Quick answer
Our top pick is Royal Canin Small Puppy Dry Dog Food, because it is formulated for small-breed puppies, lists a clear AAFCO growth statement, and uses a kibble shape sized for a tiny Lhasa Apso mouth. If your puppy has a touchy stomach, Hill’s Science Diet Small Paws Puppy is a gentler runner-up. On a tighter budget, Diamond Naturals Small Breed Puppy delivers a named-meat-first recipe for less, while Purina Pro Plan Small Breed Puppy suits owners who want higher protein and Wellness Complete Health Small Breed Puppy fits those wanting a grain-inclusive whole-food style recipe.
What to consider for Puppy Food For Lhasa Apso
The Lhasa Apso is a small breed, usually maturing around 12 to 18 pounds, with a long double coat and a compact jaw. That shape drives three real priorities. First, kibble size: standard puppy kibble can be hard for a small muzzle to pick up and chew, so a dedicated small-breed piece matters. Second, steady energy: small puppies burn calories fast and can be prone to low blood sugar if meals are skipped, so a calorie-dense, complete growth food fed in several small meals a day helps. Third, the breed’s heavy coat benefits from a recipe that supplies omega fatty acids. Lhasa Apsos can also be prone to certain eye and kidney issues over a lifetime, so we keep claims modest and recommend you discuss any breed-specific health concern with your veterinarian rather than relying on food alone.
What to look for in a dog food
Look for an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth (or for “all life stages”) printed on the bag, which signals the food is formulated to nourish a puppy, not just an adult. Check that a named meat such as chicken, lamb, or salmon is the first ingredient rather than a vague “meat” or an unnamed by-product. For a small-breed puppy, protein around 26 to 30 percent and fat around 14 to 18 percent on a dry-matter basis are common and practical targets, with calorie density typically higher than adult food to support growth. Because the Lhasa Apso is a small breed, choose a small-breed formula rather than a large-breed puppy food, which is calibrated differently for slower bone growth. Omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, sometimes listed as fish oil or flaxseed, may support skin and coat, though they are not a guaranteed outcome. These are general guides, not medical rules, so confirm the right targets for your individual puppy with your veterinarian.
How we chose these picks
- Confirmed each product is currently sold and marketed specifically for small-breed or toy puppies.
- Required an AAFCO complete and balanced statement for growth or all life stages on the label.
- Prioritized recipes with a named meat as the first ingredient over unnamed meat meals.
- Checked kibble size claims so the food suits a small Lhasa Apso jaw.
- Favored grain-inclusive recipes as the safer default while the FDA DCM investigation remains ongoing.
- Compared protein, fat, and calorie levels against practical small-breed growth ranges.
- Reviewed publicly available manufacturer information and owner feedback for consistency and recall history.
- Never ranked a product higher just because it pays a commission.
What to avoid
- Foods that list an unnamed “meat meal” as the only protein source, with no named animal.
- 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 unless your veterinarian advises otherwise.
- Feeding an all-life-stages food to a large-breed puppy, which has different growth needs. For a small breed like the Lhasa Apso this is less of a risk, but match the formula to the breed size regardless.
- Abrupt diet switches. Transition over 7 to 10 days, mixing increasing amounts of the new food, to reduce the chance of digestive upset.
For more breed and feeding help, browse our dog guides, our dog food roundups, and our dog nutrition articles.