ElleVet Sciences Review 2026: The Transparency Benchmark

ElleVet is the highest-scoring brand in our 2026 transparency report — above our own benchmark. Real finished-formula trials, a Cornell CMO, lot-linked COAs, and the two gaps that remain.

By La Petite Labs Editorial 14 min read

Last reviewed July 2, 2026

Disclosure: La Petite Labs publishes this review and sells its own pet supplements. La Petite Labs sells no CBD products, so nothing here is an ElleVet alternative — and as you will see below, ElleVet outscores us on our own transparency rubric.

ElleVet Sciences Pros and Cons

Pros

  • Roughly 18 published studies listed with author, institution, journal, and direct links — the majority finished-formula trials on ElleVet's own CBD + CBDA blend (Cornell, University of Florida, Washington State, and others). This is the rarest evidence tier in the category.
  • Named accountability at the top: Dr. Joseph Wakshlag, DVM, PhD, DACVIM (Nutrition), DACVSMR — Chief Medical Officer, Cornell professor, 100+ peer-reviewed publications — plus an advisory board of board-certified diplomates with real bios.
  • A public, self-serve, lot-linked COA lookup with the third-party lab (ProVerde Laboratories) named, batch-number location explained per SKU, and a working live example (lot R9005-14).
  • Per-serving active panels on every reviewed product page — the Soft Chews disclose glucosamine at 340/510 mg and chondroitin at 140/210 mg by chew size — with full inactive-ingredient lists.
  • Receptor-level science content (TRP channels, GPR55, PPAR-γ, serotonin receptors) instead of vague "supports wellness" copy, and NASC membership.

Cons

  • Cannabinoid actives are disclosed as a combined CBD + CBDA total under a proprietary complete-spectrum label; minor cannabinoids and terpenes are not quantified per serving.
  • The publicly pullable COA shows cannabinoid potency only — the heavy-metal, pesticide, and microbial panels described in the FAQ are not surfaced on the lot certificate itself.
  • No dedicated manufacturing or quality page: the extraction/manufacturing facility is not named at facility, city, or state level, and no cGMP, FDA-registration, HACCP, SQF, or ISO certification is disclosed beyond the NASC seal.
  • The home hero's unqualified "Scientifically Proven" badge runs more confident than even this evidence base strictly supports.
  • Premium pricing: $99 for the large-dog chews and $79 for the 15 ml oil at the June 2026 check.

The Evidence Base Is the Real Thing

Most pet supplement brands cite ingredient studies done by other people on other products. ElleVet's Science page lists roughly 18 studies with named lead researchers (Wakshlag, Deabold, Court), institutions, study designs, and quantified results — and the majority are trials on ElleVet's own finished CBD + CBDA blend. That is the distinction this entire review category turns on: finished-formula evidence versus borrowed rationale, and ElleVet sits on the right side of it almost alone.

The honest boundaries still apply. Study quality and endpoints vary across that list; "has real trials" is not the same as "proven for your dog's specific situation"; and CBD products in particular deserve a veterinary conversation about your pet's medications and health status before daily use. But as a public evidence system a buyer can actually read before purchasing, this is the strongest surface we have reviewed.

Who Signs the Formulas

ElleVet's expert disclosure is the category's high-water mark. Dr. Joseph Wakshlag — DVM, PhD, Diplomate ACVIM (Nutrition) and ACVSMR, Professor at Cornell's College of Veterinary Medicine — is named as Chief Medical Officer and advisory board chair, with his research role documented in the published studies themselves. Around him sits an advisory board of board-certified diplomates with detailed bios, reachable from primary navigation, including Dr. Robert Menardi, DVM (Colorado State, 12 years of clinical practice).

Compare that with the anonymous "vet-formulated" language that dominates this category: here the veterinarians are named, credentialed, and attached to the actual research. There is nothing to caveat except the obvious — named experts validate accountability, not individual-pet outcomes.

Labels, the COA Lookup and the Two Real Gaps

Labels. Every reviewed product page publishes a per-serving active panel with defined serving sizes and a full inactive list. The non-cannabinoid actives are exact (glucosamine 340/510 mg, chondroitin 140/210 mg by chew size). The cannabinoid side is where precision drops: ElleVet discloses a combined CBD + CBDA total per serving under its proprietary complete-spectrum label, without quantifying minor cannabinoids or terpenes. For most buyers that is workable; for a veterinarian screening a specific cannabinoid intake, it is a reconstruction exercise.

Testing. The COA program is genuinely self-serve: the library explains where the batch number sits on each SKU, the search field returns the matching certificate, and the lab — ProVerde Laboratories — is named. We pulled a live certificate (lot R9005-14) to confirm the loop works. The gap is panel scope: the public lot certificate shows cannabinoid potency only. The FAQ describes heavy-metal, pesticide, and microbial testing, but those panels are not on the pullable certificate — so a buyer who wants contaminant results for their specific lot still has to request them.

Manufacturing. This is the thinnest pillar: no dedicated quality page, no named facility, no cGMP/FDA-registration/ISO disclosure beyond the NASC seal and a clear sourcing narrative. For a brand this strong everywhere else, it is a conspicuously fixable gap.

Public Transparency Score: 87/100

Under the 2026 Brand Transparency Rubric, ElleVet Sciences earns an 87/100 Public Transparency Score — Strong (scored as of 2026-06-13). The score measures what a buyer can publicly verify before purchase — labels, rationale, evidence, named experts, testing access, manufacturing disclosure, claim discipline, and findability. It is not an effectiveness score, a safety score, or a best-brand ranking.

Two things make this score worth trusting. First, it is the highest we have measured across the 20 ranked brands in our 2026 report — including above the 83.5 benchmark La Petite Labs earns when graded under the same shared rubric. We publish that comparison deliberately: a scoring system that never lets a competitor beat its publisher is marketing, not measurement. Second, the residual points ElleVet loses are specific and checkable — combined cannabinoid totals, a potency-only public certificate, and country-level manufacturing disclosure — not vague deductions.

Best fit: buyers who want the most inspectable evidence system in the category and are shopping the CBD lane specifically. Keep comparing if: you need per-cannabinoid quantification, contaminant panels on the pullable lot certificate, or a named facility.

Claims, Owner Reviews and Price

ElleVet's claims run confident — an unqualified "Scientifically Proven" hero badge, and "proven to help decrease joint discomfort" on product pages. The unusual part: this is the one brand in our set where such language sits on top of actual finished-formula trials, so the criticism is about framing precision rather than substance. "Proven" without qualifiers still overshoots what any supplement evidence can promise an individual pet.

What owners actually say (verified-purchase reviews of ElleVet's retail ellePet line on Amazon, re-checked 2026-07-04 — a small sample of personal observations, not proof): the mobility stories are specific and often dramatic. The recurring shape is an old, stiff dog moving again within days — one owner of a 16-year-old Lab with joint stiffness describes the first product her dog would reliably eat, then getting up from the floor unassisted and managing stairs again inside a week; another watched an 11-year-old Great Pyrenees go from struggling to walk to running the yard, appetite returning with it. Amazon's own review aggregation matches the anecdotes' split: 7 of 10 effectiveness mentions positive, 3 negative — real enthusiasm alongside a real minority who saw nothing. The complaint is unanimous and it isn't about the product: every value-for-money mention in the aggregation is negative, 0 of 6 positive. The most useful review on the page is a lukewarm one — a 3-star buyer noting his veterinarian sells 60 chews for roughly what Amazon charges for 31, and that he's moving his next order to the clinic. For a vet-channel-first brand that is the practical takeaway: retail is the expensive door, so price ElleVet through your vet before you subscribe anywhere else. One calibration note: the situational Urgent calming chews sit at a mixed 3.3 of 5 across 26 ratings — event-based calming reads as a much harder job than daily mobility support in this brand's own review record. Use reviews for routine fit and channel strategy; use the Science page for evidence.

Prices checked 2026-06-22: large-dog Hemp CBD Chews at $99; Hemp CBD Oil (15 ml syringe) at $79. This is the premium end of the category — dated snapshots, and serving math depends on your dog's weight band, so compute cost per month for your size before subscribing.

Where La Petite Labs Fits

Mostly, it doesn't — and saying so plainly matters more than a forced comparison. La Petite Labs sells no CBD products, so there is no LPL alternative to ElleVet's studied CBD + CBDA system. If a cannabinoid approach is what you and your veterinarian have chosen, evaluate ElleVet on its own evidence, which is exactly what its public pages let you do.

The only legitimate adjacency is the decision one step earlier: whether a senior-support plan should be cannabinoid-based at all, or built from a non-CBD daily system — a genuinely different approach, not an equivalent product, and a call to make with your veterinarian rather than from a review page. On the transparency dimensions themselves, we will say what our own rubric says: ElleVet's finished-formula evidence and lot-linked COA program are ahead of ours today, and its example is part of why our published standard keeps rising.

Final Verdict: Should You Try ElleVet?

If you are shopping for pet CBD, ElleVet is the standard the rest of the category should be judged against: real trials on the actual formula, named experts who sign their work, and a COA loop you can operate yourself before spending $99. Buy with confidence if the CBD lane is your lane and the premium price fits — after the veterinary conversation that cannabinoid products particularly warrant. Verify first if your purchase depends on per-cannabinoid amounts or contaminant panels for your specific lot (request them; the potency-only public certificate is the program's one real hole). Pause only on the question no brand can answer for you: whether CBD belongs in your pet's routine at all.

FAQ

Is ElleVet Sciences legit?

Emphatically — it is the highest-scoring brand in our 2026 transparency report at 87/100, with published finished-formula trials, a named Cornell-professor CMO, and a working lot-linked COA lookup.

Does ElleVet have real clinical studies?

Yes. Its Science page lists roughly 18 studies with authors, institutions, and links — the majority peer-reviewed trials on ElleVet's own CBD + CBDA blend, led by named researchers at institutions including Cornell, the University of Florida, and Washington State. That is finished-formula evidence, which almost no pet supplement brand has.

Who formulates ElleVet products?

Dr. Joseph Wakshlag — DVM, PhD, DACVIM (Nutrition), DACVSMR, Professor at Cornell — is the named Chief Medical Officer and advisory board chair, supported by a board of credentialed diplomates with public bios.

Does ElleVet publish COAs?

Yes — a self-serve, lot-linked lookup with the lab (ProVerde Laboratories) named and per-SKU guidance on finding your batch number. Note the scope: the public certificate shows cannabinoid potency only; request the heavy-metal, pesticide, and microbial results for your lot if you want the full panel.

How much CBD is in ElleVet products?

Each product states a combined CBD + CBDA total per serving under ElleVet's proprietary complete-spectrum label. Minor cannabinoids and terpenes are not quantified per serving — the one meaningful label gap.

Where is ElleVet made?

Public disclosure stops above the facility level: NASC membership and a sourcing narrative are published, but no facility name, city, state, or cGMP/FDA-registration certification appears on the pages checked.

Is ElleVet "scientifically proven"?

It has the strongest published evidence base in the category, including finished-formula trials — and its "Scientifically Proven" hero badge still runs ahead of what supplement evidence can promise an individual animal. Read the studies (they are linked) and calibrate with your veterinarian.

How expensive is ElleVet?

Premium: $99 for large-dog chews and $79 for the 15 ml oil at the 2026-06-22 check. Cost per month depends on weight-band dosing, so run the math for your dog's size.

What do ElleVet customer reviews say?

Across 92 sampled items: mostly serving-routine notes and owner-perceived changes, with a few no-difference reports. Buyer-experience context, not efficacy evidence — the unusual thing about ElleVet is that it gives you actual studies to read instead.

Is there a La Petite Labs alternative to ElleVet?

No. La Petite Labs sells no CBD products, and this review makes no substitution claim. Whether a cannabinoid or non-cannabinoid approach fits your pet is a veterinary conversation that comes before any brand choice.

Why did ElleVet score higher than La Petite Labs?

Because the rubric is honest: ElleVet's finished-formula trials and mature lot-linked COA program outscore our own current evidence and COA coverage under the same shared scoring code. We publish the benchmark comparison precisely so the score means something.

What should I verify before buying ElleVet?

Your veterinarian's view on CBD for your pet's health and medications; the combined CBD + CBDA amount against the serving chart for your dog's weight; the COA for your specific lot (and the contaminant panels, by request); and the monthly cost at your dog's dose.

Sources Reviewed

Sources note: Brand evidence was verified as of 2026-06-13, owner-review surfaces as of 2026-06-21 (verified-purchase retail-line reviews on Amazon re-checked 2026-07-04), and prices as of 2026-06-22. Public materials show what a buyer can verify; they cannot establish product safety, efficacy, medical suitability, or current pricing.

ElleVet brand and trust pages

  • ElleVet Sciences homepage — reviewed for positioning, the "Scientifically Proven" badge, and NASC seal.
  • ElleVet Science page (/cbd-science/) — reviewed for the study list (authors, institutions, designs, results) and receptor-level mechanism content.
  • ElleVet Meet the Team / advisory board pages — reviewed for named experts, credentials, and documented roles.
  • ElleVet COA lookup — reviewed for lot-linked search, lab identity, and certificate scope (live example: lot R9005-14).
  • ElleVet FAQ — reviewed for testing-panel descriptions, NASC membership, and sourcing narrative.

Sampled product pages

  • Hemp CBD Chews for Dogs — sampled for active panel, serving sizes, claims language, and price.
  • Hemp CBD Oil for Dogs and additional cannabinoid SKUs — sampled for combined CBD + CBDA disclosure pattern and inactive lists.
  • ElleVet Soft Chews — sampled for the glucosamine/chondroitin per-active disclosure.

Owner-review surfaces

  • Reddit, Chewy, Amazon, BBB, and brand-hosted review surfaces — sampled 2026-06-21 (92 extracted items, low confidence); used only as buyer-experience context, not efficacy evidence.