Dog Treats141 products
Training treats, dental chews, and natural snacks for every routine.
Dog treats cover everything from tiny training rewards to long-lasting chews and functional dental products. The right treat depends on what you're using it for: small quickly-eaten pieces for training and recall work; larger jerky strips or biscuits for general rewards; dental chews with specific texture and shape for oral health; and natural long-chews for jaw exercise and stress relief. Australian brands dominate this category — Blackdog, Bell & Bone, SavourLife, Kazoo, and Prime100 all feature alongside international heavyweights like KONG, Greenies, and Whimzees.
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Greenies
Greenies Dog Fresh Mint Dental Treats For Petite Dogs
$26.99
$36.99Save up to $10.00
$79.38/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Dog Treat Australian Duck Strips
$11.19
$14.39Save up to $3.20
$74.60/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Dog Treat Australian Milky Strips
$7.99
$14.39Save up to $6.40
$74.40/kg

Greenies
Greenies Canine Dental Dog Treats Fresh Teenie
$27.40
$36.99Save up to $9.59
$80.59/kg

Prime100
Prime100 SPD Prime Cut Turkey Treats
$9.96
$12.49Save up to $2.53
$99.60/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Australian Beef Strips Dog Treats
$9.59
$13.99Save up to $4.40
$58.12/kg
What type of dog are you shopping for?

SavourLife
Savourlife Australian Chicken Strips Dog Treats
$8.79
$13.99Save up to $5.20
$53.27/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Australian Kangaroo Training Dog Treats
$8.79
$13.99Save up to $5.20
$53.27/kg

Single-ingredient treats are usually the safest bet
Dehydrated liver, chicken breast, or fish skins with nothing added. Less processing, fewer allergens, and dogs go crazy for them.

Blackdog
Blackdog Bully Sticks Dog Treats
$26.99
$35.99Save up to $9.00
$99.83/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Australian Milky Training Dog Treats
$11.19
$13.99Save up to $2.80
$71.81/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Dog Treats Training Treats Australian Chicken
$11.79
$13.99Save up to $2.20
$71.45/kg

Black Hawk
Black Hawk Kangaroo Jerky Straps Dog Treats
$10.40
$15.22Save up to $4.82
$112.40/kg

Vetalogica
Vetalogica Vitarapid Tranquil Daily Dog Treats
$11.89
$18.99Save up to $7.10
$56.62/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Pig Ears Dog Treats
$22.97
$35.00Save up to $12.03
$14.97/kg

Black Hawk
Black Hawk Beef Jerky Straps Dog Treats
$10.39
$15.22Save up to $4.83
$112.40/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Sweet Potato And Chicken Wraps Dog Treats
$7.49
$13.98Save up to $6.49
$34.84/kg

Subscription prices can save 2-15%
Some stores offer autoship discounts. These range between 2.5-15% off when you set up a repeat delivery.

SavourLife
Savourlife Beef Biscuit Dog Treat
$11.19
$16.98Save up to $5.79
$22.38/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Dog Treats Biscuits Australian Chicken Flavour
$11.19
$16.98Save up to $5.79
$22.38/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Duck Jerky Dog Treats
$46.74
$85.00Save up to $38.26
$46.74/kg

Black Hawk
Black Hawk Dog Treats - Chicken Jerky Sticks
$9.21
$14.99Save up to $5.78
$92.10/kg

Prime100
Prim100 - Spd™ Prime Cut Beef Dog Treats
$10.92
$12.49Save up to $1.57
$109.20/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Sweet Potato Slice Dog Treats
$7.22
$10.79Save up to $3.57
$34.20/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Shark Cartilage Dog Treats
$7.99
$13.98Save up to $5.99
$71.96/kg

SavourLife
Savourlife Australian Kangaroo Biscuits Dog Treats
$9.59
$16.98Save up to $7.39
$19.18/kg

Blackdog
Blackdog Cow Ears Dog Treats
$22.99
$35.00Save up to $12.01
Showing 25 of 141 products
The category breaks down into distinct sub-types. Training treats are small, soft, and quickly swallowed so they don't interrupt sessions — liver, jerky, and soft-bite formats win here. General treats include biscuits, jerky strips, and freeze-dried meat pieces for rewards outside training. Dental treats like Greenies, Whimzees, and Oravet use fibre-matrix structures and specific shapes to clean teeth while being chewed — some are accepted by the Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC). Natural long-chews such as pig ears, beef tendons, bully sticks, and yak chews provide jaw exercise and can occupy a dog for 30 minutes to several hours.
Australian owners buy more treats per dog than most countries — partly because so much of our training culture is reward-based, and partly because dogs have become household companions rather than working animals in most homes. That makes treat quality and calorie-awareness a bigger issue than it used to be. Treats are now a meaningful part of daily calories, and cheap, low-quality treats contribute to the growing dog obesity problem. The 10% rule — treats no more than 10% of daily calories — is worth sticking to, especially for smaller and less active dogs.
How to choose
Start with the job. Training treats need to be small, soft, highly palatable, and quickly eaten — freeze-dried liver, soft jerky strips, and commercial training bites are good choices. For general rewards, biscuits and jerky strips are fine. For dental work, look for products accepted by the Veterinary Oral Health Council or that use a proven fibre-matrix structure — decorative bone-shaped biscuits don't clean teeth in any meaningful way. For long-chews, match hardness to your dog's chewing style: aggressive chewers can fracture teeth on overly hard items (antlers and large raw bones in particular), so softer options like bully sticks, yak chews, and beef tendons are safer for most dogs. Always supervise long-chews, take them away before they become a swallowable size, and count calories. A 30g bully stick can be a meal-sized chunk of daily calories for a small dog.
Key considerations
Match the treat to the job
Training needs small, soft, quickly-eaten pieces. Rewards can be bigger. Chews are for occupation and mild dental benefit.
10% calorie rule
Treats should stay under 10% of daily calories. Over that, reduce meal portions to compensate or the weight creeps on.
Dental claims need evidence
Look for VOHC acceptance or a proven fibre-matrix structure. Decorative bone shapes don't clean teeth.
Match chew hardness to dog
Aggressive chewers can fracture teeth on antlers and hard bones. Softer natural chews are safer for most powerful chewers.
Always supervise
Long-chews become choking hazards when they shrink enough to swallow. Take them away and discard the last stub.
Single-ingredient first
Dogs with sensitivities do better on single-ingredient treats. Complex recipes complicate elimination diets later.
Frequently asked
How many treats can I give my dog per day?+
The general rule is no more than 10% of daily calories from treats. For a 20kg adult dog needing around 1,200 kcal per day, that's roughly 120 kcal from treats — less than most owners realise. If you train often, use tiny pieces and reduce the meal portion slightly to compensate.
What's the best treat for training?+
Small, soft, quickly-eaten, and highly palatable — those are the four requirements. Liver treats, soft jerky bites, dried chicken strips torn small, and commercial training-specific products all work. Avoid anything crunchy that takes time to chew, because it slows the training session and the reward becomes disconnected from the behaviour.
Are dental treats actually effective?+
Some are, some aren't. Products accepted by the Veterinary Oral Health Council have evidence of plaque or tartar reduction. Common examples are Greenies, Oravet, and certain Whimzees shapes. Decorative dental biscuits that just look tooth-shaped don't do much. Dental treats complement brushing and vet cleans, they don't replace them.
Are rawhide treats safe?+
Rawhide has fallen out of favour in Australia and many other markets because of choking and intestinal blockage risks. Most specialty pet stores now stock bully sticks, beef tendons, pig ears, and yak chews as safer long-chew alternatives — they digest more predictably and carry lower blockage risk.
Can puppies have dog treats?+
Yes, but choose carefully. Soft, small, puppy-specific training treats are ideal — adult jerky can be too hard on developing teeth, and rawhide or hard bone chews aren't appropriate for young dogs. Count puppy treats against daily calories the same way you would for an adult, and introduce new ingredients one at a time.
