Toys29 products
Fetch, tug, chew, and puzzle toys for every play style.
Dog toys are more than a bored-dog fix — they're how dogs burn energy, exercise their brains, and practice species-typical behaviours like chewing, chasing, and problem-solving. The right toy for your dog depends on what they actually enjoy: fetchers want something that throws well and survives retrieval, chewers need durable rubber or rope, tuggers want rope handles or fabric loops, and puzzle solvers need enrichment toys that make them work for a reward. This category covers all of those.
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KONG
Kong Classic Dog Toy
$10.94
$31.48Save up to $20.54

KONG
Kong Dog Toy Scrunch Knots Squirrel
$12.87
$25.79Save up to $12.92

KONG
Kong Dog Wild Knots Bear Assorted
$9.88
$27.97Save up to $18.09

KONG
Kong Dog Toy Tugger Knots Frog Medium
$19.91
$34.00Save up to $14.09

KONG
Kong Dog Toy Tugger Knots Monkey Medium
$19.91
$33.19Save up to $13.28

KONG
Kong Signature Rope 40 Inch Dual Knot Dog Toy
$12.44
$19.99Save up to $7.55
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KONG
Kong Snuzzles Koala Dog Toy
$19.83
$23.99Save up to $4.16

KONG
Kong Dog Toys Signature Rope Double Ring Tug One Size
$9.99
$15.99Save up to $6.00

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Kazoo
Kazoo Space Ball Large Dog Toy
$7.99
$12.79Save up to $4.80

Kazoo
Kazoo Furries Lazy Dog Large Dog Toy
$17.00
$19.10Save up to $2.10

Kazoo
Kazoo Furries Long Ears Bunny Large Dog Toy
$12.00
$19.10Save up to $7.10

KONG
Kong Plush Dog Toy Cozie Ali Alligator
$17.19
$17.98Save up to $0.79

Kazoo
Kazoo Braided Rope 3 Knot Tug Dog Toy
$21.00
$21.99Save up to $0.99

KONG
Kong Licks Spinz Interactive Large Dog Toy
$20.99
$35.00Save up to $14.01

KONG
Kong Dog Toys Signature Rope Dual Knot With Ball One Size
$10.00
$12.44Save up to $2.44

Kazoo
Kazoo Furries Long Ears Dog Large Dog Toy
$15.49

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Kazoo
Kazoo Braided Rope Knot Bone Large Dog Toy
$28.65
$29.99Save up to $1.34

Kazoo
Kazoo Space Ball Small Pink
$5.36

KONG
Kong Licks Enrichment Lick Mat Dog Toy
$9.99
$16.00Save up to $6.01

Kazoo
Kazoo Bird Toy Cardboard Activity Box With Bell
$15.99
$17.00Save up to $1.01

Kazoo
Kazoo Play Buddies Mini Dog Toy Assorted
$5.36
$8.97Save up to $3.61

Purina
Purina Petlife Hypno Ball Tug
$9.99

Kazoo
Kazoo Braided Rope Sling Knot Ball Large Dog Toy
$19.10

KONG
Kong Dog Toy Bunji Highviz Bumper Medium Assorted Colour
$23.99

Kazoo
Kazoo Bird Toy Natural Pacifier With Beads
$18.49
Showing 25 of 29 products
Dog toys break into distinct sub-types. Fetch toys like balls, disks, and Chuckit! throwers are built for distance and durability. Chew toys (KONG Classic, rubber bones, nylon chews) stand up to tooth pressure and redirect destructive chewing onto something replaceable. Plush toys with squeakers suit gentle chewers and dogs who like a 'prey' object to carry. Rope and tug toys exercise dogs and handlers together. Puzzle toys (KONG Wobbler, snuffle mats, treat-dispensing balls) engage problem-solving and slow down fast eaters. KONG dominates this category — the classic red rubber KONG is the benchmark chew toy.
Australian dogs spend a lot of time indoors during summer heat and rain, which is exactly when toys earn their place. Brain-work toys — puzzles, snuffle mats, and slow feeders — burn as much energy as a short walk and keep indoor dogs from finding creative ways to entertain themselves. Chew toys matter more for working and sporting breeds with high chewing drive, where a reliable KONG or rubber chew saves your furniture from the alternative.
How to choose
Match the toy to the dog's play style. Fetch obsessives need ball-throwers, tennis balls larger than a golf ball to avoid choking, and flying disks. Chewers need genuinely durable rubber or nylon — not plush, not braided rope, which they shred in minutes. Puzzle solvers and high-energy breeds benefit from treat-dispensing toys and snuffle mats that turn mealtime into foraging. Size matters: a toy smaller than the dog's mouth is a choking hazard, so always size up when in doubt. Check the material for safety — avoid toys with small plastic parts, unsecured squeakers, or toxic paint, especially for aggressive chewers who will break things down fast. Rotate toys to maintain novelty; leaving the same toys out all the time dulls the appeal. And always supervise new toys for the first session to see how the dog engages — once you know how they play with it, you can relax into a routine.
Key considerations
Match toy to play style
Fetchers need balls. Chewers need rubber. Tuggers need ropes. Puzzle solvers need enrichment. One toy rarely does it all.
Size up, not down
Toys smaller than the dog's mouth are choking hazards. When in doubt, choose the larger size.
Durable rubber for aggressive chewers
KONG Classic, Goughnuts, Nylabone Extreme, and similar survive strong jaws. Plush toys don't.
Rotate for novelty
Swap toys in and out of the toy box. Continuous access dulls the appeal; a rotation keeps them interesting.
Check for loose parts
Small plastic pieces, unsecured squeakers, and eyes on plush toys become swallow hazards. Inspect regularly.
Puzzle toys earn their place indoors
Enrichment toys burn mental energy as effectively as a short walk. Essential for indoor and apartment-living dogs.
Frequently asked
What's the best toy for an aggressive chewer?+
A KONG Classic (black 'Extreme' rubber for the most destructive chewers) is the benchmark — it's thick natural rubber that survives the kind of pressure that destroys plush and plastic toys. Beyond KONG, Benebone, Goughnuts, and Nylabone's Extreme range are all built specifically for serious chewers.
Are tennis balls safe for dogs?+
Standard tennis balls are fine for most dogs in moderate play, but the felt can be abrasive on tooth enamel over years of heavy fetching. For obsessive fetchers, dog-specific rubber balls like Chuckit! Ultra Balls are a safer long-term choice — slightly softer on enamel and more durable than human tennis balls.
How do I stop my dog destroying toys?+
Match the toy to the dog. Dogs destroy toys because the toy is the wrong durability class, not because the dog is misbehaving. Move plush toys to supervised playtime only, and provide genuinely chew-rated alternatives for unsupervised time. KONG Classic, Nylabone Extreme, and similar are built for this job.
Do dogs get bored with their toys?+
Yes, fast. Continuous access to the same toys dulls appeal within days. The fix is rotation — keep half the toys away at any one time and swap them over every few days. An 'old' toy becomes exciting again after a week in the cupboard.
Are puzzle toys worth it?+
For indoor dogs, apartment dogs, and working-breed dogs that don't get enough mental stimulation, yes. Puzzle toys, snuffle mats, and treat-dispensing balls burn mental energy in a way walking doesn't, and they slow down fast eaters. Especially useful for separation anxiety and crate training as a distraction.
