Pet Food Experts adds Dogginstix to national distribution: full analysis
Pet Food Experts is expanding its treat assortment with Dogginstix, a premium natural chew brand that is now available across all PFX regions. The move gives Dogginstix access to one of the largest pet specialty distribution networks in the U.S., while giving retailers, and potentially veterinary-adjacent channels served by PFX, broader access to single-ingredient dog chews positioned around sourcing transparency and minimal processing. (blog.petfoodexperts.com)
The partnership fits a familiar pattern in the specialty pet market: distributors are using brand additions to help independent retailers compete on premiumization, ingredient transparency, and merchandising. PFX says it serves more than 10,000 retail partners nationwide and carries more than 170 brands, while also supporting fresh, frozen, direct-to-consumer, and veterinary clinic channels through its logistics network. In recent years, the company has used similar partnerships to broaden access to premium and human-grade positioned brands. (petfoodexperts.com)
In its May 2026 announcement, PFX said Dogginstix had joined the “PFX family of brands” and was available in all regions. The company highlighted Dogginstix’s manufacturing model as a differentiator, saying the brand makes its own products in its own human-grade European factory, which it described as FSSC certified. Dogginstix says its chews and treats are made from grass-fed, grass-finished proteins and formulated without additives, fillers, artificial ingredients, or unnecessary processing. The brand has also been building out its product line: Pet Food Processing reported last year that Dogginstix launched braided beef tripe treats in multiple sizes, using slow baking and dehydration methods and sourcing from pasture-raised animals through farmer partnerships. (blog.petfoodexperts.com)
The public reaction so far has come mainly from the companies themselves. Dogginstix National Sales Manager Britt Baldock said the PFX partnership would take the brand “to the next level,” while PFX category leadership said Dogginstix’s focus on safe manufacturing and health-aligned products fits the distributor’s mission. I didn’t find independent analyst commentary specifically on this partnership, but broader market research points in the same direction: a January 14, 2026 report summarized by PetfoodIndustry found that premium dog food and treat demand remains tied to wellness, sustainability, and higher-engagement consumer segments willing to pay more for differentiated products. (blog.petfoodexperts.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary professionals, this isn’t just a retail distribution story. It reflects the continued normalization of premium chew and treat products that pet parents may ask about in exam rooms, especially when discussing elimination diets, calorie control, dental safety, food sensitivities, or appropriate enrichment. Single-ingredient positioning can be attractive for dogs with limited ingredient needs, but “premium” claims don’t remove the need for case-by-case guidance. AAFCO states that treats and chews are exempt from complete-and-balanced nutritional adequacy requirements, and guidance from FEDIAF, WSAVA educational materials, and the ASPCA underscores that chew safety depends on hardness, size, supervision, and the individual dog’s chewing behavior. (aafco.org)
That creates a practical opening for clinics: helping pet parents distinguish between ingredient simplicity, manufacturing quality claims, and actual suitability for a given patient. For some dogs, a single-ingredient chew may be easier to evaluate than a multi-ingredient snack. For others, especially aggressive chewers, dogs with fractured teeth, pancreatitis risk, obesity, or strict diet trials, even a high-quality chew may not be the right recommendation. As more specialty distributors scale these products nationally, veterinary teams may see more questions about sourcing, digestibility, calorie load, and whether a chew is appropriate for dental or gastrointestinal health goals. (petmd.com)
What to watch: The next signal will be whether Dogginstix remains a specialty-retail premium chew play or uses broader PFX access to push into veterinary clinics and more wellness-oriented merchandising. It’s also worth watching whether the brand adds functional claims, new protein formats, or more explicit safety and feeding-positioning language as premium treat competition intensifies through 2026. (blog.petfoodexperts.com)