4.5(425)Amazon rating$61.991,000+ bought last month
Our verdict
Hill's Prescription Diet c/d Multicare is a veterinary diet built for urinary care, and with a 4.5 star rating across 425 reviews, it has a solid reputation among dogs managing urinary stone risk under a vet's care.
Dogs whose vet has recommended a urinary care diet to help manage the risk of calcium oxalate or struvite stones.
Skip if
Your dog doesn't have a vet-diagnosed urinary condition, since this is a prescription formula built for a specific medical need.
Form Wet Food
Flavor Chicken & Vegetable Stew
Benefits Reduces The Risk Of Calcium Oxalate And Struvite Stones In Dogs By Controlling Magnesium, Calcium, And Phosphorus Levels.
Best for Urinary Care
Breed size All
Weight 9.38 Pounds
Priced 123% above the category median ($27.84 across 97 tracked models)
Our scorecard
4.4/5overall
Owner rating4.5/5
4.5 average across 425 owner ratings
Popularity0.8/5
425 owner reviews, fewer than most models here
The overall score is owner satisfaction weighted by how many reviews back it, so a high rating from few reviews counts for less. The bars below show where this model stands against the other dog food and health supplements we track in this category on price, popularity and size. Context, not marks against it, and our read of the data, not a lab test.
Overview
["This 12-pack of 12.5 oz cans is a chicken and vegetable stew formulated as a veterinary urinary care diet. Hill's designs it to help manage magnesium, calcium, and phosphorus levels, with added antioxidants, potassium citrate, and omega-3 fatty acids, as part of an overall approach to reducing the risk of calcium oxalate and struvite stones.", "Like other Hill's Prescription Diet products, this is meant to be fed under a vet's guidance as part of a diagnosed treatment plan, not chosen as a general purpose wet food for a healthy dog.", "At $61.99 for a 12-pack, it's among the pricier options in the canned food category, consistent with prescription diet pricing. With 425 reviews and a 4.5 star average, plus about 1,000 units bought in the past month, it has a dependable track record for dogs on this diet."]
Pros
Formulated specifically as a urinary care veterinary diet
Includes antioxidants, potassium citrate, and omega-3 fatty acids
Strong 4.5 star rating across 425 reviews
Chicken and vegetable stew format most dogs accept well
Cons
Premium price point in line with prescription diet positioning
Meant to be fed under veterinary guidance, not chosen without a diagnosis
Fewer total reviews than some of the non-prescription cans in this lineup
Specifications
Form
Wet Food
Flavor
Chicken & Vegetable Stew
Benefits
Reduces The Risk Of Calcium Oxalate And Struvite Stones In Dogs By Controlling Magnesium, Calcium, And Phosphorus Levels.
Best for
Urinary Care
Breed size
All
Weight
9.38 Pounds
Performance notes
The formula's added potassium citrate and omega-3 fatty acids, along with controlled mineral levels, are built around Hill's approach to urinary stone risk reduction, so it works as part of a broader vet-directed care plan rather than a stand-alone fix.
What buyers say
425 reviews at a 4.5 star average, with roughly 1,000 units purchased in the past month, reflects solid satisfaction among dogs prescribed this urinary care diet, even with a smaller review base than some of the more mainstream cans.
Hill's formulates this c/d Multicare recipe to help reduce the risk of calcium oxalate and struvite stones by controlling magnesium, calcium, and phosphorus levels, typically as part of a vet-directed care plan.
Do I need my vet's approval before feeding this?
Yes, this is a Hill's Prescription Diet formula intended to be recommended and monitored by a veterinarian rather than picked independently for a healthy dog.
What additional ingredients does this formula include?
Along with controlled mineral levels, it's enriched with antioxidants, potassium citrate, and omega-3 fatty acids as part of its urinary care approach.
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