Disclosure: La Petite Labs publishes this review, and La Petite Labs sells its own pet supplements. La Petite Labs sells no homeopathic or condition-named remedy comparable to this catalog, so nothing here compares PetAlive products against a La Petite Labs product, and no substitution is implied.
PetAlive Pros and Cons
Pros
- A plainly stated manufacturing stack: USA manufacture, FDA-registered facilities, cGMP compliance, and a described extraction method — the strongest single layer in this record.
- A genuinely built service path: a free Ask Our Experts service with stated 24–48 hour response times, a product finder, an ailment index, and a substantive FAQ.
- Honest category conventions on the homeopathic side: dilution-and-format presentation described accurately.
Cons
- "No risk of side effects or known interactions with pharmaceutical drugs" — a double absolute no product category can carry, stated as fact in the FAQ.
- No veterinarian is named, credentialed, or even claimed anywhere on this pet line; the expert team is unnamed herbalists, naturopaths, and homeopaths.
- No evidence documents of any kind: no study, citation, named laboratory, COA, or lot access — beneath a catalog whose products are named after outcomes.
- The herbal line's "therapeutic dosage" claim comes with no published per-active amounts.
What We Could Verify — and What We Couldn't
Checkable from the public record: the manufacturing claims (FDA-registered, cGMP, USA) as statements; the Full Spectrum extraction method description; the catalog structure, ailment index, and product naming; the expert-service mechanics (free, 24–48h); and the raw-ingredient "laboratory-tested" claim as a statement. That is the complete list.
Not checkable: any laboratory's identity or any test result; any expert's name, training, or credential; any veterinary involvement whatsoever; per-active amounts on the herbal side; and any evidence behind any product's implied outcome — including every outcome baked into a product's name. On each of those questions the public record returns nothing.
Two things distinguish PetAlive from the other low scorers in our set. First, the manufacturing floor is real disclosure — most transparency-light brands can't state FDA registration and cGMP plainly. Second, the absence of a veterinarian isn't an oversight of naming, as with brands that tout an anonymous "vet team" — here no veterinary involvement is claimed at all, which is at least internally consistent for a homeopathy-first line, and worth knowing before you buy animal-health products from it.
How to Verify PetAlive Yourself
Since the site won't do it, here is the email to send before subscribing — the same five asks we make of every brand at this disclosure level:
- The full formulation for your exact product: every active with amounts (herbal) or dilution (homeopathic).
- The COA for your lot, with the testing laboratory named — the FAQ claims lab-tested ingredients, so ask for the document.
- The manufacturing facility behind the FDA-registered/cGMP statements.
- Who formulated the product — name, training, and whether any veterinarian reviews the pet line.
- The basis for "no risk of side effects or known interactions" — and show the answer to your own vet, especially for a pet on medication.
A brand with good internal answers can produce all five inside a week. Silence on all five is also an answer.
Public Transparency Score: 37.5/100
Under the 2026 Brand Transparency Rubric, PetAlive earns a 37.5/100 Public Transparency Score — Sparse Public Evidence (scored as of 2026-07-03), in the bottom tier of our 37-brand set. 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 product-quality verdict — and it is not a ruling on homeopathy; it counts documents, and there aren't any.
The shape is unusual for this tier: manufacturing at 7 — a real floor — with accessibility at 6 and rationale at 5, against experts and evidence at 2, claims at 3, and testing at 3. Two watchouts fired: unnamed experts and actives without amounts. The record was rebuilt from six live-fetched, archived surfaces with every quote verified verbatim. The gap to the mid-40s is one veterinarian's name and one qualified sentence where the absolute now stands.
Best fit: committed homeopathy users who already accept the modality's framework and will send the five-question email. Keep comparing if: you want veterinary accountability, evidence, or testing documents behind pet products — none exist here.
Owner Reviews and Price
The owner-review sample (35 items across 16 sources, checked 2026-07-03, low confidence) is small and logistics-tilted: shipping notes lead (10), with scattered owner-reported changes and a small tolerance cluster (3) — worth noting against a "no side effects" official position; unverified anecdotes, but the claim leaves room for none. Our snapshot didn't capture stable list prices — check live listings; the products sell in multi-format bundles where per-dose math varies by pet size.
Where La Petite Labs Fits
It doesn't. La Petite Labs sells no homeopathic products and no condition-named remedies, so no comparison is made and no product card follows — on a page about unverifiable outcome-named products, a pitch would be the least credible element we could print.
What this page offers instead is the habit: the five-question email above works on every supplement brand at every price, including ours. The brands that answer it well are the ones this report exists to find.
Final Verdict: Should You Try PetAlive?
That depends on a decision this review can't make for you — whether homeopathic remedies belong in your pet's care — and that decision belongs in a conversation with a veterinarian, which is precisely the professional this brand's public record never mentions. What the record does establish: the manufacturing claims are stated more plainly than most low scorers manage, the service layer is real, and the marketing absolutes are not to be taken at face value — "no risk" and "no interactions" are category slogans, not clinical facts, and a pet on medication deserves better than a slogan. Send the five questions. Route the answers through your vet. And read RunnyPoo Relief's name as the catalog's honest summary of how it sells: by the outcome, not the evidence.
FAQ
Is PetAlive legit?
It is a real line from Native Remedies with stated USA/FDA-registered/cGMP manufacturing and a functioning expert-answer service. Checkability is the issue: no named people, no documents, no veterinary involvement anywhere in the public record.
Why does PetAlive score 37.5/100?
Because the score counts what a buyer can verify, and here that is: manufacturing statements, an extraction-method description, catalog structure, and service mechanics. No amounts, names, labs, evidence, or veterinary review are published.
Is PetAlive safe for pets?
The FAQ claims homeopathic medicines carry "no risk of side effects or known interactions with pharmaceutical drugs" — an absolute we'd discount on any label. For a pet on medication, ask your veterinarian, not a category slogan.
Who formulates PetAlive products?
An unnamed team described as herbalists, naturopaths, and homeopaths. No individual is named, and no veterinarian is mentioned anywhere on the reviewed pet-line surfaces.
Does PetAlive publish COAs or name a lab?
No. Raw ingredients are described as laboratory-tested; no laboratory, certificate, or lot document appears anywhere. Request your lot's COA.
Where is PetAlive made?
In the USA, in FDA-registered facilities under stated cGMP compliance, using a described Full Spectrum extraction method for the herbal line. No facility is named.
What is RunnyPoo Relief?
PetAlive's condition-named digestive remedy — and the clearest example of the catalog's outcome-based naming. No product-level evidence is published for the implied outcome.
Do homeopathic remedies work for pets?
That is a modality question this disclosure review doesn't decide. What we can report: no evidence documents exist on these surfaces, and the efficacy language ("short-term relief") is asserted at category level. Discuss the modality with your veterinarian.
Is there a La Petite Labs alternative to PetAlive?
No — La Petite Labs sells no homeopathic or condition-named products, so this review makes no comparison and implies no substitution.
What should I ask PetAlive before buying?
Five things: the full formulation with amounts or dilutions, your lot's COA with the lab named, the facility behind the cGMP claim, the formulator's name and training (and any veterinary review), and the basis for the no-side-effects claim — reviewed with your own vet.
Sources Reviewed
Sources note: Six brand surfaces were live-fetched and locally archived on 2026-07-03, with every quote verified verbatim against the archived HTML. Public materials show what a buyer can verify; they cannot establish product safety, efficacy, medical suitability, or current pricing.
PetAlive pages reviewed
- PetAlive hub — reviewed for catalog structure, positioning, and navigation.
- FAQ — reviewed for the manufacturing stack, the laboratory-tested claim, homeopathy framing, and the no-side-effects absolute.
- Ask Our Experts — reviewed for the expert-team composition and service mechanics.
- Product finder and ailment index — reviewed for the condition-oriented catalog structure.
- RunnyPoo Relief — sampled as the condition-named flagship.
Owner-review surfaces
- Retail and forum surfaces — sampled 2026-07-03 (35 extracted items across 16 sources, low confidence); used only as buyer-experience context, not efficacy evidence.