Quick answer
For most adult Bugg dogs, our top pick is Royal Canin Small Adult Dry Dog Food. It is formulated specifically for small breeds, uses a small kibble that suits a short, flat-faced muzzle, and carries an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for adult maintenance. If your Bugg has a sensitive stomach, Purina Pro Plan Small Breed Sensitive Skin and Stomach is a better fit because it leads with salmon and is easier on digestion. On a budget, Diamond Naturals Small Breed Adult delivers a named meat first ingredient at a lower cost. For a Bugg puppy under about 12 months, choose Hill’s Science Diet Small Paws Puppy, and if you want a grain-inclusive everyday option, Wellness Complete Health Small Breed Adult is a sensible default. Always confirm any change with your veterinarian, especially if your dog has a health condition.
What to consider for Dog Food For Bugg Dog
The Bugg is a small companion crossbreed, usually a Boston Terrier crossed with a Pug, typically weighing about 10 to 25 pounds. A few traits of this dog drive the food choice. First, Buggs are brachycephalic, meaning they have a short, flat muzzle, so a smaller kibble shape is easier to pick up and chew and may reduce gulping of air. Second, both parent breeds are prone to weight gain, and extra weight puts more strain on an already compromised airway and on the joints, so calorie control and measured portions matter a great deal. Third, Buggs can inherit a sensitive stomach or skin and food sensitivities, so a recipe with a single named protein and limited filler is often easier to tolerate. Finally, this is a small breed, so a small breed or all life stages formula sized for little dogs is the right category, not a large breed food. If your dog shows ongoing digestive upset, itching, or breathing difficulty, talk to your veterinarian before changing the diet.
What to look for in a dog food
Start with the label. Look for an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for the correct life stage, either adult maintenance for a grown Bugg or growth for a puppy. Choose a food that lists a named meat as the first ingredient, such as chicken, lamb, or salmon, rather than a vague meat by-product. For a small adult Bugg, a sensible target is roughly 25 to 30 percent protein and about 12 to 16 percent fat on a dry matter basis, though these are general ranges and not strict medical rules. Because small breeds have a fast metabolism but Buggs gain weight easily, watch the calorie density, often around 350 to 400 calories per cup in many small breed foods, and measure portions rather than free feeding. Pick a small breed sized kibble suited to a small flat-faced mouth, not a large breed formula. Omega 3 fatty acids and joint support ingredients like glucosamine can be a useful bonus for a breed prone to skin and joint issues, but they are a supplement to a good base diet, not a cure. Ask your veterinarian which targets fit your individual dog.
How we chose these picks
- We compared products using publicly available manufacturer information, ingredient panels, and guaranteed analysis figures, not personal lab testing.
- We required an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for the relevant life stage on every pick.
- We favored recipes that list a named meat as the first ingredient over generic meat meals.
- We prioritized small breed formulas with an appropriately sized kibble for a brachycephalic mouth.
- We checked the FDA recall and advisory pages for the brands included and noted the ongoing FDA grain-free DCM investigation.
- We weighed calorie density and portion guidance because Buggs are prone to weight gain.
- We looked for honest trade-offs and listed at least one real con for every pick.
- Never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.
What to avoid
- An unnamed generic meat meal listed as the only protein source, since you cannot tell what animal it came from.
- Defaulting to grain-free or legume-heavy recipes without a reason. The FDA investigation into a potential link between certain grain-free diets and canine dilated cardiomyopathy is ongoing, and grain-inclusive food is the safer default unless your veterinarian advises otherwise.
- Feeding an all life stages or puppy food long term to an adult, or feeding a generic adult food to a fast-growing puppy when a stage-appropriate formula is available.
- Abrupt diet switches. Transition over 7 to 10 days by gradually mixing the new food in, since sudden changes often upset a sensitive Bugg stomach.
For more help choosing and feeding your dog, browse our dog guides, our dog food reviews, and our dog nutrition articles.