Buying Guides Β· 6 min read
How to Pick the Right Dog Toy: A Practical Guide for Every Chewing Style
From puppy teethers to power chewers, here's how to match a toy to your dog's age, size, and play style β and avoid the ones that won't last a week.
Published January 12, 2025
Start with your dog's chewing style, not their breed
The most common mistake we see pet parents make is buying toys based on breed stereotypes. Not every Labrador is a power chewer, and plenty of small dogs can shred a plush in minutes. Spend a week observing how your dog actually plays. Do they carry, cuddle, and gently mouth? They're a snuggler. Do they shake, toss, and pounce? They're a play-driver. Do they immediately try to dismantle every seam? They're a power chewer β and you'll need to shop differently.
Once you know the style, the right toy almost picks itself. Snugglers thrive with chenille and waffle-knit plushes. Play-drivers love squeaky, multi-textured toys with crinkle layers. Power chewers need rope, rubber, or reinforced plush with anchored seams β not surface-stitched filler.
Size matters more than people think
A toy that's too small is a choking risk. A toy that's too large frustrates the dog and gets ignored. The general rule: the toy should be slightly larger than your dog's mouth opening when fully relaxed. For puppies, size up β they grow fast, and a toy sized for the next 6 months will still be safe today.
If you have multiple pets in the home, buy for the largest one. Smaller pets can usually still play with a larger toy, but the reverse can be dangerous.
Read the construction, not the marketing
Most plush toys fail at the seams long before the fabric wears out. Look for double-stitched seams, reinforced anchor points where ropes or limbs attach to the body, and squeakers that are tucked away from the highest-stress areas. A squeaker stitched directly into a tug rope will be the first thing to go.
For chew toys, check that any rope or fabric extensions are anchored through the core of the toy, not just glued or surface-stitched. This single detail is the difference between a toy that survives months of tug-of-war and one that comes apart on day three.
Rotate, don't accumulate
Dogs get bored of toys the same way kids get bored of puzzles. Instead of buying ten toys at once, buy three or four and rotate them weekly. Each time a toy reappears, it feels new again. This stretches your toy budget and keeps your dog more engaged across the week.
When a toy starts showing real wear β exposed stuffing, loose squeakers, fraying ropes β retire it. A worn toy isn't a thrifty toy; it's a vet visit waiting to happen.
What to avoid, no matter how cute it looks
Skip toys with plastic eyes, noses, or buttons that can be chewed off. Skip raw cotton stuffing β opt for hypoallergenic polyester fill instead. Skip dyed rope toys; the dyes can transfer and may not be food-safe. And skip anything that smells strongly of plastic or chemicals straight out of the package β that's a sign of low-quality manufacturing.
When in doubt, look for toys made with non-toxic, pet-safe materials and brands that publish their safety standards openly. If you have to dig to find them, that's a red flag.
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