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Treat Calories Add Up Faster Than You Think

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I see it in my practice every single day. A concerned owner brings in an overweight dog. "But doctor," they say, "we only feed him one cup a day. Exactly what the bag says."

Then I ask about treats. The answer is always the same: "Oh, just a few." A few milk bones. A few pieces of cheese. A few scraps from dinner. A few licks of peanut butter from the spoon.

Here is the math. A medium milk bone is about 40 kcal. Give five a day? That is 200 kcal. For a 20-pound dog needing 600 kcal total, that is 33% of daily calories. From treats. That the owner "forgot" to count.

The Hidden Calories

I made a chart for my clients. Here is what common treats actually cost:

Five milk bones + one dental chew = 275 kcal. For a small dog, that is nearly half their daily need. No wonder they are overweight.

๐Ÿ“‹ Factor Treats Into the Feeding Plan

Our feeding plan generator lets you subtract treat calories from meals automatically. No more guesswork.

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Low-Calorie Alternatives

You do not have to eliminate treats. Just switch to low-cal options:

Bruno, my rescue pit bull, thinks carrot sticks are the best thing ever. I am not sure if he actually likes them or if he is just happy I am giving him something. Either way, it works.

The rule is simple: treats should not exceed 10% of daily calories. For a 800 kcal diet, that is 80 kcal in treats. Two milk bones. That is it. Everything else comes out of the meal portion.

โ€” Dr. Anika Patel

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