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20 Best Vet-Recommended Dog Bones & Chews

Bestie Paws, May 8, 2026May 8, 2026
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FDA CVM · Cornell Vet · AVMA · VOHC · Preventive Vet · Whole Dog Journal · PetMD · AKC · Verified United States

Safe Bones, Dangerous Bones, Dental Chews, Bully Sticks, Natural Alternatives & What the FDA Warns

Which bones are actually safe, which ones the FDA has warned against, what the VOHC seal means for dental health, how to choose the right chew for your dog’s size and chewing style, and which alternatives vets recommend instead of real bones.

🚨 FDA Warning: Processed Bone Treats Have Caused Deaths in Dogs — Read Before You Buy

The U.S. Food and Drug Administration’s Center for Veterinary Medicine has received reports of illness and death in dogs connected to commercially processed bone treats — products sold as “Ham Bones,” “Pork Femur Bones,” “Rib Bones,” and “Smokey Knuckle Bones.” These are real animal bones that have been dried through smoking or baking and may contain preservatives, seasonings, and smoke flavorings. The FDA has specifically warned pet owners that giving a dog a bone treat may lead to an unexpected trip to the veterinarian, emergency surgery, or death. This guide covers 20 of the safest, most effective, and most vet-endorsed chew options — including those that are genuinely beneficial for your dog’s dental health — with full context on what makes any chew safe or dangerous. Always supervise your dog with any chew or bone. Remove it when it becomes small enough to swallow whole.

📋 Key Facts — Vet-Recommended Dog Bones & Chews

Dogs have a deeply hardwired drive to chew — it relieves stress, satisfies instinct, supports jaw muscle development, and when the right chew is chosen, actively benefits dental health. The problem is not chewing itself. The problem is that the word “bone” has become shorthand for a wide category of products with dramatically different safety profiles, from FDA-flagged processed treats to VOHC-certified dental chews that vets specifically endorse. Understanding the difference — and knowing which specific products have passed independent safety and efficacy testing — is the most important thing a dog owner can do before buying anything labeled a bone or chew. Here are the key facts every owner needs before choosing any chew for their dog.

  • 1
    Do vets recommend bones for dogs? Veterinary consensus: real bones carry serious risks — safer alternatives exist that satisfy the same needs · Cornell University College of Veterinary Medicine advises against bones, antlers, and hooves of any kind · The AVMA recommends asking your vet before giving any chew · VOHC-certified dental chews are specifically endorsed by veterinary professionals · The FDA has warned owners to avoid processed bone treats entirely
    Veterinary opinion on bones is more nuanced than the simple “dogs love bones” cultural assumption. Cornell University’s Dr. Brian Collins explicitly states he discourages pet owners from giving bones, antlers, or hooves of any kind or any other hard or abrasive objects. The FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine backs this up with a formal consumer warning citing illness reports involving broken teeth, oral wounds, gastrointestinal blockages, choking, rectal bleeding, and death. The AVMA’s position — echoed by the American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA) — is to consult your veterinarian about the specific chew options appropriate for your individual dog’s size, age, breed, dental condition, and chewing style. What vets do enthusiastically recommend is a different category entirely: VOHC-accepted dental chews that have passed rigorous clinical testing for both safety and efficacy in reducing plaque and tartar. These are the products that deliver the dental health benefits many owners hope a bone will provide — without the fracture, obstruction, and contamination risks.
  • 2
    What is the healthiest dog bone for dogs? Healthiest options by category: VOHC-accepted dental chews (Greenies, WHIMZEES, Virbac C.E.T.) for dental health · Bully sticks for single-ingredient protein chewing · Raw large beef bones (knuckle, femur) under strict supervision for marrow nutrition · Natural rubber chew toys (KONG) for safe mechanical chewing · Yak milk chews (Himalayan) for long-lasting, digestible gnawing
    Defining “healthiest” requires specifying what health benefit you are seeking. For dental health — the most clinically supported benefit of appropriate chewing — the Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC) provides the only independently verified standard: their seal of acceptance means a product has passed controlled clinical trials proving it reduces plaque and/or tartar. VOHC-accepted dental chews such as Greenies, WHIMZEES, and Virbac C.E.T. VeggieDent are the only chew-type products with this evidence base. For behavioral health — the stress relief, mental stimulation, and instinct satisfaction that chewing provides — single-ingredient bully sticks, natural rubber KONG toys stuffed with appropriate fillings, and Himalayan yak milk chews score well because they are digestible, long-lasting, and do not carry the tooth fracture risk of hard bones. For raw nutrition enthusiasts under veterinary supervision, large raw beef knuckle or femur bones can provide marrow nutrition — but the FDA has flagged bacterial contamination risks with raw diets, and supervision is mandatory at all times. The consensus from multiple veterinary dental specialists is that no single “bone” delivers on all three dimensions simultaneously — the right chew depends on your dog’s individual profile.
  • 3
    What is the safest bone for a dog to chew? Safest options: VOHC-certified dental chews (fully digestible; clinical safety testing; prescribed size per dog weight) · Natural rubber chew toys (KONG) — passes the fingernail test and the knee test · Large raw beef knuckle bones under direct supervision only · Bully sticks with a holder to prevent swallowing the last piece · Himalayan yak chews (E-cheese) — digestible; no splintering; progressively softens with chewing
    Veterinary dental specialist Dr. Melissa Guillory, DVM, DAVDC, offers one of the most practical safety guidelines for any chew: the fingernail test and the knee test. If you can create an indentation in the chew with your fingernail, it is likely safe for teeth. If you would not want the object thrown hard at your knee, it is not safe for teeth. This simple framework eliminates most of the genuinely dangerous options immediately: real bones, antlers, hooves, and hard nylon chews fail the knee test — they are hard enough to fracture tooth enamel, which dogs have 5 to 10 times less of than humans. VOHC-accepted dental chews are formulated to be soft enough to flex but textured enough to mechanically clean teeth during chewing. Natural rubber KONG toys pass both tests for most dogs. Himalayan yak chews occupy an interesting middle ground: they are harder than dental chews but soften progressively with chewing and are fully digestible — they do not splinter into dangerous shards. The safety profile of any chew is also dog-specific: a chew that is safe for a moderate chewer may be a tooth-fracture risk for an extremely aggressive power chewer.
  • 4
    Are bully sticks vet recommended? Many vets recommend bully sticks as safer than real bones or rawhide — with important caveats · Bully sticks are single-ingredient beef pizzle; fully digestible; no artificial additives in quality brands · Key risks: choking hazard from the last small piece; high calorie density (approximately 88 kcal per large treat) · A Rutgers study found bully sticks reduced oral bacteria by 60.2% — competitive with dental chew performance · Always use a bully stick holder when the chew gets small · Remove when 3–4 inches remain
    Bully sticks occupy a middle tier in veterinary recommendations — safer than real bones but not without meaningful risks that every owner should understand. They are made from 100% beef pizzle, are single-ingredient, contain no artificial preservatives in quality brands, and are fully digestible — a significant safety advantage over rawhide, which is not digestible and can swell into dangerous masses in the gastrointestinal tract. The calorie concern is real and frequently underestimated: research published in veterinary nutritional literature found that approximately 50% of dog owners dramatically underestimate bully stick calorie content. A large bully stick can represent up to 12% of a 50-pound dog’s entire daily caloric requirement. For dogs prone to weight gain or pancreatitis, this matters. The choking risk concentrates in the final stage: as the stick approaches 3–4 inches, dogs may gulp the remaining piece, creating a gastrointestinal obstruction risk. A bully stick holder prevents this specific hazard almost entirely. Used with a holder and within appropriate caloric limits, bully sticks are among the most commonly endorsed middle-ground chews by general practice veterinarians.
  • 5
    What chews do vets actually recommend for dogs’ teeth? Only products with the VOHC Seal of Acceptance have clinical proof of dental benefit · Top VOHC-accepted dental chews: Greenies (plaque + tartar control; multiple sizes) · WHIMZEES (grain-free vegetarian; plaque + tartar) · Virbac C.E.T. VeggieDent Flex (plant-based; gut and joint support; VOHC-accepted) · Virbac C.E.T. Enzymatic Rawhide Chews (more digestible; VOHC) · OraVet Dental Hygiene Chews (bacteria-barrier technology) · Purina DentaLife (daily tartar control; VOHC) · Pedigree Dentastix (widely available; VOHC tartar control)
    The VOHC seal is the gold standard for any product claiming dental health benefits for pets. It is awarded only to products that pass controlled clinical trials meeting VOHC protocols and demonstrating statistically significant reduction in plaque and/or tartar compared to control groups. This is not a self-reported manufacturer claim — it requires third-party scientific evidence. The AVMA and AAHA specifically direct veterinarians and owners toward VOHC-accepted products when recommending dental chews. Dental disease is the most commonly diagnosed health problem in adult dogs — by age three, approximately 80% of dogs show some form of periodontal disease — and untreated dental disease has been linked to secondary health effects on the heart, kidneys, and liver. While dental chews cannot replace professional dental cleanings (which remain essential every 6–12 months for most dogs), VOHC-accepted chews used daily are a clinically meaningful complement to at-home dental care.
  • 6
    Are rawhide bones safe for dogs? Traditional rawhide carries significant risks — many vets now recommend alternatives · Main concern: rawhide is not digestible — large pieces can swell and cause gastrointestinal obstruction · Chemical processing risks: some rawhide uses bleaching agents and chemical preservatives · Bacterial contamination: Salmonella and E. coli found in some products · Safer alternatives: Virbac C.E.T. Enzymatic Rawhide (vet-formulated; easier to digest; VOHC-accepted) · Bully sticks (fully digestible; single ingredient) · Collagen chews (digestible hide collagen; no keratin outer hide)
    Traditional rawhide has been a pet store staple for decades, but its safety profile has come under increasing veterinary scrutiny. The core problem is digestibility: unlike bully sticks or VOHC dental chews, rawhide does not break down well in a dog’s gastrointestinal system. Large chunks that are bitten off and swallowed can soften and swell in the stomach or intestines, creating blockages that may require surgical intervention. The digestibility concern is compounded by manufacturing: standard commercial rawhide often undergoes bleaching and chemical treatment during processing, and quality control is variable. Preventive Vet specifically recommends Virbac C.E.T. Enzymatic Rawhide Chews as the primary exception — this product is formulated to be significantly more digestible while retaining the chewing experience dogs enjoy, and it carries the VOHC seal. Beef collagen chews — made from the digestible inner corium layer of hide rather than the outer keratin-rich layer — are also widely considered a safer alternative to standard rawhide.
  • 7
    Are deer antlers safe for dogs to chew? Veterinary consensus: antlers are too hard and carry significant tooth fracture risk · Cornell University, the AVMA, and the AAHA all advise against antlers · Antlers are harder than dog tooth enamel — they fail the fingernail test and the knee test immediately · Tooth fracture from antlers requires anesthesia and surgical extraction or repair · Split antlers (exposed marrow) are softer than whole antlers but still risky for aggressive chewers · Safer long-lasting alternatives: Himalayan yak chews; stuffed frozen KONG; Benebone (flavored nylon)
    Deer and elk antlers have been heavily marketed as a “natural” long-lasting chew — and they are technically natural. However, natural does not mean safe, and antlers represent one of the most consistent sources of tooth fractures seen by veterinary dentists. Dr. Melissa Guillory, DVM, DAVDC, lists antlers alongside real bones, cow hooves, and ice as common chew objects that cause tooth trauma in clinical practice. Dog tooth enamel is only 0.1–0.6 mm thick — 5 to 10 times thinner than human enamel — and antlers are among the densest, hardest biological materials a dog can encounter. The carnassial teeth (upper fourth premolars used for power chewing) are the most commonly fractured, and a fractured carnassial requires surgical treatment under anesthesia. Cornell University’s Dr. Brian Collins specifically includes antlers in his list of items to avoid without exception. The bottom line from veterinary dentists: the risk of a costly, painful tooth fracture is not worth the “natural” appeal of an antler chew when safer long-lasting alternatives exist.
  • 8
    What are the best long-lasting dog chews that are vet recommended? Best long-lasting chews with strong safety profile: Himalayan yak milk chews (E-cheese) — digestible; progressively softens; 30–90+ minutes for most dogs · Bully sticks with holder — single ingredient; digestible; 20–60 minutes depending on size · KONG Classic stuffed with kibble or frozen filling — hours of engagement; no digestion risk · Benebones (flavored nylon) — very long-lasting for power chewers; not edible but designed for safe gnawing · WHIMZEES Alligator or Stix — VOHC-accepted; longer shape extends chewing time
    The search for long-lasting chews is one of the most common requests veterinarians hear, particularly for high-drive, anxious, or large-breed dogs that demolish standard treats in minutes. Himalayan yak chews have emerged as one of the strongest options: made from traditional compressed hard cheese from yak and cow milk, they do not splinter, progressively soften with chewing rather than becoming dangerous fragments, and the small final nub can be microwaved 30–45 seconds to puff it into a digestible cheese treat. KONG rubber toys stuffed with appropriate xylitol-free fillings and frozen can provide hours of sustained engagement without any ingestion risk — particularly valuable for dogs with food sensitivities. Benebones are made from food-grade flavored nylon with wishbone or plaything shapes that encourage productive gnawing — designed to abrade in tiny, safe amounts rather than break into large chunks. They should be replaced when significant grooves develop, before a dog can break off a piece. The chewing action itself is the therapeutic component — whether the chew is consumed or not.
📊 Dog Bone & Chew Safety — Key Rules at a Glance
✅ The Fingernail Test
Can You Dent It With Your Nail?
If you can make an indentation in the chew with your fingernail, it is likely soft enough to be safe for teeth. If you cannot, it is hard enough to fracture tooth enamel. This practical rule from board-certified veterinary dentists immediately disqualifies real bones, antlers, hooves, cow horns, and ice — all too hard. VOHC dental chews, bully sticks, and yak chews pass this test.
🦷 Dog Enamel Thickness
5–10× Thinner Than Human Enamel
Dogs have only 0.1–0.6 mm of tooth enamel — dramatically less than humans. This is why hard chew objects cause tooth fractures in dogs far more readily than owners expect. A fractured carnassial (upper back molar) requires anesthesia and surgery. Dogs are also very good at hiding dental pain — a fracture may go unnoticed for weeks.
🔢 VOHC Seal Standard
Only Third-Party Verified Dental Claim
The Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC) awards its seal only to products that pass controlled clinical trials proving reduction of plaque and/or tartar. This is the only independent third-party verification in the pet dental product category. “Dental” in a product name means nothing without the VOHC seal — check vohc.org for the current accepted products list.
⚠️ FDA Bone Treat Warning
68+ Reports · 15 Dog Deaths Reported
The FDA’s Center for Veterinary Medicine received over 68 reports of illness and approximately 15 deaths connected to processed commercial bone treats. Issues included gastrointestinal obstruction, choking, mouth wounds, rectal bleeding, vomiting, and diarrhea. The FDA advises consulting your vet before giving any bone treat and supervising every chewing session regardless of product type.
🏆 20 Best Vet-Recommended Dog Bones & Chews — Organized by Type & Use Case
📌 How This List Is Organized

Chews 1–7 are VOHC-accepted dental chews — the only category with clinical proof of dental health benefit. Chews 8–11 are natural single-ingredient protein chews (bully sticks; collagen; trachea; ears). Chews 12–14 are long-lasting digestible chews (yak milk; sweet potato; collagen sticks). Chews 15–17 are safe non-edible chew toys (rubber; nylon; flavored rubber — for mechanical chewing without ingestion risk). Chews 18–20 are raw and natural bone options under strict supervision for owners committed to raw feeding with full understanding of the risks. All products should be size-matched to your dog. Always supervise. Remove when small enough to swallow whole. Introduce new chews gradually and watch for digestive upset.

  • 1
    🥇 Greenies Dental Treats — Best Overall VOHC-Accepted Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted dental chew; unique toothbrush-like shape with flexible chewy texture that scrubs teeth down to the gumline; available in seven sizes from Teenie (5–15 lb) to Large (50–100 lb) and three flavors · Clinical backing: One of the most widely vet-recommended dental chews worldwide; demonstrated reduction in plaque by approximately 60% and tartar by approximately 50% in clinical testing; VOHC seal for both plaque and tartar control · How to use: One chew per day after the evening meal as part of an oral hygiene routine; does not replace professional dental cleanings · Where to buy: Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Amazon · Walmart · Target
    🏆 VOHC seal: both plaque AND tartar control — rare dual claim🦷 ~60% plaque reduction; ~50% tartar reduction in clinical testing📏 7 size options — Teenie (5 lb) through Large (100 lb)🛒 Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Walmart · Target
  • 2
    WHIMZEES Natural Dental Chews — Best Grain-Free Vegetarian Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted vegetarian dental chew; made with non-GMO ingredients; no artificial colors, flavors, or preservatives; no gluten; no meat; multiple shapes including alligator, toothbrush, hedgehog, and stix · Why it stands out: One of very few VOHC-accepted dental chews suitable for dogs with meat protein allergies or sensitivities; the variety of shapes provides options for different chewing styles and longer engagement times · Where to buy: Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Amazon · whimzees.com
    🌿 VOHC-accepted; grain-free; vegetarian; non-GMO🥩 Meat-free: ideal for dogs with protein allergies🎨 Multiple shapes — some forms last longer than standard sticks🛒 Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · whimzees.com
  • 3
    Virbac C.E.T. VeggieDent Flex — Best Multi-Benefit Plant-Based Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted; plant-based Z-shaped dental chew with additional support for oral health, gut health, and joint health in one product; made by Virbac, a veterinary pharmaceutical and nutrition company with decades of dental care expertise · How it works: The Z-shape provides multi-surface contact with teeth during chewing; plant-based formula supports digestive and joint health alongside proven dental benefit · Where to buy: Your veterinarian · virbac.com · Chewy · Petco
    🌱 VOHC-accepted; plant-based; oral + gut + joint support🩺 Made by Virbac — veterinary pharmaceutical dental specialistsZ-shape — multi-surface tooth contact per chew🛒 Veterinary clinics · virbac.com · Chewy
  • 4
    Virbac C.E.T. Enzymatic Rawhide Chews — Best Vet-Safe Rawhide Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted; rawhide chew with Virbac’s dual-enzyme system that targets plaque chemistry; significantly more digestible than standard rawhide due to enzymatic formulation · Why it’s different: The enzymatic treatment makes this rawhide far more digestible than conventional alternatives — addressing the primary safety concern about traditional rawhide; Preventive Vet specifically identifies this as the preferred rawhide option for dogs that enjoy hide-style chewing · Where to buy: virbac.com · Chewy · Petco · your veterinarian
    🦴 VOHC-accepted; dual-enzyme system reduces plaque at chemistry level✅ Far more digestible than standard rawhide — Preventive Vet top pick🩺 Available through veterinary clinics nationwide🛒 virbac.com · Chewy · Petco · vet clinics
  • 5
    OraVet Dental Hygiene Chews — Best Bacteria-Barrier Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted; unique delmopinol technology creates a physical barrier on tooth surfaces that prevents bacteria from attaching — targeting the root cause of plaque formation rather than just mechanically removing buildup · Active ingredient: Delmopinol, a compound also used in human oral care, creates a slippery coating on teeth that inhibits bacterial adhesion and the formation of plaque biofilm · Best for: Dogs with persistent dental disease; proactive bacterial prevention; available in five sizes · Where to buy: Your veterinarian · Chewy · Petco · PetSmart
    🔬 Delmopinol creates anti-bacterial adhesion barrier on tooth surfaces🏥 VOHC-accepted; commonly dispensed through veterinary clinics📏 5 size options: Extra Small through Extra Large🛒 Vet clinics · Chewy · PetSmart
  • 6
    Pedigree Dentastix — Best Widely Available Budget VOHC Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted for tartar control; X-shaped ridged texture designed for 360-degree cleaning action; low calorie; available at grocery stores, drug stores, and mass retailers across the country · Why it matters: VOHC acceptance confirms real clinical dental benefit at the most accessible price point of any dental chew on the market — and consistent daily use is the single most important factor in dental chew effectiveness; accessibility drives consistency · Note: Dogs with food sensitivities should use WHIMZEES or Greenies instead · Where to buy: Walmart · Target · Kroger · CVS · Walgreens · Petco · PetSmart · Chewy
    🦷 VOHC tartar control seal; low calorie; X-ridge design💰 Most accessible price + widest retail availability of any dental chew📅 Daily use required — consistent availability drives better compliance🛒 Walmart · Target · Kroger · Walgreens · Chewy
  • 7
    Purina DentaLife Daily Oral Care — Best Daily Routine VOHC Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted for tartar control; porous chew texture and chewy consistency designed for daily use; Purina Pro Plan Veterinary Diets Dental Chewz (veterinary-only version) is also VOHC-accepted with longer-lasting, higher-protein profile; six size options from Mini to Large · Why vets recommend it: Consistent daily integration is the single most important factor in dental chew effectiveness; DentaLife’s palatability and multi-pack availability support daily habit formation · Note: Ask your vet about the Pro Plan Veterinary Diets version if your dog needs more from a daily dental chew · Where to buy: Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Walmart · Target
    🦷 VOHC tartar control; 6 size options; porous chewy texture🩺 Vet Diets version (vet-only): longer lasting + higher protein📅 Designed specifically for daily routine integration🛒 Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Walmart
  • 8
    🥩 Bully Sticks (Cadet, Redbarn, Best Bully Sticks) — Best Natural Protein Chew
    What it is: Dried beef pizzle; single ingredient; fully digestible; no artificial additives in quality brands; available in straight, braided, ring, and spiral shapes; 6-inch standard to 12-inch lengths · Safety rules: Always use a bully stick holder when the stick reaches 4 inches or less; choose thickness appropriate for your dog’s size; limit to one per day within daily caloric budget; store opened bags in the refrigerator · Quality markers: USA-sourced or grass-fed; no bleaching; low odor · Where to buy: bestbullysticks.com · Chewy · Amazon · Petco · PetSmart
    🥩 Single-ingredient; 100% digestible; no artificial additives⚠️ Use a holder when under 4 inches — choking risk without it🌡️ Refrigerate after opening — bacteria risk at room temperature🛒 bestbullysticks.com · Chewy · Petco
  • 9
    Beef Collagen Chews (Brutus & Barnaby, Redbarn) — Best Digestible Alternative to Rawhide
    What it is: Pressed beef collagen (inner bovine hide corium) in rolled or stick form; significantly more digestible than traditional rawhide; high protein; no artificial additives in quality brands; natural collagen content may support joint health · How it compares to rawhide: Collagen chews are made from the inner corium layer of hide rather than the outer keratin-rich layer — this collagen-dense inner layer is substantially more digestible than conventional rawhide · Where to buy: Chewy · Amazon · Petco · PetSmart
    🦴 Inner corium collagen: far more digestible than traditional rawhide💪 Natural collagen — potential joint health support✅ Single-ingredient quality brands; no artificial additives🛒 Chewy · Amazon · Petco · PetSmart
  • 10
    Beef Trachea Chews — Best Cartilage Chew for Natural Joint Support
    What it is: Dried beef or lamb trachea (windpipe); naturally rich in glucosamine and chondroitin from the cartilaginous structure; fully digestible; no artificial additives; crunchy outer texture with softer inner cartilage · Health benefit: The glucosamine and chondroitin content makes trachea chews one of the few chew treats with a potential orthopedic benefit — appropriate for dogs with early joint concerns, though not a substitute for veterinary joint supplementation · Consideration: Strong odor — best given outdoors or on a washable mat · Where to buy: Chewy · Amazon · Petco · specialty pet stores
    💪 Naturally contains glucosamine + chondroitin from cartilage structure✅ Fully digestible; non-splintering; moderate chewing duration⚠️ Strong odor — give outdoors or on a washable surface🛒 Chewy · Amazon · Petco
  • 11
    Freeze-Dried Beef Ears (No-Hair) — Best Light Chew for Small and Senior Dogs
    What it is: Freeze-dried or air-dried beef or lamb ears; single ingredient; low fat; easy to chew; no splintering; fully digestible; available hair-on (higher fiber) or no-hair (more common, lower mess) · Best for: Small breeds, senior dogs with reduced chewing strength, dogs with dental sensitivity, puppies building chewing habits, or dogs recovering from dental procedures · Fat content note: Pork ears are significantly higher in fat than beef or lamb ears — for dogs prone to pancreatitis or weight gain, beef or lamb ears are the better choice · Where to buy: Chewy · Amazon · Petco · PetSmart
    👴 Best for seniors, small dogs, post-dental recovery — soft and gentle🌡️ Freeze-dried: longer shelf life; lower processing than baked⚠️ Choose beef/lamb ears — pork ears too high fat for pancreatitis-prone dogs🛒 Chewy · Amazon · Petco
  • 12
    🏔️ Himalayan Yak Milk Chews (E-Cheese / Yak Churpi) — Best Long-Lasting Digestible Chew
    What it is: Traditional Himalayan hard cheese made from yak and cow milk, lime juice, and salt — no artificial additives; very dense and hard but does not splinter into dangerous shards; progressively softens with chewing; the final nub can be microwaved 30–45 seconds to create a digestible cheese puff · Duration: 30–90+ minutes for most dogs depending on size and chewing intensity · Consideration: Higher in sodium than many chews; dogs on low-sodium diets or with kidney disease should not use these without veterinary guidance · Where to buy: Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Amazon · himalayiandog.com
    🏔️ No splinters; softens progressively — reduces tooth fracture risk♻️ Final nub: microwave 30–45 sec → puffed cheese treat⏱️ 30–90+ min duration — long-lasting engagement for most dogs⚠️ Higher sodium — avoid in dogs with kidney disease or low-sodium diets
  • 13
    Benebone Wishbone Chew — Best Flavored Durable Chew for Power Chewers
    What it is: USA-made flavored nylon chew in wishbone or dental chew shape; real food ingredients (bacon, peanut butter, chicken) are infused throughout the nylon — not a surface coating that wears off; designed to be gnawed safely, not consumed · Safety design: Made from food-grade nylon; designed to abrade in tiny amounts rather than break into large pieces; replace immediately when the dog begins to break off actual chunks · Best for: Aggressive chewers; dogs that destroy soft chews in minutes; KONG is still safer for most dogs — Benebone is the next tier up for genuine power chewers · Where to buy: benebone.com · Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Amazon
    🔨 Power chewer safe: designed to abrade, not fracture into pieces🥓 Real food infused throughout — flavor doesn’t wear off with use🇺🇸 USA-made; food-grade nylon materials⚠️ Replace immediately if chunks break off — swallowing nylon is dangerous
  • 14
    Whimzees Brushzees / Stix Bulk — Best Budget Long-Form VOHC Daily Dental Chew
    What it is: VOHC-accepted; the Stix and Brushzees form factors from WHIMZEES provide a longer chewing duration than the standard shapes; available in bulk bags for significant cost savings; grain-free; vegetarian; all-natural ingredients throughout · Why it earns a separate listing: The longer, straighter shape takes most dogs measurably longer to consume than the alligator or hedgehog shapes — particularly relevant for dogs that go through dental chews very quickly and for owners building a daily dental habit who need a chew that genuinely lasts the session · Where to buy: Chewy · Petco · PetSmart · Amazon · whimzees.com
    🦷 VOHC-accepted; Stix format lasts longer per chewing session🌿 Grain-free; vegetarian; all-natural ingredients💰 Bulk bags available — reduces per-chew cost significantly🛒 Chewy · Petco · whimzees.com
  • 15
    🔴 KONG Classic Rubber Chew — Best Safe Non-Edible Chew Toy
    What it is: Natural rubber chew toy with hollow center designed to be stuffed with food, kibble, or treats; erratic bounce provides additional mental stimulation; available in puppy, classic, and extreme formulations with five sizes from XS to XXL · Why vets love it: Passes both the fingernail test (natural rubber flexes) and the knee test; provides hours of constructive chewing without any ingestion risk; stuffing with frozen peanut butter or kibble dramatically extends engagement time · Safety note: Always use xylitol-free peanut butter — xylitol is acutely toxic to dogs; check every peanut butter label carefully before use · Where to buy: kongcompany.com · Petco · PetSmart · Chewy · Amazon
    ✅ Passes fingernail test AND knee test — genuinely safe for teeth❄️ Freeze stuffed KONG for hours of extended engagement☠️ Peanut butter MUST be xylitol-free — xylitol is acutely toxic to dogs🛒 kongcompany.com · Petco · Chewy · PetSmart
  • 16
    Playology Durable Scented Chew Toy — Best Scented Rubber Chew Toy
    What it is: Durable natural rubber chew toy with real food scents (chicken, beef, sweet potato, peanut butter) infused throughout the rubber using patented Encapsiscent technology — not a surface spray; multiple shapes including bone, ring, and ball; age-appropriate firmness levels including a specifically softer Senior formulation · Why Preventive Vet recommends it: Soft enough for teeth; durable enough for heavy chewing; scent infusion throughout maintains attractiveness through extended use; Senior formulation specifically addresses dental sensitivity · Where to buy: playologyusa.com · Petco · Chewy · Amazon
    🐾 Real food scent infused throughout rubber — not a surface coating👴 Senior formulation: softer rubber specifically for dental sensitivity✅ Safe for teeth; durable for heavy chewing sessions🛒 playologyusa.com · Petco · Chewy
  • 17
    Goughnuts / West Paw Tux — Best Indestructible Safe Chew for Extreme Chewers
    What it is: Thick-walled natural rubber chew toys engineered specifically for extreme or destructive chewing dogs; Goughnuts includes a safety indicator — when the inner red layer is exposed through chewing, it signals time to replace; West Paw Tux is dishwasher-safe, stuffable, and made in the USA from food-safe materials · Best for: Pit bulls, Rottweilers, Mastiffs, and other powerful breeds that genuinely destroy standard chew toys in minutes · Note: Even these heavy-duty options should be inspected regularly — replace whenever significant structural compromise occurs · Where to buy: goughnuts.com · westpaw.com · Petco · Chewy
    🔨 Engineered for extreme chewers who destroy standard toys🔴 Goughnuts safety indicator: red layer visible = replace now🌿 Natural rubber; food-safe materials; no toxic compounds🛒 goughnuts.com · westpaw.com · Petco · Chewy
  • 18
    🦴 Raw Large Beef Femur or Knuckle Bones (Supervised Only) — For Raw Feeding Households
    What it is: Large raw (never cooked) beef or bison femur or knuckle bones from a butcher or trusted raw pet food supplier; marrow-filled; the cartilage and soft tissue provide nutritional variety · Critical rules for any raw bone: (1) NEVER cooked — cooking makes bone brittle and creates razor-sharp splinters that perforate mouth, GI tract, and can cause death; (2) Supervise 100% of the time — no leaving the dog unattended, ever; (3) 15–20 minute maximum session; remove and refrigerate or discard; (4) Size must be larger than the dog’s entire head — never a size that could be swallowed; (5) Discard after 3–4 sessions or if cracking begins · Bacterial risk: The FDA CVM found raw pet food more likely to carry disease-causing bacteria — handle with strict food-safety protocols · Where to get: Local butcher · raw pet food suppliers
    🚫 NEVER cooked — cooked bones splinter and cause death👁️ Supervise 100%; 15–20 min max per session; refrigerate after📏 Size rule: must be larger than dog’s entire head — no exceptions⚠️ FDA: raw bones carry bacterial contamination risk — handle safely
  • 19
    Raw Beef Marrow Bones (Pipe/Cut) — For Experienced Raw Feeders Under Strict Supervision
    What it is: Cross-cut sections of raw beef femur exposing the marrow canal; sometimes called pipe bones; the dog licks and gnaws the marrow from the center; popular in raw feeding communities for marrow’s high fat and nutrient content · Important risk profile: Marrow is significantly higher in fat than other raw bone options — high-fat treats have triggered pancreatitis in dogs, particularly in predisposed breeds including Miniature Schnauzers, Yorkshire Terriers, and Cocker Spaniels; remove the bone before the marrow is exhausted and the dog begins gnawing the bone itself · Where to get: Local butcher · raw pet food suppliers · some grocery stores in the meat department
    ⚠️ Very high fat: significant pancreatitis risk in predisposed breeds🍖 Remove when marrow is gone — gnawing bare bone causes tooth fracture🚫 NEVER cooked or reheated — raw only, always, without exception🛒 Local butcher · raw pet food suppliers
  • 20
    Tartar Shield Rawhide Chews (Vet-Dispensed) — Best VOHC Tartar Control Rawhide Through Your Vet
    What it is: VOHC-accepted specifically for tartar control; formulated differently from standard rawhide with a focus on clinical tartar reduction rather than simple hide chewing; primarily distributed through veterinary clinics; awarded the VOHC Seal of Acceptance for Tartar Control · What makes it different: Unlike conventional rawhide, the Tartar Shield formulation has clinical trial evidence supporting its tartar control claim — the same standard required of all VOHC-accepted products · Veterinary note: Ask your veterinarian specifically about Tartar Shield chews if your dog has persistent tartar buildup that standard dental chews have not adequately addressed · Where to buy: Through veterinary clinics · Chewy
    🦷 VOHC tartar control seal — clinical trial verified, not self-reported🩺 Primarily through veterinary clinics — ask your vet directly✅ Formulated for tartar specifically — not conventional rawhide🛒 Vet clinics · Chewy
🔍 Your Biggest Dog Bone Questions — Practical Answers
What are the most dangerous bones and chews for dogs — and why?
WHAT TO AVOID · SAFETY GUIDE
Veterinary dental and emergency medicine records show several consistent sources of serious injury. Cooked bones of any kind are the most dangerous single category: cooking denatures the collagen matrix of bone, making it brittle and prone to shattering into razor-sharp longitudinal splinters that can perforate the gums, tongue, esophagus, stomach, and intestines. The kitchen turkey or chicken bone is one of the most common holiday-related veterinary emergencies in the country. Processed commercial bone treats — “Ham Bones,” “Pork Femur Bones,” “Rib Bones,” “Smokey Knuckle Bones” — prompted the FDA’s formal warning after reports of 68+ illnesses and approximately 15 deaths, including problems with splintering, mold, GI obstruction, rectal bleeding, and mouth lacerations. Antlers and cow hooves are uniformly recommended against by Cornell, the AAHA, and AVMA due to tooth fracture risk — the carnassial tooth fracture they cause requires anesthesia and surgical extraction. Standard rawhide carries digestive obstruction risk — large pieces swallowed whole can form indigestible masses in the GI tract. Ice cubes are one of the most commonly overlooked tooth fracture hazards — they fail the knee test immediately and fracture dog enamel readily. Small diameter bones (chicken legs, pork ribs, chop bones) can become lodged in the throat or form a ring around the lower jaw. The common thread through all of these: any chew that is harder than tooth enamel, prone to forming sharp shards, or not digestible if swallowed carries serious medical risk.
🚫 Cooked bones: ANY type — they splinter into razor-sharp shards 🚫 FDA-warned: Ham Bones, Rib Bones, Smokey Knuckle Bones, Pork Femur Bones 🚫 Antlers + cow hooves: tooth fracture requiring anesthesia + surgery 🚫 Standard rawhide: indigestible; GI obstruction risk 🚫 Ice cubes: shatter tooth enamel — more dangerous than they appear
What is the right chew for my dog’s size and chewing style?
SIZE GUIDE · CHEWING STYLE MATCHING
Matching a chew to your dog’s size and chewing style is as important as the chew’s safety profile, because the same product can be safe for one dog and dangerous for another based on jaw strength and body size. Small dogs (under 20 lbs) and toy breeds: Choose the smallest available VOHC dental chew size (Greenies Teenie; WHIMZEES XS); thin bully sticks with a holder; beef ears; small Himalayan yak chews; soft rubber KONG toys in small. Avoid anything requiring significant jaw force. Senior small dogs with tooth loss: stick exclusively to soft options like KONG or appropriately sized soft dental chews. Medium dogs (20–50 lbs): Full range of VOHC dental chews in size-matched formulations; standard bully sticks (6–12 inch) with holder; Himalayan yak chews; collagen chews; Benebone (standard) for moderate-to-aggressive chewers. Large and giant breed dogs (50+ lbs): Large formulation VOHC chews; thick or braided bully sticks with holder; large Himalayan yak chews; Benebone Power Chewer; KONG Extreme (black rubber); Goughnuts for extreme chewers; large raw beef knuckle or femur bones under strict supervision. Note that large breeds apply enormous jaw force, making tooth fracture from hard objects more likely. Puppies 3–8 months old (teething): WHIMZEES Puppy (specifically soft-formulated for developing teeth); KONG Puppy (softer pink rubber formulated for puppy teething); Playology Puppy; cold damp washcloth tied in a knot; avoid all hard chews during active teething when gums are sensitive and adult teeth are emerging.
🐕 Small/toy breeds: Greenies Teenie; thin bully sticks; beef ears; KONG small 🐕‍🦺 Medium dogs: full range VOHC chews; standard bully sticks; yak chews 🦮 Large/giant: thick braided bully sticks; KONG Extreme; Goughnuts 🐾 Puppies teething: WHIMZEES Puppy; KONG Puppy; no hard chews during teething
Do dental chews actually work — or is it just marketing?
DENTAL HEALTH SCIENCE · VOHC EXPLAINED
The direct answer: dental chews with the VOHC seal genuinely work — and dental products without that seal may not. The distinction matters because the pet dental product market is full of products with “dental,” “clean,” or “fresh breath” in their names that have no independently verified dental health effect. The VOHC exists specifically to identify which products have real science behind their claims. As a dog chews a textured dental chew, the mechanical abrasion against the tooth surface removes soft dental plaque — the early-stage bacterial biofilm that, if not removed, mineralizes into tartar over days to weeks. Tartar cannot be removed by chewing — it requires professional scaling. This is why consistent daily use is critical: dental chews work on plaque, and plaque accumulates daily. Greenies’ clinical data shows approximately 60% reduction in plaque and 50% reduction in tartar with daily use — meaningful numbers given that dental disease affects over 80% of adult dogs and is linked to systemic effects on the heart, kidneys, and liver. The limitations are equally important: dental chews cannot clean below the gumline, where periodontal disease begins; they cannot replace professional dental cleaning under anesthesia; and they do not address existing tartar. Think of them as daily maintenance between professional cleanings — effective and necessary, but not a complete substitute for veterinary dental care. Most adult dogs benefit from professional dental evaluation and cleaning every 12 months.
✅ VOHC seal = controlled clinical trial verified — the only real standard 🦷 Works on plaque (soft); cannot remove tartar (hardened) — daily use critical 📅 Professional dental cleaning every 12 months — chews don’t replace this ⚠️ “Dental” in product name without VOHC seal = no clinical proof
What chews are safe for dogs with pancreatitis, sensitive stomachs, or food allergies?
SENSITIVE DOGS · MEDICAL CONSIDERATIONS
Pancreatitis-prone dogs: Avoid all high-fat chews — this eliminates traditional bully sticks (high protein/fat), marrow bones (very high fat), and pork ears (high fat). Low-fat alternatives include WHIMZEES (plant-based; low fat), standard VOHC dental chews like Greenies or Dentastix, and lean beef trachea chews. Always check fat content on nutrition panels. Food-allergic dogs: The protein source in the chew matters as much as in food. Dogs allergic to chicken should avoid chicken-based dental chews; dogs allergic to beef should avoid beef-based bully sticks and bones. WHIMZEES and Virbac C.E.T. VeggieDent Flex are excellent VOHC-accepted options because they are plant-based and contain no common animal protein allergens. Dogs with sensitive stomachs or inflammatory bowel conditions: Digestibility is the priority — fully digestible single-ingredient chews like bully sticks (in small amounts, with a holder) or collagen chews are generally better tolerated than products with multiple additives. Introduce any new chew very gradually and watch for 48 hours for vomiting, diarrhea, or appetite changes. Senior dogs with dental disease or tooth loss: Prioritize soft options: KONG stuffed with appropriate soft fillings; VOHC dental chews (formulated to be chewy rather than hard); avoid Himalayan yak chews if significant tooth loss is present. Ask your veterinarian for a dental examination before choosing chews for any senior dog — dental disease is frequently undiagnosed and the wrong chew can cause significant pain in a dog already suffering from oral disease. Dogs on weight management diets: Count all chew calories. A Greenies Large contains approximately 90 kcal. A standard 6-inch bully stick contains approximately 88 kcal. Subtract these from the day’s food portion rather than adding them on top.
🩼 Pancreatitis: avoid high-fat chews; choose WHIMZEES or lean dental chews 🥩 Food allergies: match protein source; WHIMZEES/VeggieDent for any protein allergy 👴 Seniors with dental disease: soft KONG fills; vet dental exam before any chew ⚖️ Weight management: count chew calories; subtract from daily food portion
When does a chew-related injury require emergency veterinary care?
MEDICAL EMERGENCIES · WHEN TO CALL YOUR VET
Call your emergency vet immediately if: Your dog is gagging, retching repeatedly, pawing at their mouth, or showing signs of choking — a bone or chew fragment may be lodged in the throat; this is an emergency requiring immediate care. Your dog consumed a large piece or an entire small bone and shows abdominal pain, bloating, vomiting, reluctance to move, hunched posture, or extreme restlessness — these signs suggest gastrointestinal obstruction, which can be life-threatening within hours. Any rectal bleeding or blood in the stool after a chewing session — indicates GI tract injury from bone shards. Difficulty swallowing, excessive drooling, or persistent pawing at the face after chewing — possible throat or esophageal injury. See your regular vet within 24–48 hours if: Your dog seems reluctant to eat, chew, or pick up toys — often a sign of a painful tooth fracture the dog is hiding; dogs are very good at concealing dental pain. One side of the face appears swollen — possible tooth root abscess from a fracture. Any significant change in appetite or chewing behavior in the days following a bone session. General rule: If you are unsure whether your dog swallowed a piece that could be dangerous, call your veterinarian or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control line — describe what was swallowed, the approximate size relative to your dog, and when it happened. Early veterinary intervention is almost always preferable to a wait-and-see approach with potential gastrointestinal foreign bodies.
🚨 Choking, gagging, pawing at mouth: emergency vet immediately — do not wait 🚨 Abdominal pain, bloat, repeated vomiting after bone: emergency vet immediately 🚨 Rectal bleeding or blood in stool after chewing: emergency vet immediately 📅 Reluctance to eat or one-sided face swelling: vet within 24–48 hours
📍 Find Dog Chews, Pet Stores & Veterinary Help Near You

Use the buttons below to find pet retailers, veterinarians, and emergency animal hospitals near you. If your dog is choking, gagging, or showing abdominal pain after chewing any bone or treat, call your emergency veterinarian immediately — do not search for stores first.

Searching near you…
✅ 5-Step Action Plan — Safe, Effective Chewing for Your Dog
  • Step 1 — Start with VOHC-accepted dental chews before anything else. These are the only dog chews with independently verified safety and dental health benefit from controlled clinical trials. Choose a VOHC-accepted product in the size appropriate for your dog’s weight (Greenies, WHIMZEES, Virbac C.E.T. VeggieDent, OraVet, Purina DentaLife, Pedigree Dentastix, or Milk-Bone Brushing Chews). Give one per day after the evening meal. This is the single most impactful chew choice you can make for your dog’s long-term dental health.
  • Step 2 — Apply the fingernail test and the knee test to every chew you consider. If you cannot dent it with your fingernail, it is hard enough to fracture dog tooth enamel — avoid it regardless of marketing claims. If you would not want it thrown hard at your knee, it is too hard for teeth. This eliminates real bones, antlers, hooves, cow horns, and ice cubes immediately and without exception.
  • Step 3 — Match the chew to your dog’s specific health profile. Size, age, breed, chewing intensity, food sensitivities, and any existing medical conditions all affect what is appropriate. Small dogs and seniors need softer options. Pancreatitis-prone dogs need low-fat chews. Protein-allergic dogs need plant-based options like WHIMZEES. Power chewers need harder-wearing rubber toys — not harder bones. When in doubt, ask your veterinarian for a specific recommendation at your next wellness visit.
  • Step 4 — Supervise every chewing session, always. This rule applies to every chew on this list — including KONG toys and VOHC dental chews. Supervision allows you to remove the chew before it becomes small enough to swallow whole, notice if a piece breaks off unexpectedly, and observe your dog for any signs of choking or distress. The bully stick holder is the most practical supervision tool for long-duration protein chews — use one every single time.
  • Step 5 — Schedule a professional veterinary dental exam annually. No chew, regardless of quality, can replace professional dental evaluation and cleaning. By age three, over 80% of dogs have some form of periodontal disease — most undiagnosed because dogs hide dental pain extremely well. Professional scaling removes tartar that chews cannot address, and the exam identifies fractures, disease, and oral masses before they become serious problems. Ask your veterinarian specifically about your dog’s chew habits and individual dental risk profile at every annual wellness exam.
📞 Key Brands, Resources & Contacts: 🦷 VOHC Accepted Products: vohc.org 🥇 Greenies: greenies.com · Petco · Chewy 🌿 WHIMZEES: whimzees.com · Petco · Chewy 🩺 Virbac C.E.T.: virbac.com · vet clinics 🔴 OraVet: Chewy · PetSmart · vet clinics 🥩 Best Bully Sticks: bestbullysticks.com · Chewy 🏔️ Himalayan Chews: himalayiandog.com · Petco 🔴 KONG: kongcompany.com · PetSmart · Chewy 🎗️ Benebone: benebone.com · Petco · Chewy 🔨 Goughnuts: goughnuts.com · Chewy · Amazon 🌊 West Paw: westpaw.com · Petco · Chewy 🎮 Playology: playologyusa.com · Petco · Chewy 🛒 Petco: petco.com 🛒 PetSmart: petsmart.com 🛒 Chewy: chewy.com 🛒 Walmart: walmart.com 🩺 Find a Vet (AVMA): avma.org/find-a-vet ☠️ ASPCA Animal Poison Control: 888-426-4435 🚨 FDA Pet Food Complaints: fda.gov/safety/report-problem

This guide is for informational purposes only and does not constitute veterinary medical advice. A dog that is choking, gagging, pawing at the face, showing abdominal pain, vomiting repeatedly, or has rectal bleeding following a chewing session requires immediate emergency veterinary care. Product formulations, ingredient lists, VOHC acceptance status, retail availability, and safety guidance evolve — always verify current product details with manufacturers, your veterinarian, and vohc.org. Individual dogs have unique health profiles, dietary restrictions, chewing styles, and dental conditions that significantly affect which chew is appropriate. Always consult your veterinarian before introducing new chew products, particularly for senior dogs, dogs with dental disease, dogs with food allergies, dogs prone to pancreatitis, and dogs on medically managed diets.

Recommended Reads

  1. 12 Veterinary-Approved Dental Chews for Small Breeds โ€” Complete VOHC-Verified Guide
  2. 12 Best Dental Chews for Dogs
  3. Old Dog Bad Teeth โ€” 20 Best Tips for Senior Dog Dental Care
  4. Vet-Recommended Dog Chews for Aggressive Chewers
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