Top picks at a glance
Highest-Rated Pick Zoetis Pet Tabs Plus 180CT,Brown,10000276
$50.00
A dog multivitamin is supposed to fill small nutritional gaps, not replace a real conversation with your vet about what your dog actually needs. We looked at every dog multivitamin in this dataset with real sales and rating data behind it, from budget tablets under $15 to premium 40-in-1 powders near $55. Instead of ranking by price or marketing claims, we sorted by verified demand, how many units sold in the last month and how many customers left a review, then checked that rating against a 3.8-star floor. We also read every guaranteed analysis and active ingredient list we could find, because a multivitamin with an empty specs sheet tells you nothing about what you're actually giving your dog. The result is a list of 10 multivitamins that combine real demand, real ratings and real formulas, organized by the job each one is best at, whether that's senior support, joint health, skin and coat, or plain daily coverage. This isn't veterinary advice, and none of it replaces your vet, especially if your dog has an existing health condition.
Highest-Rated Pick Zoetis Pet Tabs Plus 180CT,Brown,10000276
$50.00
NaturVet's All-in-One soft chews are the best-reviewed dog multivitamin we found, with 7,893 ratings and a 4.5-star average, and shoppers are still buying roughly 1,000 bottles a month at $28.77. The formula pairs a multivitamin base with added joint support and the omega 3, 6 and 9 fatty acids named in the title, and it's made without wheat. It also ranks #14 in the Dog Multivitamins category on Amazon, one of the stronger rank positions among the products we reviewed. For a dog that needs general wellness support plus a little help for aging joints, this is a solid first multivitamin to try.
Best for: Adult dogs who want one chew that covers general wellness and joint support
Bottom line: The most-reviewed, best-rated all-around multivitamin on this list, and a fair price at $28.77.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →Native Pet's Daily Dog powder is the fastest-moving product in this roundup, with about 6,000 tubs bought in the last month and 4,582 reviews at a 4.4-star average. The 11-in-1 powder mixes collagen, glucosamine, chondroitin, prebiotic fiber, taurine, DHA, cranberry extract, L-carnitine, vitamin C, zinc and a probiotic blend into one scoop, so it's formulated to support joints, digestion and immune health at the same time. At $34.99 for a 14-ounce, 60-scoop tub, it costs more than a basic tablet but covers more ground in one product. It's allergen-free and mixes into any bowl of food.
Best for: Owners who want one powder that layers joint, gut and immune ingredients together
Bottom line: The best-selling pick in this category right now, backed by nearly 4,600 reviews.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →VetriScience's Senior 27+ chews are built for aging dogs, with a guaranteed analysis that lists real amounts per chew, including 32 mg of EPA and 22 mg of DHA from fish oil, 1,000 IU of vitamin A, and a full B-vitamin lineup. At $12.79 for 60 vegetable-flavored soft chews, it's one of the more affordable options here, and it has 5,046 reviews at a 4.5-star average with about 2,000 units bought last month. The label calls out support for the heart, brain, coat, eyes and stomach, which lines up with the kinds of changes senior dogs tend to need most. It's wheat-free.
Best for: Senior dogs that need heart, brain and joint support in one daily chew
Bottom line: The most transparent label on this list and a strong value at under $13.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →Nutri-Vet's liver-flavored Multi-Vite tablets are the best price-to-demand ratio on this list, $13.11 for 180 tablets, a 4.6-star rating and 2,785 reviews, with about 1,000 bottles bought last month. It's marketed for overall health, immune support and balanced nutrition in active adult dogs, and the tablets are buckwheat-free. It ranks #46 in the Dog Multivitamins category, and the straightforward formula keeps the price down for owners who don't need extra joint or skin ingredients layered in. For owners who just want a plain daily multivitamin, this is the cheapest option here that still has real demand behind it.
Best for: Budget-conscious owners who want a plain daily multivitamin, not an all-in-one formula
Bottom line: The best value pick here at $13.11 for 180 tablets, with real demand and a 4.6-star average.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →
Pet-Tabs Plus, manufactured by Virbac, carries the highest average rating on this list at 4.8 stars across 2,500 reviews, with about 800 bottles bought last month. It's a flavorless tablet aimed at active dogs, sold in a 180-count bottle for $50.00, and it's allergen-free. It's the priciest option on this list, so it fits owners who want the highest-rated formula here over the lowest price.
Best for: Owners who want the highest-rated multivitamin on this list and don't mind paying more
Bottom line: The highest-rated multivitamin here, at a premium price.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →Zesty Paws' 8-in-1 chicken chews rank as the number-1 best seller in the Dog Multivitamins category on Amazon, and demand shows it, roughly 10,000 units were bought last month, more than any other product in this roundup. The formula lists glucosamine hydrochloride, chondroitin sulfate, fish oil concentrate, flaxseed, vitamin E and a full B-vitamin lineup among its ingredients, and it carries a 4.5-star average. At $32.97 for 90 chews, it's positioned as an all-in-one for hip and joint, skin and coat, and general wellness support. That combination of the number-1 category rank and roughly 10,000 units sold last month makes it the single most in-demand multivitamin in this entire dataset.
Best for: Owners who want the single most popular multivitamin chew on the market right now
Bottom line: The top seller in the category by a wide margin, based on verified monthly demand.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →
Golden Paw's cranberry-flavored liquid drops are the only liquid multivitamin in this roundup, and they've built real demand with 2,700 reviews, a 4.5-star average and about 800 bottles bought last month at $18.17. The ingredient list includes a full B-vitamin range, vitamin C, vitamin D3, glucosamine, MSM and cranberry juice powder, aimed at joints, coat and urinary comfort. A liquid is easy to dose by drops and mix into water or food, which makes it a good option for dogs that spit out chews or refuse powders. At 2 ounces per bottle, it's sized for smaller dogs or as a lower-dose daily addition.
Best for: Dogs that refuse chews and powders but will take a few drops in water or food
Bottom line: The easiest format to dose for a picky or small dog, with solid reviews behind it.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →Dr. Harvey's powder blends chamomile, ginger, licorice and rosemary into a 7-ounce herbal multivitamin, a different approach from the vitamin-and-mineral tablets most of this list is built on. It has 1,128 reviews, a 4.5-star average and about 1,000 tubs bought last month at $27.95, ranking #55 in the Dog Multivitamins category, which shows real traction despite the more specialized herbal approach. It's labeled for large, medium and small dogs, making it a flexible topper for any size. If you're looking for a whole-herb approach rather than an isolated-vitamin blend, this is the clearest example of that on this list.
Best for: Owners who prefer a whole-food, herb-based supplement over a vitamin-isolate blend
Bottom line: The most distinct, herb-forward formula here, with solid reviews to back it up.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →
Nutra Thrive is the most extensive formula in this roundup, marketed as a 40-in-1 blend of vitamins, minerals, probiotics and enzymes aimed at digestion and immune support. It's also the second-most expensive pick here at $54.99 for a 30-scoop, 3.3-ounce tub, but it still moves about 800 units a month and holds a 4.6-star average. With only 160 reviews, it has less of a track record than the higher-volume picks on this list, though its rating has stayed high. This is a fit for owners who want the broadest possible ingredient count and are comfortable paying for it.
Best for: Owners who want the most comprehensive formula and don't mind a premium price
Bottom line: The most ingredient-dense formula on this list, at a premium price to match.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →PetLab Co.'s 22-in-1 soft chews lean into skin and coat support alongside general wellness, with vitamins A, E, D and B12 plus minerals and antioxidants in a berry-pork flavor blend. It has strong numbers behind it, 2,912 reviews, a 4.4-star average and about 1,000 units bought last month at $29.55. It ranks #23 in the Dog Multivitamins category, backed by nearly 3,000 reviews. If shiny coat and skin comfort are your dog's main issue alongside general immune support, this is the most coat-focused pick on this list.
Best for: Dogs whose main need is skin and coat support alongside a general multivitamin
Bottom line: The most coat-focused multivitamin on this list, with solid reviews and demand.
Check price on Amazon Read the full review →A daily multivitamin is meant to fill small gaps in a dog's diet, things like extra B vitamins, antioxidants or a modest dose of omega-3s, not correct a genuine deficiency or treat a diagnosed condition. Most dogs eating a complete and balanced commercial food already get the nutrients they need from that food alone, so a multivitamin is closer to insurance than a requirement. Where multivitamins tend to help most is in dogs eating homemade diets, dogs recovering from illness, or older dogs whose appetite and absorption have started to slip. None of the products on this list are formulated to cure, treat or heal any disease, and none should be used as a substitute for a vet visit if your dog is showing symptoms. If you're unsure whether your dog's diet already covers these bases, that's a question for your vet, not a guess based on a supplement label.
The most useful thing on any multivitamin label is the guaranteed analysis, the section that lists actual milligram or IU amounts per serving rather than just a list of ingredient names. Products like VetriScience's Senior 27+ spell out exact amounts, 32 mg of EPA and 22 mg of DHA from fish oil, 1,000 IU of vitamin A, per chew, which lets you compare it honestly against another product's serving size. A long list of ingredient names without amounts, or a specs sheet that's mostly blank, tells you the brand either isn't disclosing dosages or the listing hasn't been filled in completely. Fat-soluble vitamins, A, D and E, build up in the body over time, so it's worth checking those amounts specifically if your dog is already on another supplement. When in doubt, a shorter list with clear amounts is more useful than a long list with none.
Soft chews are the most common format on this list and the easiest to give, most dogs take them like a treat, but they tend to cost more per serving than a plain tablet. Powders, like Native Pet's Daily Dog or Dr. Harvey's herbal blend, mix directly into food and work well for dogs that are picky about texture or that already eat wet or homemade meals. Liquids, like Golden Paw's cranberry drops, are easiest to dose precisely by the drop and are a good option for small dogs or for owners who want to start with a lower amount. Tablets are usually the cheapest per serving but can be harder to hide in food for a dog that picks around pills. There's no format that's objectively better, it comes down to what your dog will actually eat and how precisely you want to control the dose.
A young, healthy adult dog eating a complete commercial diet usually does fine with a basic multivitamin like Nutri-Vet's Multi-Vite or Zoetis's Pet-Tabs Plus, without needing extra joint or skin ingredients. Senior dogs tend to benefit from formulas built around their specific needs, VetriScience's Senior 27+ is formulated with heart, brain, coat and joint support in mind, which lines up with what aging dogs commonly need. Active dogs and larger breeds prone to joint wear often do better with an all-in-one formula that layers in glucosamine or chondroitin, like NaturVet's All-in-One or Zesty Paws' 8-in-1 chews. Puppies have different nutrient needs than adult dogs, and most of the multivitamins on this list are labeled for adult dogs, so check the label or ask your vet before giving one to a puppy. Matching the formula to your dog's actual stage and activity level matters more than chasing the product with the most ingredients.
A $50 bottle of 180 tablets and a $13 bottle of 180 tablets work out to a very different daily cost, so it pays to divide price by count before comparing two products. On this list, Nutri-Vet's Multi-Vite works out to a few cents a day at $13.11 for 180 tablets, while Ultimate Pet Nutrition's Nutra Thrive runs closer to $1.80 a scoop at $54.99 for 30 scoops. A higher price doesn't automatically mean a better formula, VetriScience's Senior 27+ is one of the cheapest picks here and also one of the most detailed on ingredient disclosure. It's worth deciding what you actually need first, a basic daily multivitamin or a more comprehensive formula, before letting price alone drive the decision. If your dog does well on a basic formula, there's little reason to pay premium prices for extra ingredients your dog doesn't need.
A multivitamin is not a treatment for a specific health problem. If your dog is showing symptoms like lethargy, appetite loss, joint pain or skin issues that don't resolve, that's a reason to call your vet, not to add a supplement. Dogs already on medication or being treated for a diagnosed condition should only start a new multivitamin after checking with a vet, since some ingredients, especially fat-soluble vitamins and minerals, can interact with existing treatment or build up if doubled with another supplement. Puppies, pregnant or nursing dogs, and dogs with kidney or liver conditions all have different nutritional needs that a general multivitamin isn't built to address. None of the products on this list are formulated to cure, treat or heal any disease, they're meant to support general wellness alongside a healthy diet. When in doubt, a quick call to your vet is faster and safer than guessing from a label.
Most dogs eating a complete and balanced commercial diet already get the nutrients required by pet food regulations, so a multivitamin isn't strictly necessary for a healthy adult dog. Where they tend to help more is with dogs on homemade or limited diets, dogs recovering from illness, or older dogs whose appetite or absorption has slipped. A multivitamin is best thought of as a small supplement to a good diet, not a replacement for one. If you're not sure whether your dog's current diet is complete, that's worth asking your vet directly.
Look for a guaranteed analysis with real milligram or IU amounts, not just a list of ingredient names with no dosages attached. Core B vitamins, vitamin C and vitamin E show up in most formulas, and many products, like NaturVet's All-in-One or Zesty Paws' 8-in-1, add glucosamine or fish oil for joint support on top of the base multivitamin. Probiotic strains show up as an increasingly common addition for digestive support. If a label lists ingredients but no amounts at all, treat that as a gap in disclosure rather than a red flag on its own.
It mostly comes down to what your dog will actually eat and how precisely you want to control the dose. Soft chews are the easiest to give since most dogs take them like a treat, powders mix invisibly into wet or dry food, and liquids like Golden Paw's cranberry drops let you dose by the drop for a small dog or a lower starting amount. None of the formats are inherently more effective than another, the ingredients inside matter more than the delivery method.
Most multivitamin ingredients, vitamins, minerals and probiotics, work gradually, so it's reasonable to give a formula four to eight weeks before deciding whether it's doing anything noticeable. Coat and digestive changes tend to show up before anything else, since those systems turn over faster than joints do. If you don't see any change after two months of consistent daily use, it's worth talking to your vet rather than assuming a different multivitamin will do better.
Often yes, but check both labels for overlapping ingredients first. Several multivitamins on this list, including NaturVet's All-in-One and Zesty Paws' 8-in-1, already include glucosamine or fish oil, so adding a separate joint chew on top could mean doubling up on the same ingredients. Fat-soluble vitamins A, D and E are the ones most likely to build up if you're combining several supplements. When combining products, it's safest to run the combination by your vet first.
Most of the multivitamins on this list are labeled for adult dogs, and puppies have different nutrient needs during growth, so check the label before giving any of these to a puppy. A general adult formula isn't automatically unsafe, but it also isn't formulated with a growing puppy's needs in mind. If you have a puppy and want to add a multivitamin, ask your vet for a product actually labeled for puppies.
Not without checking with your vet first. A multivitamin isn't formulated to treat, cure or manage a diagnosed condition, and some ingredients can interact with medication or affect certain conditions, like added minerals for a dog with kidney issues. Your vet can tell you whether a general multivitamin is safe alongside your dog's current treatment plan, or whether a condition-specific supplement is a better fit.
Across the 36 dog multivitamins in this dataset, the ones that earned a spot here combined real monthly demand, a rating of at least 4.4 stars, and an actual disclosed ingredient list, not just a well-designed label. NaturVet's All-in-One chews stand out as the best overall pick thanks to nearly 8,000 reviews and a 4.5-star average, while Nutri-Vet's Multi-Vite is the clearest value at $13.11 for 180 tablets. From there, the right choice depends on your dog, a senior formula like VetriScience's Senior 27+, a liquid for a picky eater, or a premium 40-in-1 powder if you want the broadest coverage. Whatever you choose, treat it as a supplement to a good diet, not a substitute for one, and loop in your vet if your dog has any ongoing health condition.