Dog Supplies

On this Dog Supplies category page, the quickest checks are size and fit (XS–XL harnesses, 1.2m vs 3m leads), then formats like 50–100 pack refills versus single items. Product listings come from multiple partner retailers, so the same item can appear as a single SKU, a colour variant (black, red, navy), or a bundle with add-ons such as a spare clip or travel pouch. Some ranges turn over without warning as partners refresh their catalogues, and a favourite size can drop out while a different material or closure appears. The mix is broad: bowls and feeders, grooming tools, hygiene basics, training rewards, and health-support items. It’s not always tidy.

Read on for how Dog Supplies listings vary by type, size, materials and platform details

Core product types you’ll run into

Leads, collars and harnesses sit alongside feeders, grooming tools, and hygiene consumables, and partners don’t always publish them the same way. One partner posts a harness as separate sizes (S, M, L) while another groups colour variants under one tile with a dropdown; it changes how quickly you spot a 25–35cm neck range or a 15mm webbing width. Small details matter. With Pets at Home, you’ll also see overlap where the same style lead appears both as a single 1.5m line and as a set with a matching collar, which can shift the visible SKU count. For bowls, check rim height and base diameter—those are the practical differences behind dog feeding bowls.

Multipacks, sets, and refills

Consumables are where format differences show up fast: poop bags appear as 60, 120 or 270-count rolls, sometimes with a dispenser clipped in, sometimes as plain refills. Not consistent. Some partners publish each scent-free roll count as its own listing, while others bundle mixed roll sizes into one product card with selectable variants, which affects whether you notice a 15-bag roll versus a 20-bag roll. With Zooplus UK, multipacks can be titled as “value packs” but still arrive as several 10-roll sleeves, so the pack structure is worth reading. Material is another tell—HDPE vs compostable film changes thickness and tear resistance in dog poop bags listings.

Sizing and spec details that vary by partner

Sizing is published unevenly across collars, coats and carriers: you might get chest girth in cm, or just a weight band like “up to 10kg”, or a single “medium” label with no measurement. That’s frustrating. For carriers and car restraints, look for stated strap length (for example 45–70cm adjustable) and clip type (seatbelt loop vs ISOFIX-style strap), because some listings only show one of those specs. Treat weights are similar—some partners show 70g pouches, others 500g tubs, and the same flavour can appear in both. When you’re scanning dog training treats, the piece size (mini cubes vs sticks) and pack weight are the hard details that stop mismatches.

Materials, build, and functional features

Construction details change the day-to-day use: stainless steel bowls resist odours, while melamine shells hide scuffs but can chip at the rim; silicone bases reduce slide on tile. Simple, but real. Grooming tools vary too—pin brushes with rounded tips behave differently from slicker brushes with fine wire pins, and coat rakes are listed by tooth count (8-tooth vs 12-tooth) or blade width (6cm vs 9cm). With Wilko, you’ll see basic nylon leads with metal swivel clips next to padded neoprene handles, and the closure hardware (trigger clip vs bolt snap) isn’t always in the title. For dog grooming supplies, material and fastening details are the difference between a quick brush and a snaggy one.

Common checks people make while browsing

Shoppers check closure and safety first: a harness buckle style (side-release vs step-in), reflective stitching, and whether D-rings are welded or split. It’s a fast filter. Hygiene items get checked for roll count, dispenser compatibility, and whether bags are scented or unscented, because “refill” can mean different core sizes. Feeding items get checked for bowl capacity (500ml vs 1.5L) and dishwasher-safe markings, and travel items for fold-flat thickness and clip placement. For dog travel accessories, the practical checks are strap length, wipe-clean lining, and whether a carrier base is rigid or soft.

How Discount Promo Codes Help Lower Costs When Buying Dog Supplies

Discount codes relate to reduced cost when buying Dog Supplies because the same collar size, bowl capacity, or pack format can be sold by different partner retailers under separate listings. It’s not a single catalogue. Alongside some product listings, Discount Promo Codes provides access to discount codes for partner retailers, and retailer code-page links may appear next to the merchant name rather than inside the product description—then the product details still stay focused on specs like 120-count refills or 2L stainless bowls. Amazon appears in this category, but only as one of many sources in the wider mix of stock rotation and variant movement. Separately, the platform’s operation supports a monthly charity donation, with 20% of profits donated, which is recorded as a business process rather than a product feature. For dog flea treatment, listings also vary by weight band (2–10kg vs 10–20kg) and format (spot-on pipettes vs collars), so the merchant context matters.