Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil Review

A krill-oil label with clear per-teaspoon antioxidant and omega lipid guarantees, but limited public detail on price, bottle size, storage, warnings, and testing.

La Petite Labs Editorial 1 min read

Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil is a dog-and-cat oil supplement made with wild Antarctic krill. The label positions it around omega-3 lipids and antioxidants, with guaranteed amounts listed per teaspoon: 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil and 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil.

For buyers, the useful part is that the active guarantee is more specific than many broad oil pages. The harder part is that the public product page we checked did not show price, bottle size, servings per container, storage instructions, warnings, public COA, lot lookup, named lab, or testing panel. That makes this a label-transparency review more than a value verdict.

This can still be a sensible product to consider if you want a krill-based oil for a dog or cat and are comfortable verifying practical details before purchase. The main decision is whether the disclosed omega lipid and astaxanthin information is enough for your goal, given the missing price, freshness, and testing context.

We reviewed Grizzly Pet Products at brand level — Public Transparency Score 54/100 — see the Grizzly Pet Products Review for the brand's testing posture, disclosure practices, and what to verify before buying anything from its range.

Disclosure: La Petite Labs sells its own pet supplements, including its daily systems. This review is editorial: competitor facts are drawn from the public sources listed in the References section, and facts are dated where shown.

What Grizzly Krill Oil Is, And What The Page Says It Is Made From

Grizzly Pet Products presents this product as Krill Oil Supplement with Wild Antarctic Krill for dogs and cats. The product identity is simple: it is a liquid krill oil supplement meant to be added to food. The public page does not show a separate manufacturer name, a life-stage statement, or sibling variants for this reviewed item.

The page describes the oil as made with wild krill sourced from Antarctica. It also says the product is powered by omegas and antioxidants, and it highlights astaxanthin as a naturally occurring antioxidant inherent to krill. Those are brand and label claims, not the same thing as a clinical outcome guarantee.

The formula disclosure is narrow but useful. The active ingredient line is krill oil, and the guaranteed analysis lists 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil per teaspoon, based on a 4.6 g teaspoon. It also lists 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil per teaspoon. Inactive ingredients are listed as None.

For a buyer, that means the page gives more numeric detail than a purely claim-based oil page, but it does not answer every practical question. A liquid oil purchase also depends on how many servings are in the bottle, how much a pet needs each day, how the bottle should be stored after opening, and whether quality documents are available for the lot you receive. Those details are not all visible on the product page.

At a Glance

What is Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil?

Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil is a liquid krill-oil supplement for dogs and cats. The product page identifies it as Krill Oil Supplement with Wild Antarctic Krill and says to add it to a dog's or cat's food. The label guarantees 736 mg omega-3 lipids and 4089 mcg astaxanthin per teaspoon, with one teaspoon listed as 4.6 g.

Product
Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil Supplement with Wild Antarctic Krill
Category
Krill oil supplement for dogs and cats
Species
Dogs and cats
Format
undefined
Disclosed actives
Per tsp (4.6 g): 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil; 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil; inactive ingredients listed as None.
Price
No public price, bottle size, count, subscription price, or servings per container was shown, so cost per day is not calculable from the visible page.
Best fit
Dog or cat owners who specifically want a krill-based oil with per-teaspoon omega-3 lipid and astaxanthin guarantees and who are willing to verify price, bottle size, storage, pump volume, and testing details before buying.
What to check
Confirm current price, bottle size, pump volume, servings per container, storage instructions, warnings, EPA/DHA details if needed, and whether lot-specific quality results are available.

Quick Answers

Is Grizzly Krill Oil good for dogs and cats?

It may be a good fit for owners specifically looking for a krill oil with disclosed per-teaspoon omega-3 lipid and astaxanthin guarantees. The label also lists inactive ingredients as None. The main limitation is transparency around purchase and quality details: price, bottle size, storage, warnings, public COA, lot lookup, named lab, and testing panels were not easy to find publicly.

What should owners check before buying Grizzly Krill Oil?

Check the current price, bottle size, pump volume, servings per container, storage instructions, best-by date, warnings, and whether lot-specific quality results are available. The visible page gives a pump-based feeding chart and per-teaspoon guarantees, but it does not show how one pump converts to a teaspoon, so daily active intake cannot be calculated from the public label alone.

What side effects or cautions should I watch for with this oil?

The product page did not publish warnings, so use practical monitoring. Watch appetite, stool, vomiting, meal refusal, weight changes, and any new or worsening signs after adding the oil. Pause and call your veterinarian if your dog or cat has repeated digestive upset, stops eating, becomes lethargic, or has a concerning change. Ask a vet first for fat-sensitive, weight-managed, medically complex, pregnant, nursing, or medicated pets.

How much does Grizzly Krill Oil cost per day?

Cost per day cannot be calculated from the visible page because price, bottle size, servings per container, and pump volume were not published. The page gives daily pump amounts by weight, but without bottle volume and price there is no honest arithmetic for daily cost. Buyers should verify current price and servings per bottle before comparing value.

Does the label show EPA and DHA amounts?

No separate EPA or DHA amounts were easy to find on the visible page. The label guarantee shown is 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil per teaspoon, plus 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil per teaspoon. If your veterinarian wants a specific EPA or DHA target, ask the brand for those numbers before using this as the dosing basis.

Can I use Grizzly Krill Oil for both my dog and my cat?

The product page supports both dogs and cats and says to add it to your dog's or cat's food. The feeding chart is based on weight, not species. Dose each pet separately and prevent shared-bowl dosing. For small cats, toy dogs, or medically managed pets, confirm pump volume and fit with your veterinarian before starting.

Does Grizzly publish testing or a COA for this krill oil?

A public COA, lot lookup, named laboratory, and stated third-party testing panel were not easy to find on the product page. That does not prove testing is absent. It means buyers who care about lot-level verification should ask the brand or seller whether results are available for the bottle they will receive.

Is Grizzly Krill Oil a multivitamin or complete skin supplement?

No. The visible label presents it as a krill-oil supplement with omega-3 lipids and astaxanthin, not as a multivitamin or complete skin system. It may be relevant when an owner wants an oil format, but it should not be used as a substitute for a different supplement category unless your veterinarian agrees.

Before You Buy

Five things to verify about Krill Oil

VerifyWhy it mattersWhat we found
What is the current bottle size and price?Price and size determine cost per day and whether the oil is practical for a cat, small dog, or large dog using the pump chart long term.Price, subscription price, bottle size, count, SKU size, and servings per container were not easy to find publicly when we checked.
How much oil is delivered by one pump?The guarantees are listed per teaspoon, but the feeding chart is listed per pump. Without a pump-to-teaspoon conversion, daily omega-3 lipid and astaxanthin intake cannot be calculated.The page showed 736 mg omega-3 lipids and 4089 mcg astaxanthin per teaspoon, and a pump-based feeding chart, but pump volume was not easy to find publicly when we checked.
What storage instructions apply after opening?Oils depend on freshness handling. Storage guidance helps owners know whether refrigeration, light protection, or a use-after-opening window applies.Storage instructions were not easy to find publicly when we checked.
Are lot-specific quality documents available?A COA, lot lookup, named lab, and testing panel help buyers verify active content, freshness markers, and contaminant screening rather than relying only on general quality language.A public COA, lot lookup, named laboratory, and third-party testing panel were not easy to find publicly when we checked.
Are there product-specific sustainability or certification identifiers?The page references Antarctic krill sourcing and standards, but traceable identifiers are what let a buyer verify a specific certification claim.The page included sustainability language tied to WWF and CCAMLR standards, but a product-specific certificate or identifier was not easy to find publicly when we checked.

Competitor label and pricing facts checked July 3, 2026. Sources are listed in the References section below.

Why This Krill Oil Has Real Appeal For Dog And Cat Owners

The product's appeal starts with format and simplicity. Some owners want an oil they can add to food rather than a chew with flavors, binders, or extra functional ingredients. Grizzly Krill Oil fits that preference because the inactive ingredient line says None and the directions are simply to add it to a dog's or cat's food.

The second appeal is that the label discloses two per-teaspoon guarantees. Instead of only saying omega support, it lists 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil and 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil per teaspoon. That gives owners and veterinarians something concrete to compare against a pet's needs, even though the page does not publish every oil-quality detail a cautious buyer may want.

The brand's page also leans into krill-specific positioning. It describes the product as pure, unadulterated, and unrefined krill oil, and it says krill oil contains omega-3 lipids in phospholipid form rather than omega-3 fatty acids like other fish oils. Those comparative statements should be read as the brand's framing. They may be relevant to shoppers intentionally seeking krill oil, but they do not replace a veterinary dosing conversation.

This is one of the places where fair praise can stand on its own: a short ingredient list, a dog-and-cat feeding chart, and disclosed per-teaspoon guarantees are genuinely useful buyer signals. The remaining question is not whether the product has any visible substance; it is whether the public page gives enough detail for your specific pet, budget, and quality expectations.

The Grizzly Krill Oil Label, Line By Line

The active ingredient disclosure centers on krill oil. One FAQ statement says Grizzly Krill Oil is a pure, unadulterated and unrefined krill oil. The guaranteed analysis then gives two quantified lines per teaspoon, with one teaspoon defined as 4.6 g.

The first number is 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil per teaspoon. This is the main omega-related guarantee visible on the page. The wording matters: the page says omega-3 lipids, not a detailed EPA and DHA breakdown. If your veterinarian is trying to target a specific EPA or DHA intake, the visible label does not provide those separate amounts.

The second number is 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil per teaspoon. Astaxanthin is the antioxidant compound the page emphasizes most clearly. The page also describes krill generally as rich in antioxidants, Omega 3s and vitamin A, but it does not publish a finished-product vitamin A amount. A buyer should not infer a vitamin A dose from the general krill description.

Inactive ingredients are listed as None. That is a clean disclosure for owners who are trying to avoid extra oils, flavoring agents, or inactive carriers, at least based on the visible label text.

The directions say to add the product to a dog's or cat's food and to use consistently on a long-term basis for best results. The dosing chart is pump-based by body weight, but the page does not define the amount of oil delivered by one pump. That limits precise dose math from the visible page.

What The Public Page Does Not Make Easy To Check

The most important gaps are practical, not cosmetic. The page did not publish a price, subscription price, bottle size, count, SKU size, servings per container, or sibling variants for this reviewed product. Without those, a buyer cannot calculate cost per day, bottle duration, or value by pet size from the public page alone.

The page also did not show public warnings or storage instructions. That matters more for oils than for many dry supplements because freshness handling is part of the product experience. Owners may reasonably want to know whether the bottle should be refrigerated after opening, how long it should be used after opening, and what changes in smell or appearance should prompt disposal. Those instructions were not easy to find publicly on the product page we checked.

Quality documentation was also limited in public view. We did not find a public certificate of analysis, lot lookup, named laboratory, or stated third-party testing panel on the product page. That does not prove the product is untested. It means a cautious buyer cannot independently review those details from the visible page.

The product page includes sustainability and standards language around Antarctic krill, WWF, and CCAMLR, but it did not show a product-specific certificate or identifier. That is still useful context, but it is not the same as a traceable certification document tied to the bottle in your cart.

For a careful buyer, these gaps do not automatically disqualify the product. They simply shift the next step: verify price, size, storage, warnings, lot-level quality documentation, and any certification identifiers before treating the purchase as fully evaluated.

Dose Math From The Visible Pump Chart

The feeding chart is weight-based and applies to dogs and cats. It lists: up to 12 lb, one-half pump per day; 13 to 25 lb, 1 pump per day; 26 to 50 lb, 1.5 pumps per day; 51 to 75 lb, 2.5 pumps per day; and for every additional 10 lb, add one-half pump per day.

That is enough to understand the daily pump count by pet size, but it is not enough to calculate milligrams per pump. The guaranteed analysis is stated per teaspoon, with one teaspoon equal to 4.6 g. The dosing chart is stated per pump. The public page does not define how many teaspoons, grams, milliliters, or milligrams are in one pump.

Because of that, the only responsible math is pump-count math. A 10 lb cat or small dog falls into the up-to-12-lb band at one-half pump per day. A 20 lb pet gets 1 pump per day. A 40 lb dog gets 1.5 pumps per day. A 60 lb dog gets 2.5 pumps per day. A 95 lb dog would start at the 51-to-75-lb band of 2.5 pumps and add one-half pump for each additional 10 lb; if counted from 75 lb to 95 lb, that adds 1 pump, for 3.5 pumps per day.

What you cannot calculate from the visible label is how much omega-3 lipid or astaxanthin those pump servings provide. To do that, the buyer would need the pump volume or a conversion between pump and teaspoon. This is a good question to ask the brand or your veterinarian before purchase if dose precision matters.

“The strongest visible part of this label is the per-teaspoon guarantee; the weakest visible part is the missing purchase and verification detail.”

Calories, Fat Load, And When An Oil Deserves Extra Caution

Grizzly Krill Oil is an oil supplement, so the practical caution is fat load. The page does not publish calories per serving or fat grams per pump in the visible information we reviewed. It also does not publish warnings. That makes it harder for owners of weight-managed pets, fat-sensitive pets, or pets with complicated medical histories to evaluate the daily impact.

The label does provide a weight-based pump chart, but pump count is not the same as calorie disclosure. One-half pump for a small cat or small dog may be a very different nutritional event from 2.5 or more pumps for a large dog. Without calories per pump, owners cannot add the supplement cleanly into a calorie-controlled feeding plan.

This matters most for pets where added fat needs to be discussed before changes are made. Dogs or cats with a history of fat sensitivity, digestive upset after oils, pancreatitis concerns, weight-management plans, or prescription diets should not have a new oil layered in casually. The right question is not whether krill oil is good or bad in general. It is whether adding this specific oil at the label's pump amount fits that pet's current diet and medical plan.

For everyday use, owners should watch the food bowl and the stool after starting. If appetite changes, digestive comfort changes, or the pet refuses meals with the oil added, pause and ask the veterinarian or the brand for guidance. The page's long-term-use direction is not a reason to push through a poor individual response.

Freshness, Oxidation, And Storage Questions This Page Leaves Open

Freshness is a core buying issue for any oil supplement. Grizzly's page describes the product as pure, unadulterated, and unrefined krill oil, and it emphasizes antioxidants. Those statements may matter to shoppers comparing oil types, but they do not answer storage and use-after-opening questions.

The public page did not show storage instructions. It did not say whether the bottle should be refrigerated after opening, kept at room temperature, protected from light, or used within a particular period after opening. It also did not publish freshness testing markers, oxidation panel names, or a lot-level document that a buyer could review before using a bottle.

That does not mean freshness controls are absent. It means they were not easy to verify from the visible page. For a liquid oil, that distinction matters. A cautious buyer should look at the physical bottle when it arrives and confirm the label instructions, best-by date, lot number, cap or pump condition, and any smell or texture changes during use.

The absence of public storage detail also affects convenience. If a household has multiple pets, a large dog, or slow product turnover, bottle duration and storage expectations become part of the value equation. Because the page does not show bottle size or servings per container, buyers cannot assess how quickly they are likely to finish the bottle at the label's pump rates.

Before buying, it is reasonable to ask the seller for storage instructions, whether refrigeration is recommended after opening, and whether lot-specific quality or freshness documentation can be provided.

Using The Same Bottle For Dogs And Cats

The product is positioned for both dogs and cats, and the directions explicitly say to add it to your dog's or cat's food. That is helpful for mixed-pet households because the product page does not split the formula into separate dog-only and cat-only versions.

The dosing chart is based on body weight rather than species. For many cats and small dogs, the relevant line is up to 12 lb at one-half pump per day. Larger cats and small dogs may fall into the 13-to-25-lb line at 1 pump per day. Medium and large dogs move through the higher pump bands.

The practical issue is measuring and acceptance. A pump can be convenient, but the page does not define how much oil one pump delivers. Owners who are trying to be exact with small cats, toy dogs, or pets on restricted diets may want more precision than a pump chart provides. Asking the brand for pump volume can make the label easier to use.

Food acceptance is another practical consideration. The directions assume the oil will be added to food, but cats and some dogs can be selective about smell and texture. The product page does not provide a transition schedule, so a cautious owner may choose to start slowly only with veterinary approval, especially if the pet has a sensitive stomach or a history of refusing altered meals.

For multi-pet homes, the main rule is to dose by each individual animal's weight and prevent one pet from eating another pet's supplemented food. The label supports both species, but shared bowls can make pump-based dosing unreliable.

Testing And Quality Signals Visible To A Buyer

The visible quality signals are mostly label-based and sourcing-based. The page lists inactive ingredients as None, gives guaranteed amounts for omega-3 lipids and astaxanthin per teaspoon, and describes the krill as wild Antarctic krill. It also includes sustainability language tied to WWF and CCAMLR standards.

Those are meaningful signals, but they are not the same as public lot-level testing. We did not find a public certificate of analysis, lot lookup, named laboratory, or stated third-party testing panel on the product page. We also did not find third-party certification identifiers or study citations attached to the finished product.

The page says the krill is sustainably sourced and harvested in accordance with international standards set by WWF and CCAMLR. It also says wild krill is highly regulated and that krill harvesting is below 1% of the entire krill biomass. Those statements may be important to sustainability-minded buyers, but the visible page did not provide a product-specific certificate or identifier that a buyer could independently check.

The right buyer posture is balanced. Do not ignore the useful disclosures simply because every document is not public. Also do not treat broad quality and sustainability language as equivalent to a lot-specific COA. If testing matters to you, ask for the lot number process, the lab used, what panels are run, and whether results are available for oxidation, contaminants, and active-content verification.

For owners comparing oils, the strongest visible quality detail here is the per-teaspoon guarantee. The weakest visible area is public verification beyond the label.

What The Evidence Can And Cannot Support

The product page makes several broad health-support claims. It says the product is powered by omegas and antioxidants, provides antioxidants to support health and wellbeing, and supports immune system health as well as liver, ocular, respiratory, cardiovascular, vascular, cellular, and tissue health. Those are the brand's claims and should be read as structure-function or broad wellness positioning, not as proof that the product will produce a specific measurable result in an individual pet.

The label's strongest evidence-relevant information is the actual guarantee: 736 mg omega-3 lipids and 4089 mcg astaxanthin per teaspoon. That gives a veterinarian something to discuss. But the page does not publish finished-product study citations, a finished-product clinical trial, EPA and DHA amounts, a public COA, or testing panels. The label therefore cannot be used to match every claim to a published dose or trial from the visible information alone.

There is also a vitamin A nuance. The page says Antarctic krill are rich in antioxidants, Omega 3s and vitamin A, but it does not disclose a finished-product vitamin A amount. Owners should not treat the product as a vitamin A supplement unless the brand or a veterinarian provides finished-product details.

La Petite Labs sits in a different category context: it is not a krill oil and should not be treated as a substitute for a fish- or krill-oil product. Its own evidence posture is also limited in an important way: La Petite Labs has no finished-formula clinical trial and says so. For buyers, the broader lesson is to match the product type to the job, then check what evidence is public for that exact finished formula.

“Grizzly Krill Oil may fit shoppers who want krill oil specifically, but cost per day cannot be judged until price, bottle size, and pump volume are verified.”

Price, Bottle Duration, And Cost Per Day Are Not Publicly Calculable Here

Price is one of the biggest missing pieces on this review. The page did not publish a price, subscription price, count, bottle size, or servings per container for the reviewed product. Because those details are not visible, cost per day cannot be calculated from the public page.

The arithmetic would normally be simple. Cost per day requires a bottle price, the amount of oil in the bottle, and the daily serving by pet size. This page only provides the pump chart. It does not provide the container size or the amount delivered per pump. That means even bottle duration is not calculable from the visible information.

For example, the chart says a pet up to 12 lb uses one-half pump per day, a 13-to-25-lb pet uses 1 pump per day, a 26-to-50-lb dog uses 1.5 pumps per day, and a 51-to-75-lb dog uses 2.5 pumps per day. Those are useful daily serving directions. But without pump volume and bottle volume, there is no honest way to say how many days the bottle lasts for a cat, small dog, or large dog.

This creates a real buying limitation. A product can look affordable or expensive depending on serving size, bottle size, and the number of pets using it. Owners should verify current price, bottle size, pump volume, servings per bottle, and return policy before comparing it with another oil.

If a retailer page provides those details at checkout, use the arithmetic directly: bottle price divided by estimated days per bottle for your pet's weight band. If the retailer does not show pump volume or serving count, ask before buying.

Who Grizzly Krill Oil Genuinely Fits

Grizzly Krill Oil genuinely fits a buyer who wants a dog-and-cat krill oil rather than a broad skin chew, powder, or multivitamin. The visible label is simple, the inactive ingredient line says None, and the page gives specific per-teaspoon guarantees for omega-3 lipids and astaxanthin. That is a useful combination for owners who already know they want a krill-based oil format.

It may also fit mixed-species households where both a dog and a cat need an oil-style supplement and each pet can be dosed separately by body weight. The directions include both species, and the chart covers small pets through larger dogs.

This product is less straightforward for buyers who need tight budget forecasting. Because the page does not publish price, bottle size, or servings per container, you cannot evaluate cost per day until those details are verified elsewhere. It is also less straightforward for buyers who need lot-level testing documents before purchase, because a public COA and lot lookup were not easy to find.

The product may be a reasonable candidate for an owner who is comfortable asking a few pre-purchase questions. Those questions should include: What is the bottle size? What is the current price? How much oil is in one pump? How should it be stored after opening? Are lot-specific quality results available?

A fair summary is that the product's formula-facing label is more informative than its purchase-facing detail. It tells you what the key guaranteed krill-oil components are per teaspoon, but it leaves important value, storage, and verification questions open.

Who Should Ask A Veterinarian Before Starting This Oil

Dogs and cats with existing medical conditions should be handled individually, especially when adding any oil to the diet. The public page does not publish warnings, so owners should not assume the product is appropriate for every pet simply because it is sold for dogs and cats.

A veterinarian conversation is especially sensible for pets with a history of digestive sensitivity, fat-sensitive conditions, pancreatitis concerns, weight-management plans, prescription diets, liver concerns, bleeding or clotting concerns, upcoming surgery, pregnancy or nursing, or multiple medications. Those are not claims that the product causes problems; they are practical reasons to check before changing the diet with an added oil.

Small cats and toy dogs also deserve careful handling because the label's lowest band is one-half pump per day, and the page does not define pump volume. If a pet is small, underweight, medically fragile, or already eating a tightly managed diet, the owner should confirm whether the pump serving is appropriate.

Owners should also ask before using the product as a workaround for a skin, coat, immune, eye, heart, or respiratory concern. The brand makes broad support claims, but a supplement should not delay diagnosis when a pet has persistent itching, skin lesions, coughing, eye changes, appetite loss, vomiting, diarrhea, weight change, lethargy, or other clinical signs.

The safest buyer posture is simple: use the label as a starting point, not a diagnosis or treatment plan. If the pet is not healthy and stable, ask the veterinarian before adding a long-term oil.

Krill Oil, Skin Barriers, And Why Different Supplement Jobs Should Not Be Blended Together

Grizzly Krill Oil is an oil. Its visible label revolves around krill oil, omega-3 lipids, and astaxanthin. That makes it different from a multivitamin, a probiotic, a joint product, or a targeted skin-barrier system. Buyers should be careful not to collapse those categories into one bucket called skin and coat support.

An oil can be chosen for omega-related nutrition and antioxidant positioning. A skin-barrier product may be built around a different logic, such as supporting the skin's structural needs. A multivitamin may aim to fill broader micronutrient gaps. Those are different jobs, and one format does not automatically replace another.

This matters when reading broad claims. Grizzly's page mentions immune, liver, ocular, respiratory, cardiovascular, vascular, cellular, and tissue support. That does not make the oil a complete organ-support formula. It means the brand is positioning krill oil's omegas and antioxidants broadly. If your goal is a specific clinical issue, the right next step is a veterinary diagnosis and a product type matched to that issue.

It also matters in the other direction. A non-oil skin system is not a fish oil or krill oil. If a veterinarian specifically wants an omega oil, then a barrier-support product should not be treated as an equivalent substitute. If a veterinarian wants a non-oil approach because calories, fat tolerance, or diet restrictions are central, then an oil may not be the first fit.

The practical takeaway is to define the job before buying. Are you adding an oil for omega-related support? Are you trying to manage a skin barrier plan? Are you responding to a diagnosed condition? The answer should decide the product category.

The First 90 Days: What To Watch After Adding It To Food

The page says to use the product consistently on a long-term basis for best results. For owners, that makes the first 90 days a practical observation window rather than a promise window. The goal is to track whether the oil fits the pet's food routine and whether any changes are worth continuing to discuss with a veterinarian.

Start with the basics: appetite, stool quality, vomiting, gas, scratching, coat feel, skin comfort, energy, body weight, and whether the pet continues eating meals normally when the oil is added. For cats, also watch food refusal closely because skipped meals can become a separate problem. For dogs, watch whether the oil changes stool consistency or meal enthusiasm.

Because the page does not publish calories per pump, weight should be monitored if the pet is weight-managed or receives multiple treats, toppers, or supplements. If body condition starts drifting upward, the oil may need to be included in the pet's calorie plan.

Pause and contact a veterinarian if the pet develops repeated vomiting, diarrhea, appetite loss, marked lethargy, new skin lesions, swelling, breathing changes, or any sudden change that feels medically important. That guidance is not specific proof of a product risk; it is common-sense supplement monitoring when adding a long-term oil.

Also watch the bottle. If smell, color, texture, pump function, or label date raises concern, stop using it until storage and freshness are clarified. The public page did not provide storage instructions, so the bottle's own label and the seller's guidance matter.

How To Read A Krill Or Fish-Oil Label After Seeing This One

Grizzly's label is a useful reminder that not all oil pages disclose the same things. The first item to check is the active guarantee. This page gives omega-3 lipids and astaxanthin per teaspoon, which is helpful. But it does not give separate EPA and DHA amounts, so buyers who need EPA or DHA targeting should ask for those numbers.

The second item is serving conversion. If the guarantee is per teaspoon but the feeding chart is per pump, the label should ideally tell you how much oil is in a pump. Without that bridge, you cannot translate a pet's daily pump count into the guaranteed amount of omega-3 lipids or astaxanthin.

The third item is bottle economics. A strong oil label should make price, bottle size, servings per container, daily serving, and cost per day easy to calculate. For this product, price and bottle size were not visible on the page, so the buyer has to verify them before comparison shopping.

The fourth item is freshness and quality documentation. Oils are especially sensitive to storage and handling questions, so look for storage instructions, best-by date, lot number, and whether the brand makes a COA, lot lookup, named lab, or testing panel public. If those are not easy to find, ask directly.

The fifth item is claim discipline. Broad wording about antioxidants, free radicals, organ systems, and wellbeing should not be read as proof of a specific result. Give more weight to quantified label facts and veterinary guidance than to sweeping wellness language.

What To Bring To Your Vet Before Buying Or Reordering

A productive vet conversation starts with the exact label details. Bring the product name, species use, inactive ingredient line, the guarantee of 736 mg omega-3 lipids per teaspoon, the guarantee of 4089 mcg astaxanthin per teaspoon, and the feeding chart by weight.

Also bring the gaps. Tell your veterinarian that the page did not show EPA and DHA amounts, calories per pump, pump volume, bottle size, servings per container, storage instructions, warnings, public COA, lot lookup, named laboratory, or testing panel. Those gaps may or may not matter for your pet, but they are exactly the details a veterinarian may need to judge fit.

For dose discussion, write down your pet's current weight and the matching label band. A 10 lb cat would fall into the up-to-12-lb band at one-half pump per day. A 20 lb small dog would fall into the 13-to-25-lb band at 1 pump per day. A 40 lb dog would fall into the 26-to-50-lb band at 1.5 pumps per day. A 60 lb dog would fall into the 51-to-75-lb band at 2.5 pumps per day.

Bring your pet's current diet, treats, medications, supplements, medical history, and the reason you are considering a krill oil. If the goal is skin, coat, heart support, eye support, or general wellness, say that plainly. Your vet can then decide whether an oil is the right category and whether more precise omega information is needed.

Bottom Line On Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil

Grizzly Pet Products Krill Oil is a legitimate product to consider if your shopping brief is narrow: a dog-and-cat krill oil with no inactive ingredients listed and visible guarantees for omega-3 lipids and astaxanthin per teaspoon. The page gives enough substance to understand the product's basic identity and active-label focus.

The same page leaves several buyer-critical details unresolved. Price, bottle size, servings per container, pump volume, calories, storage instructions, warnings, public COA, lot lookup, named laboratory, testing panel, and product-specific certification identifiers were not easy to find publicly. Those omissions limit value analysis and quality verification from the page alone.

The fairest verdict is conditional. For an owner who wants krill oil specifically and is willing to verify price, size, storage, pump volume, and testing details, this product can stay on the shortlist. For an owner who needs precise EPA and DHA targeting, public lot-level testing, or cost-per-day certainty before buying, the visible page does not provide enough information by itself.

Do not read the broad antioxidant and organ-system language as a promise of specific health outcomes. Read the label, confirm the missing practical details, and bring the per-teaspoon guarantees plus the pump chart to your veterinarian if your dog or cat has any medical complexity.

The cleanest way to decide is to separate the product's visible strengths from its open questions. The visible strengths are a simple oil format, both-species directions, no inactive ingredients listed, and quantified per-teaspoon omega lipid and astaxanthin guarantees. The open questions are cost, daily active intake by pump, freshness handling, warnings, and public quality verification. If those questions can be answered to your satisfaction, the product becomes much easier to evaluate fairly.

“A pump chart is useful for feeding, but it does not let owners calculate active intake unless the pump volume is disclosed.”

Educational content only. This material is not a substitute for veterinary advice. Always consult your veterinarian about your dog’s specific needs. These statements have not been evaluated by the Food and Drug Administration. Products mentioned are not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease.

Glossary

Omega-3 lipids

The omega-related guarantee used on this label. The page lists 736 mg omega-3 lipids from krill oil per teaspoon, but it does not separately disclose EPA and DHA amounts.

Astaxanthin

A naturally occurring antioxidant associated with krill. This label guarantees 4089 mcg astaxanthin from krill oil per teaspoon.

Pump-based dosing

A serving approach where the pet receives a number of pumps per day by weight. This page gives pump counts but does not publicly define pump volume.

COA

Certificate of analysis. A lot-specific quality document that can show what was tested and what results were found. A public COA was not easy to find for this product.

Per teaspoon guarantee

A label amount tied to one teaspoon, which this page defines as 4.6 g. It is useful, but it must be connected to the actual daily serving to calculate intake.

Inactive ingredients

Ingredients listed as non-active parts of a formula. This product's visible label lists inactive ingredients as None.

CCAMLR

The Commission for the Conservation of Antarctic Marine Living Resources. The product page references CCAMLR standards in its sourcing language, but no product-specific certificate identifier was visible.

Lot lookup

A way to enter or search a bottle's lot number to find quality or testing information. A public lot lookup was not easy to find for this product.

Related Reading

References

References

Sources for the Krill Oil Supplement with Wild Antarctic Krill facts on this page

Competitor label, pricing, and claims facts on this page come from these public sources. Links are provided for verification.

  • Source pdp.txt Accessed 2026-07-03 · high confidence.
  • Source pdp.jsonld.json Accessed 2026-07-03 · high confidence.
  • Source manifest.json Accessed 2026-07-03 · high confidence.

FAQ

La Petite Labs

Discover LPL-01: How This Fits Into a Complete Canine Integumentary Support System

Skin, coat, and nails aren’t cosmetic features. They’re the visible surface of deeper biological systems—barrier function, hydration balance, structural protein turnover, and lipid integrity—working in concert.

When these systems fall out of sync, it shows: dull coat, shedding, dryness, brittleness, sensitivity.

This article explores one piece of that puzzle. If you want to understand how true coat quality and skin resilience are built—and what actually moves the needle—you need to zoom out.

Start with the underlying science: