ADULT COMPANION FEEDING PROFILE

Maintenance Nutrition for Household Giant Breed Dogs
Overview
Adult companion giant breeds typically live stable household lifestyles with moderate daily activity.
Their nutritional goal is maintenance.
Not growth.
Not performance.
But long-term structural preservation and metabolic stability.
The greatest nutritional risk at this stage is gradual weight gain.
Even small increases in weight place significant additional stress on joints, ligaments, and connective tissue.
Proper feeding protects long-term mobility.
Calorie Control Priority
Companion adult dogs require fewer calories than more active or working dogs.
Excess calorie intake often occurs slowly and unnoticed.
Focus on:
• Maintaining stable body weight
• Adjusting portions based on condition
• Avoiding unnecessary calorie excess
Small adjustments prevent long-term problems.
Feeding Frequency
Most adult companion giant breeds do best on:
2 structured meals per day
This supports:
• Digestive stability
• Energy consistency
• Reduced digestive stress
Avoid once-daily feeding.
Avoid free feeding.
Body Condition Monitoring
Body condition remains the most reliable feeding guide.
Your dog should appear:
• Lean
• Defined
• Structurally balanced
You should easily feel ribs beneath a thin layer of tissue.
Excess weight increases joint stress and reduces long-term mobility.
Digestive Stability
Consistency supports digestive health.
Avoid frequent food changes unless necessary.
When changing foods, transition gradually over 7–10 days.
Stable nutrition supports stable digestion.
Companion Adult Summary
Primary Focus:
Weight stability and structural preservation
Key Priorities:
• Maintain lean condition
• Prevent gradual weight gain
• Feed structured meals
• Support digestive stability
Proper maintenance feeding protects long-term health.
Continue Building Your Dog’s Feeding Plan
Return to the Feeding System to explore other feeding profiles and life stages.

