Quick answer

For most Westie puppies, our top pick is Royal Canin Small Breed Puppy Dry Dog Food. It carries an AAFCO statement for growth, uses small kibble sized for tiny jaws, and balances protein, fat, and calories for the fast metabolism of a small breed pup. If your puppy has a sensitive stomach or itchy skin, Hill’s Science Diet Small Paws Puppy or Purina Pro Plan Small Breed Puppy Sensitive Skin and Stomach may fit better. On a tighter budget, Diamond Naturals Small Breed Puppy delivers a named meat first at a lower cost, and Wellness Complete Health Small Breed Puppy suits owners who want a grain inclusive recipe with added omega support. Always confirm any new diet with your veterinarian, especially if your Westie has known allergies.

What to consider for Puppy Food For Westie

The West Highland White Terrier is a small breed that usually matures around 15 to 20 pounds, so a Westie puppy needs a food formulated for small breed growth, not a large breed or all life stages recipe. Small breed pups have fast metabolisms and small stomachs, which means they benefit from calorie dense food in small, frequent meals and from small kibble that is easier to chew and less of a choking risk.

Westies are also well known for skin and coat sensitivities and allergy related itching. Many owners report that their dogs do better on recipes with a single, clearly named animal protein and added omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids that may support skin and coat health. This is general guidance, not a diagnosis, and a persistently itchy or scratching puppy should be seen by a veterinarian to rule out food allergies, environmental allergies, or skin conditions.

Because Westies can be prone to digestive upset and to dental crowding in a small mouth, a gentle, highly digestible formula and appropriately sized kibble both matter. Watch your puppy’s weight closely, since a small frame puts excess pounds on quickly, and follow the feeding chart on the bag as a starting point rather than an exact rule.

What to look for in a dog food

Look first for an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth or for all life stages, which tells you the food is formulated to be a full diet for a puppy rather than a supplemental or topper product. Confirm a named meat is the first ingredient, such as chicken, lamb, salmon, or deboned turkey, rather than a vague unnamed meat or a grain filler.

For a small breed puppy, sensible nutrient ranges are a useful guide. Protein in the range of roughly 26 to 32 percent and fat around 14 to 20 percent on a dry matter basis are common in quality small breed puppy foods, with calorie density often near 380 to 450 calories per cup. Treat these as practical reference points, not absolute medical rules, since the right amount depends on your individual puppy. Choose a small breed formula rather than a large breed one, since large breed puppy foods are designed to slow growth in big dogs and are not the right fit for a Westie. Finally, look for omega fatty acid support, often listed as omega 3 and omega 6, fish oil, or DHA, which may help support skin, coat, and developing brain and eyes.

How we chose these picks

  • Confirmed each food carries an AAFCO complete and balanced statement appropriate for puppy growth or all life stages.
  • Required a clearly named animal protein as the first ingredient, not an unnamed meat meal.
  • Prioritized small breed formulas with small kibble suited to a Westie sized mouth.
  • Favored recipes with added omega 3 and omega 6 fatty acids that may support skin and coat.
  • Compared protein, fat, and calorie levels against sensible small breed puppy ranges using publicly available product information.
  • Checked each brand against publicly posted FDA recall information at the time of writing.
  • Included options across price points and for sensitive stomach and skin needs.
  • Never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.

What to avoid

  • Foods that list an unnamed generic meat meal as the only protein source, with no named animal protein.
  • Defaulting to grain free or legume heavy recipes. The FDA investigation into a potential link between certain diets and canine dilated cardiomyopathy is ongoing, so a grain inclusive recipe is the safer default for most puppies unless your veterinarian advises otherwise for a specific reason.
  • Feeding an all life stages or large breed puppy food when a small breed growth formula is the better match for a Westie.
  • Abrupt diet switches. Transition to any new food over about 7 to 10 days, gradually mixing more new food into the old, to reduce the risk of stomach upset.

For more help, browse our dog guides, our dog food roundups, and our dog nutrition articles for breed and life stage specific advice.

Sources and further reading