream veterinary nutrition guidelines, including those in the Merck Veterinary Manual, which now emphasize that protein restriction is only warranted in dogs with confirmed chronic kidney disease (CKD) or specific metabolic conditions — not as a general senior strategy. For healthy senior dogs without diagnosed conditions, Kirkland’s Mature formula at $0.77–0.85 per pound provides the same core quality as premium senior foods selling for $2.00–3.00 per pound. As with all life stages, exceptions apply: CKD patients need phosphorus and protein control (Hill’s k/d, Purina NF, Royal Canin Renal Support); cardiac patients need sodium restriction; dogs with cognitive dysfunction may benefit from MCT-enriched therapeutic diets. For these cases, the Mature Kirkland formula is not an appropriate substitute for a prescription diet.
📊 Kirkland Adult Chicken & Rice — Guaranteed Analysis at a Glance
🥩 Crude Protein
26% min · ~28–29% DM
Exceeds AAFCO adult minimum (18% DM) and surpasses Blue Buffalo LPF (24%). Sources: fresh chicken, chicken meal, egg product, fish meal. Adequate for all moderately active healthy adult dogs.
🫙 Crude Fat
16% min · ~17% DM
Slightly higher than many comparable premium kibbles. Primary sources: chicken fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols), flaxseed, fish meal. Provides omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids for coat and immune health.
🌾 Crude Fiber
4% max · ~3% actual
Standard adult maintenance fiber level. Sources include dried beet pulp, dried chicory root (prebiotic), and whole grain brown rice. Chicory root specifically feeds beneficial gut bacteria alongside the Active9™ probiotic blend.
🦴 Glucosamine
300 mg/kg min
Included for joint support — notably present even in the standard adult formula, not only in the mature or large breed versions. Paired with chondroitin sulfate (100 mg/kg min) and omega-3 EPA from fish meal for anti-inflammatory joint support.
🐾 Kirkland Formula Guide — Which Bag Is Right for Your Dog?
📌 How to Choose the Right Kirkland Formula

Kirkland Signature dog food comes in two main lines — Super Premium (grain-inclusive) and Nature’s Domain (grain-free/alternative grain) — plus age-specific and size-specific variants. All share the same core philosophy: real meat first, no corn/wheat/soy, no artificial additives, AAFCO-compliant, and Active9™ probiotics in most formulas. The differences lie in protein source, carbohydrate base, and life-stage targeting. Here is a breakdown of the primary formulas.

1
🐔 Super Premium Adult Chicken, Rice & Vegetable — The Flagship
All Breeds · Adult Dogs · Protein: 26% · Fat: 16% · Best Value · Grain-Inclusive
Best for: Healthy adult dogs of any breed without specific health conditions or dietary restrictions. The most widely stocked, most cost-effective, and most nutritionally versatile formula Kirkland offers. Key ingredients: Chicken, chicken meal, whole grain brown rice, cracked pearled barley, chicken fat, egg product, dried beet pulp, potatoes, fish meal, flaxseed, dried chicory root, carrots, peas, dried kelp, apples, cranberries, rosemary extract, parsley flakes, Active9™ probiotic blend. What makes it stand out: The dual-protein approach of fresh chicken + chicken meal provides both consumer-friendly label appeal and concentrated protein efficiency. The inclusion of egg product adds a highly bioavailable amino acid source. Real fruits and vegetables (apples, cranberries, carrots, peas, kelp) contribute natural antioxidants and trace minerals. Glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate are included even in the standard adult formula — a feature typically reserved for large breed or senior formulas in competing brands. Calorie content: Approximately 393 kcal/cup (3,754 kcal/kg calculated metabolizable energy).
✅ AAFCO adult maintenance compliant💰 ~$0.77–0.85/lb in Costco warehouse🌾 Grain-inclusive: grain-free DCM concern avoided🦠 Active9™ probiotics + chicory prebiotic fiber
2
🐑 Super Premium Adult Lamb, Rice & Vegetable
All Breeds · Adult Dogs · Protein: 23% · Fat: 14% · Alternative Protein · Grain-Inclusive
Best for: Adult dogs whose owners prefer rotating between protein sources, or those whose dogs show a preference for lamb-flavored food. Not appropriate as a true allergy elimination diet — the formula still contains chicken fat as a secondary ingredient, making it unsuitable for dogs with confirmed chicken allergies. Key nutritional notes: Lamb and lamb meal as the primary protein sources deliver a slightly different amino acid profile and palatability compared to chicken. The 23% protein minimum is slightly lower than the chicken formula (26%), though both exceed AAFCO adult requirements comfortably. Also includes cracked pearled barley, millet, and potatoes as supplemental carbohydrate sources alongside brown rice, offering broader grain and fiber diversity. Important price note: The Lamb & Rice formula is occasionally priced slightly higher per pound than the Chicken & Rice at Costco, and analysis has found that the name-brand equivalent (Diamond Naturals Lamb & Rice) is sometimes actually cheaper per pound on subscription on Chewy — worth comparing before purchasing. Same Active9™ probiotic blend, same no corn/wheat/soy standard as the flagship formula.
🐑 Lamb + lamb meal as primary proteins🔄 Good for protein variety rotation⚠️ Contains chicken fat — not true chicken-free🌾 Grain-inclusive base with millet + barley
3
⚖️ Healthy Weight Chicken & Vegetable — Lower Calorie Formula
All Breeds · Overweight Adults · Protein: 22% · Fat: 9% · Higher Fiber · Grain-Inclusive
Best for: Adult dogs who are overweight or prone to weight gain, or those on a calorie-reduction program under veterinary guidance. How it differs from the standard formula: Fat is reduced substantially (9% minimum vs. 16%), fiber is significantly increased to a maximum of 13% to improve satiety and help dogs feel full on fewer calories, and protein is maintained at 22% minimum to preserve lean muscle during caloric restriction. This is the least expensive Kirkland formula per pound — approximately $0.70–0.75/lb for the 40-pound bag — delivering strong value for owners of food-motivated or sedentary dogs. Does it work? The combination of lower fat and higher fiber is the standard approach in over-the-counter weight management foods and is supported by veterinary nutrition research for mild to moderate weight management. Limitation: For dogs with clinically significant obesity (body condition score of 8–9/9), a prescription calorie-controlled formula from Hill’s (r/d or Metabolic), Purina (OM), or Royal Canin (Satiety) provides more precise caloric control and veterinary support than an over-the-counter healthy weight food. Ask your veterinarian to assess your dog’s body condition score before relying solely on the Healthy Weight formula for a dog with significant excess weight.
⚖️ Lowest fat in the Kirkland line (9%)🌾 High fiber (13% max) for improved satiety💰 Lowest price per pound in the range🩺 Clinical obesity: ask vet about prescription formula
4
🐾 Mature Dog Chicken, Rice & Egg — Senior Formula
All Breeds · Dogs 7+ Years · Protein: 24% · Fat: 14% · Glucosamine + Chondroitin
Best for: Healthy senior dogs aged seven and older without diagnosed medical conditions that require therapeutic nutrition. Senior-specific additions: Glucosamine and chondroitin sulfate for joint support (arthritis is the most common ailment in older dogs), along with an egg product for enhanced amino acid diversity and palatability. Egg is a highly digestible, complete protein with excellent bioavailability — valuable for older dogs whose digestive efficiency may have declined somewhat. Why protein is maintained, not reduced: Current veterinary nutrition science — reflected in the Merck Veterinary Manual and AAFCO guidelines — has moved away from blanket protein restriction in senior pets. Adequate protein (at or above 24%) helps preserve lean muscle mass in aging dogs, reducing the risk of sarcopenia that accelerates physical decline. Kirkland’s Mature formula correctly maintains a 24% protein floor consistent with this updated guidance. Important distinction: Dogs with chronic kidney disease (CKD) do require controlled phosphorus and potentially protein restriction — the Mature formula is not suitable for CKD. If your senior dog has been diagnosed with any systemic condition, confirm the appropriate diet with your veterinarian before selecting this formula.
✅ Maintains 24% protein per updated vet guidance🥚 Egg product: premium amino acid source🦴 Glucosamine + chondroitin for aging joints🩺 CKD or cardiac disease: needs prescription diet
5
🐕 Small Formula Chicken & Vegetable — Small Breed Adult
Dogs Under 25 lbs · Adult · Protein: 26% · Smaller Kibble Size · Higher Caloric Density
Best for: Adult dogs of small or toy breeds (typically under 25 pounds) who need a smaller kibble size for safer chewing and higher caloric density to support their naturally faster metabolisms. Why small breeds need a different formula: Small and toy breeds have higher metabolic rates per pound of body weight than large breeds, meaning they need more calories per pound of food — or more frequent small meals — to maintain healthy weight and energy. A food with higher caloric density per cup helps meet these needs without forcing small dogs to eat impractically large volumes. Small breed kibbles are also sized to reduce the choking risk and jaw strain associated with large-breed kibble. Key consideration: Small breeds sold in 20-pound bags rather than 40-pound bags — the per-pound price is slightly higher ($0.85–1.00/lb vs. $0.77/lb for the 40-pound adult bag), though still substantially below premium small-breed competitors. If you have a dog near the 25-pound threshold, the standard adult formula (with appropriate portion sizing) is generally suitable — consult your vet if uncertain.
🐾 Smaller kibble: safer for small jaws⚡ Higher caloric density for fast metabolisms💰 Still 50%+ cheaper than premium small-breed brands📦 20-lb bag: slightly higher per-pound cost
6
🌿 Nature’s Domain — Grain-Free Line Overview
All Life Stages · Salmon, Turkey, Beef & Sweet Potato Varieties · Read DCM Notes
Best for: Dogs with confirmed grain allergies or intolerances (note: true grain allergies are less common than food sensitivity marketing suggests — chicken and beef are far more frequent dog food allergens than grains), or owners who strongly prefer grain-free formulations with veterinary guidance. Nature’s Domain varieties available: Salmon Meal & Sweet Potato, Turkey Meal & Sweet Potato, Beef Meal & Sweet Potato, Turkey & Ancient Grains (grain-inclusive), and Puppy Formula Chicken & Pea. All deliver 24% minimum protein and 14% minimum fat, meeting AAFCO standards for all life stages including large breed growth (70+ lbs). Each formula includes Active9™ probiotics, chicory root prebiotic, and an omega fatty acid blend from salmon oil and flaxseed. The DCM concern — read before buying: Nature’s Domain’s pea-and-potato-heavy grain-free formulas were cited in the FDA’s 2018 DCM investigation data. While no causal link has been proven, many veterinary cardiologists advise against grain-free formulas for dogs without a confirmed clinical need for them. Kirkland’s grain-inclusive Super Premium line is the recommended default for healthy dogs without grain allergy diagnoses. If you choose Nature’s Domain: Discuss with your veterinarian, and ask about periodic cardiac monitoring if your dog eats grain-free long-term.
🐟 Salmon, turkey, beef varieties available⚠️ Read DCM concern before choosing grain-free🐾 All life stages including large breed puppies🌿 Turkey & Ancient Grains: grain-inclusive alternative
🔍 Common Questions — Kirkland Signature Dog Food
How to transition your dog to Kirkland Signature dog food
TRANSITION GUIDE
Switching dog foods abruptly — even to a high-quality food — is one of the most common causes of digestive upset, loose stools, and vomiting in healthy dogs. The gut microbiome needs time to adjust to a new protein source and fiber profile, regardless of how good the new food is.

Standard transition schedule (7–10 days):
— Days 1–2: 75% current food + 25% Kirkland
— Days 3–4: 50% current food + 50% Kirkland
— Days 5–6: 25% current food + 75% Kirkland
— Days 7–10: 100% Kirkland

For sensitive stomachs or older dogs: Extend the transition to 14–21 days, moving more slowly through each phase. Adding a plain, low-fat probiotic (plain low-fat yogurt with live cultures, or a veterinary supplement like Purina FortiFlora) can help ease GI adjustment. Adding one teaspoon of plain canned pumpkin (not pie filling) per 20 pounds of body weight also helps firm stools during transitions by providing soluble fiber.

What is normal during transition: Slightly looser stools or minor gas for the first 3–5 days at each new ratio. This typically resolves as the gut adjusts.

Warning signs that need vet attention: Bloody diarrhea, severe vomiting, complete food refusal for more than 24 hours, visible abdominal bloating, or lethargy. These are not normal transition symptoms and warrant a veterinary call regardless of what food is being fed.
📅 7–10 day standard transition timeline 🌿 Sensitive stomach: extend to 14–21 days 🥫 Canned pumpkin: 1 tsp/20 lbs helps firm stools 🚨 Blood in stool or vomiting: call vet immediately
Is Kirkland dog food safe for dogs with allergies?
ALLERGY GUIDE
Food allergies in dogs are more complex and less common than marketing suggests. The vast majority of commercial dog food allergies are reactions to specific proteins — most commonly chicken, beef, dairy, and eggs — not to grains. Kirkland’s ingredient profile is neither ideal nor inappropriate for allergic dogs without knowing the specific allergen first.

What Kirkland Super Premium Adult Chicken formula contains that are common allergens: Chicken (one of the most common dog food allergens), egg product, and fish meal. If chicken is your dog’s confirmed allergen, the Lamb & Rice variety avoids chicken as a primary protein — but note that chicken fat is still present in the Lamb formula, meaning it is not fully chicken-free.

What Kirkland does NOT contain: Corn, wheat, soy, artificial colors, artificial flavors, artificial preservatives — ingredients that sometimes trigger sensitivities in susceptible dogs.

The right way to diagnose a food allergy: A veterinary-supervised strict dietary elimination trial lasting 8–12 weeks minimum, using a food containing a hydrolyzed protein or a novel protein your dog has never eaten. Kirkland’s chicken formula cannot serve as an elimination diet for most dogs because chicken is a top allergen candidate. For confirmed food allergy diagnosis and management, prescription limited-ingredient diets from Hill’s (z/d), Purina (HA), or Royal Canin (HP or Anallergenic) are specifically designed for this purpose. Once an allergen is confirmed and eliminated, Kirkland may serve well as long-term maintenance if its ingredient list avoids the confirmed allergen.
⚠️ Chicken allergy? Lamb variety has chicken fat ✅ Free from: corn, wheat, soy, artificial additives 🔬 Diagnosis needs 8–12 week elimination trial 🩺 Confirmed allergy: prescription LD formula needed
Kirkland vs Purina Pro Plan vs Hill’s Science Diet vs Blue Buffalo
FULL COMPARISON
Understanding the real differences — and similarities — between these four popular dog food options helps you make a choice based on facts rather than marketing.

Kirkland Signature (Costco): Manufactured by Diamond Pet Foods. Real meat first, no corn/wheat/soy, Active9™ probiotics, grain-inclusive and grain-free options. 26% protein (adult chicken formula). Approximately $0.77–0.85/lb in-store. AAFCO formulation-method compliance. Best for: budget-conscious owners with healthy adult dogs who shop at Costco.

Purina Pro Plan: Manufactured by Purina (Nestlé). The most vet-recommended brand, backed by the largest portfolio of peer-reviewed feeding trials. 26–30% protein depending on formula. Approximately $1.20–1.50/lb. AAFCO feeding trial compliance on many formulas. Best for: owners who prioritize clinical research backing and want the brand most recommended by veterinarians.

Hill’s Science Diet: Manufactured by Hill’s (Colgate-Palmolive). Veterinarian-recommended, research-heavy, with an extensive therapeutic formula line for medical conditions. 19–24% protein depending on formula. Approximately $1.60–2.80/lb. Best for: owners with dogs with specific health conditions or who want a clinically research-backed maintenance diet.

Blue Buffalo Life Protection Formula: Real meat first, proprietary LifeSource Bits antioxidant blend, no by-products/corn/wheat/soy. 24% protein. Approximately $1.90–2.50/lb. Wide retail availability. Best for: owners who prioritize recognizable natural ingredients and wider retail access.

Bottom line: For nutrition per dollar, Kirkland leads by a wide margin. For clinical research evidence, Pro Plan leads. For therapeutic medical management, Hill’s leads. For natural ingredient philosophy and broad retail availability, Blue Buffalo leads.
💰 Kirkland: best nutrition-per-dollar value 🔬 Pro Plan: strongest clinical research backing 🏥 Hill’s: best for medical therapeutic needs 🌿 Blue Buffalo: natural ingredient philosophy winner
What dogs should NOT eat Kirkland Signature dog food
NOT FOR THESE DOGS
Kirkland Signature dog food is an excellent everyday maintenance food — but it is not appropriate for all dogs. Here are the situations where a different food is clearly needed:

Dogs with chronic kidney disease (CKD): CKD requires controlled phosphorus, often controlled protein, and precise sodium management. No over-the-counter Kirkland formula is designed for this — Hill’s k/d, Purina NF, or Royal Canin Renal Support are the appropriate choices.

Dogs with heart disease (DCM or other cardiac conditions): Cardiac conditions typically require sodium restriction. Neither the Super Premium nor Nature’s Domain formulas are sodium-restricted. Prescription cardiac diets (Hill’s h/d, Royal Canin Early Cardiac) are needed.

Dogs requiring food allergy elimination trials: Kirkland’s standard formulas contain chicken, egg, and fish — common allergen candidates. For a valid elimination trial, a prescription hydrolyzed or true novel protein formula is required.

Dogs with diabetes or pancreatitis: These conditions require carefully managed carbohydrate and fat levels, respectively. Kirkland does not offer therapeutic formulas for either condition.

Dogs with liver disease or copper storage disorders: Liver conditions often require copper restriction and specific protein management. Hill’s l/d or a carefully formulated veterinary diet is needed.

Puppies of large breeds (70+ lbs at adult size): Large breed puppies require controlled calcium-to-phosphorus ratios and appropriate caloric density for controlled skeletal growth. Use Nature’s Domain Puppy Formula or another AAFCO large breed growth-certified food, not the standard adult Kirkland Super Premium formula.
🚫 Kidney disease: needs Hill’s k/d or Purina NF 🚫 Heart disease: needs low-sodium cardiac diet 🚫 Liver disease: needs copper-restricted formula 🚫 Allergy elimination: needs prescription LD diet 🚫 Large breed puppies: needs large breed puppy formula
📍 Find Veterinary & Pet Nutrition Help Near You

Whether you need a veterinarian to assess your dog’s dietary needs, a Costco warehouse to pick up Kirkland, or an emergency animal clinic, use the buttons below to search near your location.

Searching near you…
✅ 5 Smart Steps Before Buying Kirkland Dog Food
  • Step 1 — Confirm your dog is healthy with no active medical conditions. Kirkland Signature is a maintenance food for healthy dogs. If your dog has a recent diagnosis of kidney disease, heart disease, liver disease, diabetes, or obesity, talk to your veterinarian about whether a prescription therapeutic diet is more appropriate before switching to any over-the-counter food.
  • Step 2 — Choose the right formula for your dog’s life stage and size. Super Premium Adult Chicken & Rice for most healthy adult dogs. Healthy Weight if weight management is the goal. Mature Dog for dogs 7+ without medical conditions. Small Formula for dogs under 25 pounds. Nature’s Domain only with veterinary guidance given the DCM precaution. Do not use adult formulas for large breed puppies.
  • Step 3 — Always buy in-store at Costco for the lowest price per pound. Costco.com prices are significantly higher due to shipping. A 40-pound bag purchased in-warehouse at $0.77–0.85/lb is the benchmark — always compare in-store vs. online before purchasing.
  • Step 4 — Transition gradually over 7–10 days. Abrupt food changes cause digestive upset in most dogs. Start with 25% Kirkland mixed into the current food, increasing slowly. Sensitive dogs may need 14–21 days. Adding plain canned pumpkin (not pie filling) at one teaspoon per 20 pounds of body weight helps smooth the transition.
  • Step 5 — Monitor and adjust based on your dog’s body condition. Use the bag feeding guide as a starting point, not an absolute. Weigh your dog monthly and assess body condition score (feel ribs without pressing hard — if visible, increase food; if buried, decrease). Adjust daily portions by 10–15% as needed. Contact your vet if weight changes persist or if digestive symptoms don’t resolve within 4–6 weeks of full transition.
📞 Key Resources & Contacts: 🛒 Costco: costco.com 📞 Costco Member Services: (800) 955-2292 🔬 AAFCO Nutrient Profiles: aafco.org 🏥 FDA Pet Food Recalls: fda.gov/animal-veterinary 🥗 Find DACVN: acvn.org/find-a-nutritionist 🩺 Find Vet Internal Medicine: acvim.org/pet-owners ☎️ ASPCA Poison Control: (888) 426-4435 📋 Dog Food Advisor: dogfoodadvisor.com 📱 Online Vet Consultation: vetster.com

This guide is for general informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute veterinary medical or nutritional advice. Every dog has unique health needs, and no single food is right for every animal. Kirkland Signature dog food is appropriate for healthy adult dogs without medical conditions — dogs with diagnosed health conditions may require prescription therapeutic diets. Nutrient percentages reflect publicly available guaranteed analysis data and may change with formula updates. Always verify current ingredient lists on product packaging and consult a licensed veterinarian before making significant dietary changes for your dog.

Recommended Reads

  1. Costco Kirkland Dog Food Review — Is It Actually Good, Who Makes It, and What Vets Really Think
  2. Kirkland vs. Purina Pro Plan Dog Food
  3. Is Kirkland Dog Food Vet Recommended?
  4. 20 Best Alternatives to Purina Pro Plan Dog Food
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Comments (2)

  1. Janet says:
    February 23, 2025 at 7:30 pm

    Hi, I buy Costco Kirkland Nature’s domain turkey and pea stew wet dog food in Pointe Claire, Quebec, Canada and I am going to the Costco in Myrtle Beach, South Carolina and would like to know if you sell that there and if not, what would be the equivalent? Thanks

    Reply
    1. Bestie Paws says:
      February 24, 2025 at 6:15 am

      Thank you for reaching out! We’re happy to help. Kirkland Signature Nature’s Domain Turkey & Pea Stew is a staple at many Costco locations, but availability can vary by region. Below, we provide detailed insights on its availability in Myrtle Beach, what to expect in terms of alternatives, and how to ensure you get the best match for your dog’s dietary needs.

      🔍 Availability at Costco Myrtle Beach, SC

      📍 Location: 2361 S Kings Hwy, Myrtle Beach, SC 29577
      📞 Contact: (843) 839-6604
      ⏳ Stock Status: Varies by shipment; calling ahead is best

      ✅ Likely in Stock ❌ Out of Stock? Try These Alternatives
      Kirkland Nature’s Domain Turkey & Pea Stew
      – Grain-Free
      – High in Protein
      – Rich in Omega Fatty Acids
      – Formulated for All Life Stages 🐶
      Alternatives at Costco:

      • 🦃 Kirkland Chicken & Rice Canned Dog Food (Contains grains, different protein source)
      • 🥩 Nature’s Domain Turkey & Sweet Potato Dry Food (Grain-free, turkey-based kibble)

      Nearby Pet Stores:

      • 🐕 Wellness CORE Grain-Free (PetSmart – Similar nutritional profile)
      • 🥩 Merrick Grain-Free Wet Food (Petco – High-protein with real meat)

      🛒 Cost Comparison (USD vs. CAD)

      🇺🇸 U.S. Price (Costco) 🇨🇦 Canadian Price (Costco) 💱 Conversion (1 USD ≈ 1.35 CAD)
      $29.99 USD (24 cans) $39.99–$44.99 CAD (24 cans) ≈ $40.49 CAD (Based on exchange rate)

      🧐 Key Nutritional Differences

      Feature Kirkland Turkey & Pea Stew Kirkland Chicken & Rice Nature’s Domain Dry Food
      Grain-Free? ✅ Yes ❌ No ✅ Yes
      Primary Protein 🦃 Turkey 🐔 Chicken 🦃 Turkey
      Texture 🥄 Wet Stew 🥄 Wet Pâté 🍖 Dry Kibble
      Omega Fatty Acids ⭐ High ⭐ Moderate ⭐ High

      📌 Final Recommendation

      ✅ If Kirkland Nature’s Domain Turkey & Pea Stew is available at the Myrtle Beach Costco, it will be your best option since it matches what you purchase in Pointe-Claire, Canada.
      ❗ If it’s not in stock, the closest alternative within Costco is Kirkland Chicken & Rice (though it contains grains).
      🚀 For a truly grain-free and high-quality wet food, visit local pet stores like PetSmart or Petco to find similar alternatives such as Wellness CORE or Merrick Grain-Free.

      📞 Before You Go

      Since availability can change due to demand, calling the Myrtle Beach Costco at (843) 839-6604 before your visit is highly recommended. If you’re unsure, consider bringing a few cans from home just in case!

      Let us know if you need more details—happy to help! 🐾

      Reply

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