Quick answer

For most large breed puppies, our editorial team’s top pick is Purina Pro Plan Large Breed Puppy Chicken and Rice Formula. It carries an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth of large size dogs (those expected to reach 70 pounds or more as adults), lists real chicken as the first ingredient, and is formulated for the controlled calcium and steady growth that big puppies need. If you want a budget option, Diamond Naturals Large Breed Puppy covers the same growth needs for less. For a sensitive stomach, consider Hill’s Science Diet Large Breed Puppy, and for a grain-inclusive formula with added joint support, Eukanuba Large Breed Puppy fits well. Always confirm the exact formula matches your puppy’s projected adult size, and ask your veterinarian if you are unsure.

What to consider for Dog Food For Large Breed Puppy

Large breed puppies are not just big small puppies. Their skeletons grow for a longer window, often 18 to 24 months, and growing too fast is the main risk. Excess calories and especially too much calcium have been associated with developmental orthopedic problems like hip dysplasia and osteochondrosis in fast growing big breeds. Because of this, foods specifically labeled for large breed growth are formulated with a controlled, narrower calcium range and modest calorie density to encourage slower, steadier development rather than maximum speed.

The practical takeaway is to feed a food that carries an AAFCO statement covering growth of large size dogs (70 pounds or more as an adult), and to feed measured portions so your puppy stays lean. You should be able to feel the ribs easily under a light layer of fat, and see a waist from above. A roly poly large breed puppy is not a goal. If your puppy has a known health condition or you are weighing different feeding plans, your veterinarian is the right person to confirm the calorie target and food choice.

What to look for in a dog food

Use these signals when comparing labels:

  • AAFCO statement for the right life stage. Look for wording like complete and balanced for growth, including growth of large size dogs (70 lb or more as an adult). All life stages foods can also qualify, but only if they meet the large breed growth calcium limits, so the large breed wording is the safest signal.
  • A named meat first. The first ingredient should be a specific protein such as chicken, lamb, or salmon, ideally a named source rather than a vague unnamed “meat meal”.
  • Sensible protein, fat, and calories. As a practical guide, many large breed puppy foods land roughly in the 26 to 32 percent protein and 12 to 16 percent fat range on a dry matter basis, with moderate calorie density to avoid overfeeding. These are general ranges, not medical rules, and the right numbers for your dog depend on body condition and activity.
  • Controlled calcium for large breeds. This is the single most important large breed factor. Large breed growth formulas cap calcium in a narrower range than regular puppy food.
  • Joint and omega support. Omega 3 fatty acids such as DHA support normal development, and some formulas add glucosamine and chondroitin. These may support joint health but are not a treatment, so talk to your veterinarian before adding any supplement.

How we chose these picks

  • We prioritized foods carrying an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth of large size dogs.
  • We favored recipes with a named meat as the first ingredient over vague unnamed meals.
  • We checked that calcium and calorie density were appropriate for controlled large breed growth.
  • We compared protein, fat, and DHA levels against published large breed puppy guidance.
  • We reviewed each brand’s publicly available recall history and manufacturing transparency.
  • We weighed real owner feedback patterns on palatability and stool quality, not isolated reviews.
  • We included options across price tiers so budgets are not left out.
  • We never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.

What to avoid

  • An unnamed “meat meal” as the only protein source, since you cannot tell what animal it came from.
  • Defaulting to grain-free or legume-heavy recipes. The FDA investigation into a potential link between certain grain-free diets and canine dilated cardiomyopathy is ongoing and not resolved, so a grain-inclusive food is the safer default for most puppies unless your veterinarian advises otherwise.
  • Feeding a plain all life stages food to a large breed puppy unless its label specifically confirms it meets large breed growth requirements, because the calcium may be too high.
  • Abrupt diet switches. Transition over 7 to 10 days, mixing increasing amounts of the new food, to reduce the chance of stomach upset.

For more buying help, browse our dog guides, our dog food roundups, and our dog nutrition articles to build a complete feeding plan.

Sources and further reading