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Dec 27, 2025
3 min read

My pet is picky… how can I give supplements without it becoming a struggle?

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Written by Barbara Keene
Updated on Apr 09, 2026

Main Points

If your pet sniffs the bowl and walks away, you're not alone. Getting a picky eater to take their supplements doesn't have to turn into a daily battle. Discover simple, proven tricks to make supplement time stress-free for you and your pet.

Anyone who lives with a dog or cat knows this moment.

You open the container.
You prepare the supplement.
Your pet, who normally appears the second a treat bag crinkles, suddenly vanishes.

Picky eating is not unusualβ€”especially when something new isΒ introduced. And when that β€œsomething” is a supplement meant to supportΒ hips and joints, frustration can quickly replace good intentions.

Yet refusal does not mean failure.
It means the approach matters.

Understanding why pets resist supplements is the first step toward making supplementation part of daily lifeβ€”without stress, force, or power struggles.

Why pets reject supplements in the first place

Dogs and cats rely heavily on smell, texture, and routine. A supplement that looks unfamiliar, smells different, or changes the texture of a favorite food can trigger hesitationβ€”even if the ingredients themselves are well tolerated.

For some pets, the resistance is about novelty.
For others, it’s about control.

Cats, in particular, are known for detecting even subtle changes in food. Dogs may be more flexible, but repeated negative experiences can quickly create avoidance.

The issue is rarely stubbornness.
It’s communication.

The goal is consistency, not confrontation

Supplementation works best when it blends into a pet’s routine rather than interrupting it. Instead of asking, β€œHow do I make my pet take this?” a more effective question is:

β€œHow do I make this feel familiar?”

Small adjustments often make a big difference.

Start with what your pet already loves

One of the simplest strategies is pairing supplements with something your pet already enjoys and trusts.

For dogs, this may include:

  • Soft foods with strong aromas
  • A small portion of plain canned food
  • A favorite treat used exclusively for supplement time

For cats:

  • Highly palatable wet food
  • A small spoonful of broth-style toppers
  • A familiar feeding location with minimal distractions

The supplement should feel like part of the rewardβ€”not the obstacle to it.

Form matters more than most people realize

Some pets refuse a supplement not because of the ingredients, but because of how it’s presented.

Powders can blend more easily into moist foods.
Soft chews may feel more like treats than supplements.
Tablets may work best when hidden rather than offered directly.

There is no universally β€œbest” formatβ€”only the format your pet accepts willingly.

Finding that format turns supplementation from a challenge into a habit.

When supplementation fits naturally into feeding routines, it stops being something extra and becomes part of normal careβ€”just like regular meals, walks, or playtime.

For pets who are predisposed to joint challenges, this consistency supports normal mobility, comfort, and activity over time.

Making daily care easierβ€”for both of you

A picky pet is not a problem to solve, but a partner to understand.

With the right format, a familiar routine, and a patient introduction, supplements don’t have to be a struggle. They can become one more small, supportive choice woven into everyday life.

And those small choicesβ€”made calmly and consistentlyβ€”are often theΒ ones that matter most.

Published on Dec 27, 2025
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