Brand Comparison · 2026

Ollie vs Royal Canin

Ollie (fresh-cooked subscription competitor to the farmer's dog with similar trade-offs.) and Royal Canin (the deepest breed-specific and condition-specific formulation portfolio in the industry.) compared head-to-head on WSAVA manufacturer-quality criteria, AAFCO substantiation, monthly cost, and which dog each is best for in 2026. Royal Canin meets 5 of 5 WSAVA criteria. Royal Canin is roughly 53% less than Ollie.

Quick comparison

DimensionOllieRoyal Canin
Parent companyOllie Pets Inc.Mars Incorporated
CategoryFresh-cooked subscriptionPremium dry kibble
WSAVA criteria met3 of 55 of 5
AAFCO substantiationFormulation onlyFeeding trials
Full-time veterinary nutritionistYesYes
Credentialed formulatorYesYes
AAFCO feeding trialsNoYes
Owns manufacturing plantsPartialYes
Quality control programYesYes
Typical monthly cost (50 lb dog)$140 – $220 / month$60 – $110 / month

Ollie Pets Inc.

Ollie

Fresh-cooked subscription competitor to The Farmer's Dog with similar trade-offs.

Strengths

  • Veterinary nutritionist input on formulations
  • Multiple recipes for novel-protein rotation
  • Slightly more affordable than The Farmer's Dog

Watch-outs

  • Formulation-only substantiation (no AAFCO feeding trials)
  • Cold-chain dependency
  • No long-term outcome data

Best for: Owners who want fresh-cooked food and prefer recipe variety over a single recipe.

Avoid if: You cannot accommodate freezer storage or the per-month cost.

Visit Ollie

Mars Incorporated

Royal Canin

The deepest breed-specific and condition-specific formulation portfolio in the industry.

Strengths

  • 50+ breed-specific kibbles with documented breed-trait targeting
  • Strongest urinary disease and dermatology prescription lines globally
  • Owned manufacturing across US, EU, and additional regions
  • Specific support for Cavaliers, Pugs, Bulldogs, Dachshunds

Watch-outs

  • Highest absolute price of the major WSAVA-compliant brands
  • Breed-specific evidence varies — some formulas are marketing-thin
  • Limited value for mixed-breed dogs without specific breed risks

Best for: Purebred dogs with documented breed-specific health risks (Cavaliers, Pugs, Bulldogs, Dachshunds, large-breed puppies).

Avoid if: You have a mixed-breed dog without specific risks and are budget-conscious.

Visit Royal Canin

Which is better for your dog?

The right pick depends on your individual dog. Ollie is the better choice when: Owners who want fresh-cooked food and prefer recipe variety over a single recipe. Royal Canin is the better choice when: Purebred dogs with documented breed-specific health risks (Cavaliers, Pugs, Bulldogs, Dachshunds, large-breed puppies).

On cost, Royal Canin is roughly 53% less than Ollie at the midpoint of typical premium spec for a 50 lb adult dog. On WSAVA manufacturer-quality criteria, Royal Canin meets 5 of 5 vs 3 of 5 for Ollie.

Personalized recommendation

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Compare these brands against others

Methodology: WSAVA criteria reflect each brand's publicly documented manufacturer-quality practices as of May 2026, scored against the WSAVA Global Nutrition Committee's 5-question rubric. AAFCO substantiation reflects the dominant method used across the brand's main retail product line. Monthly cost reflects typical US 2026 retail for a 50 lb adult dog at premium spec, before autoship discounts. Recommendations are editorial and not influenced by affiliate relationships. See our recommendation methodology for IntelliBowl's quiz-engine ranking logic.

Ollie vs Royal Canin: 2026 Side-by-Side Comparison | IntelliBowl