Walk down the pet food aisle of any supermarket, and you will find rows of dog biscuits in bright packaging, making all sorts of claims: natural, balanced, premium.
A closer look at the ingredient list often tells a different story.
Melbourne pet owners are increasingly paying attention to what goes into their dog's food. A growing number are moving away from mass-produced options toward artisan dog bakeries that operate with a different set of priorities. Here is why.

Most people do not read the ingredient list on a packet of dog biscuits. It is small, densely worded, and full of terms that are not immediately recognisable.
That is worth changing.
Mass-produced dog biscuits commonly contain:
None of these ingredients there for the dog's benefit. They are there to reduce production costs, extend shelf life, and make the product more visually appealing on a retail shelf.
Reading the ingredient list before purchasing is one of the simplest things a pet owner can do.
The term human-grade gets used a lot in the pet food space. It is worth understanding what it actually means.
Human-grade vs feed-grade at a glance:

Most supermarket dog biscuits are made with feed-grade ingredients. Artisan bakeries that use human-grade ingredients are working to a noticeably higher standard.
What goes into the product directly affects what the dog gets out of it nutritionally.
Dogs can develop sensitivities to specific ingredients.
Common triggers include:
Finding a supermarket dog cookie that accounts for these sensitivities is not straightforward.
Artisan bakeries tend to operate differently. Grain-free, gluten-free, and single-protein recipes are far more common in the artisan space than on a supermarket shelf.
If your dog has a known sensitivity, an artisan bakery is a more practical starting point.
Pick up a packet of supermarket dog biscuits and check the best-before date. A shelf life of twelve months or more is not uncommon.
Fresh food does not last twelve months without intervention.
That shelf life is typically achieved through:
The best dog biscuits are made fresh, in smaller batches, and intended to be consumed within a shorter timeframe. Unless they are freeze-dried. The best dog biscuits with a long shelf life are freeze-dried. Freeze-drying removes moisture and retains nutrients.
A reputable artisan bakery will tell you exactly what is in their dog cookies.
What transparent labelling looks like:
When you know precisely what your dog is eating, there is no ambiguity and no need to guess what falls under a broad category description.
Transparency around ingredients is one of the clearest indicators of a product worth considering.
Large-scale pet food manufacturing is optimised for consistency, cost-efficiency, and volume.
These are reasonable business priorities. They do not always align with what is nutritionally best for the animal eating the product.
How mass production affects the final product:
The best dog biscuits Australia wide are not coming off a factory line producing hundreds of thousands of units per day. They are coming from bespoke producers working with better ingredients and more considered methods.
When you buy from a large multinational pet food brand, the distance between you and the people making decisions about that product is considerable.
A local artisan bakery operates differently.
What local accountability looks like in practice:
This accessibility creates a level of accountability that large-scale manufacturing cannot replicate.
Whether you are shopping from a local artisan bakery or evaluating any other supplier, here is what to look for.

At Supaw Pet Bakery in Melbourne, dog cookies and treats are made with human-grade ingredients sourced locally, with no artificial additives, fillers, or added sugar or salt.
The shift away from supermarket dog biscuits among Melbourne pet owners reflects a growing awareness of the connection between ingredient quality and animal health.
Choosing where to buy your dog's treats is worth the same consideration you would give to any other food decision.
If you are in Melbourne and want to explore an artisan bakery, Supaw Pet Bakery's range of dog cookies and treats is available at supawpet.com.au/collections/pastries-and-snacks.