If your dog has a sensitive stomach, the safest and most effective approach is to transition slowly to a highly digestible, fresh diet over 7–14 days, starting with simple, gentle ingredients like lamb and fibre-rich vegetables. Done properly, this reduces flare-ups and helps stabilise digestion instead of making things worse.
I hear this almost daily, “he’s fine… until he’s not.”
One day the stool is perfect, the next day it’s soft, then normal again. That pattern is classic gut instability, not necessarily disease.
In the UAE, this is even more common. Heat, mild dehydration, routine changes, and mixed feeding habits all play a role. If you’ve ever noticed things getting worse during schedule changes, it’s similar to what we discussed in How to Support Your Dog When Your Routine Changes During Ramadan.
Most owners miss this, but it’s not just what you feed, it’s how consistently you feed it.
A sensitive stomach usually means the gut is reacting too easily.
The digestive system and microbiome are slightly out of balance, so even small changes, new treats, different proteins, or fast transitions, can trigger symptoms like loose stools, gas, or even vomiting.
If you want to understand how these signs can evolve, this connects closely with Understanding Your Dog’s Digestive Health: When to Seek Help.
The goal here is not to “fix” the gut overnight, it’s to calm it down and rebuild stability.
This is where things go wrong. Most owners either switch too fast or keep changing foods repeatedly when something doesn’t work immediately.
That creates more instability.
A structured transition is key, and if you want the full breakdown of general transitions, you can also check How to Switch Dog Food Safely: A Step-by-Step Guide, but here we’re tailoring it specifically for sensitive dogs.
We keep this simple and controlled.
Days 1–3
Start with about 25% fresh food and 75% current food.
Choose a gentle recipe like Lamb with Apple, which is naturally well tolerated and balanced.
Watch closely. Stool might soften slightly, that’s normal, but it should not become watery.
Days 4–7
Move to 50% fresh, 50% current food.
At this stage, digestion starts adapting. You may notice less gas and slightly more consistent stools.
Keep everything else stable, no new treats, no extras.
Week 2 onwards
Increase to 75% fresh, then 100% fresh food gradually.
This is usually where things start to really improve, stools become more consistent, and the gut feels more stable.
This part matters more than people think.
Avoid mixing multiple proteins at once. Avoid adding supplements randomly. Avoid giving “just a little” of different foods. Consistency is what allows the gut to reset.
If your dog has had repeated flare-ups before, it’s often because the system never had a chance to stabilise properly.
Some fluctuation is normal during transition, but certain signs are not.
If you see persistent diarrhea, blood in stool, repeated vomiting, or your dog becomes lethargic, stop and speak to your vet.
Otherwise, mild changes that improve over a few days are part of the process.
Here’s what actually changes when you switch.
Fresh food is significantly more digestible than kibble, studies suggest up to around 40 percent more. That means the gut works less to extract nutrients and produces less irritation.
It’s something we explain further in Fresh Dog Food Benefits: What Really Happens When You Ditch Kibble.
Recipes like Lamb with Apple work particularly well because they combine a gentle protein with fibre sources that support stool consistency.
At Wunderdog, we focus on this balance, digestibility, moisture, and controlled ingredients, not just calories on a label.
A typical case is a dog that’s been through multiple foods. The owner says, “nothing suits him.”
But when we look closer, it’s not that nothing works, it’s that the gut never had a stable phase.
Once we slow things down, simplify the diet, and follow a structured transition, most of these dogs settle. Within a couple of weeks, stools stabilise, and sensitivity reduces significantly.
If your dog has a sensitive stomach, the answer is rarely a miracle ingredient. It’s structure, simplicity, and consistency.
Start slow, choose a digestible recipe, avoid unnecessary changes, and give the gut time to adapt. That’s where real improvement happens.
If you’re unsure where to begin, starting with a gentle, balanced recipe like Lamb with Apple and following a structured plan is usually the safest path forward.
Book a free consult with our in-house vet to get a plan tailored to your dog’s needs, including what to feed, how to transition, and what to watch for.