5 Coat Warning Signs of Illness in Dogs & Cats
Read full insightPet Honesty Allergy Skin Health vs Pet Gala™
By La Petite Labs Editorial 16 min read
Dog owners searching this comparison are usually not doing casual supplement browsing. They are often reacting to scratching, seasonal discomfort, dull coat, paw licking, flakes, or the feeling that their dog’s skin needs more support. That makes Pet Honesty’s allergy-and-skin language immediately attractive.
The careful read starts after that first attraction. A soft chew can name useful ingredient categories without showing how much of each active the dog gets. A probiotic list can sound robust without publishing CFU. Omega sources can be relevant without telling the owner EPA or DHA mg per chew.
Pet Gala™ takes a different route. It is a food-mixed, 90-day skin-and-coat routine that prints its amounts and broadens the job beyond itch-adjacent language: coat texture, barrier support, hydration, nails, and paw pads all have a place in the plan. This page compares the two products on that practical buyer question.
What Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health Is Actually Selling
Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health is a salmon-flavored soft chew built around an allergy, itch, skin, and coat promise. The jar count is 90 chews, and the serving rule scales by weight: one chew for dogs up to 25 lb, two chews from 26 to 50 lb, three chews from 51 to 75 lb, and four chews from 76 to 100 lb. That creates an easy mental model for a shopper: buy the jar, feed the chew, and match the count to the dog.
The formula story is broad for a soft chew. It names omega-3 sources from fish oil, flaxseed, krill, and algae; it names EPA and DHA; and it adds turmeric, vitamin C, zinc proteinate, quercetin dihydrate, black pepper, biotin, vitamin E, and an eight-strain probiotic blend. Those are credible categories for a skin-and-coat buyer to recognize. The label-level issue is not ingredient emptiness. The issue is that the page does not show per-chew mg, IU, mcg, or CFU amounts for those actives.
Pet Gala™ competes from a different posture. It is not an allergy-named chew. It is a food-mixed visible-condition routine with printed amounts for structural proteins, lipids, barrier nutrients, hydration support, keratin support, and paw-and-nail support. For an owner who wants a readable first 90 days, that difference matters because the routine can be audited before the dog ever tastes it.
What is PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health?
PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health is a salmon flavored soft chew for dogs with omega sources, quercetin, turmeric, biotin, zinc, vitamins C and E, black pepper, and an 8 strain probiotic blend. The main caution is that the page does not publish per chew active amounts or total CFU.
The Plain Comparison
**The Plain Comparison**
| Question | Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health | Pet Gala™ | Stronger fit |
|---|---|---|---|
| Core job | Allergy, itch, skin, and coat soft chew with omega, quercetin, biotin, zinc, vitamin, and probiotic language. | Premium visible condition routine for skin, coat, nails, paw pads, hydration, and barrier support. | Pet Gala™ for a broader 90 day system; Pet Honesty for a simple chew. |
| Active quantities | Ingredient identities are visible, but per chew mg, IU, mcg, and CFU amounts are not published in the current label. | Printed active amounts across the support lanes. | Pet Gala™ |
| Omega detail | Fish oil, flaxseed, krill, algae, EPA, and DHA are named; EPA/DHA mg are not shown. | Omega 3 6 9 150 mg and omega 7 50 mg are printed. | Pet Gala™ |
| Barrier and hydration | No hyaluronic acid or ceramide amount in the current label. | Ceramides 8 mg and hyaluronic acid 50 mg. | Pet Gala™ |
| quality review | NASC and facility signals are useful; no easy public lot level COA or named lab is visible before purchase. | COA Lookup path for lot level review. | Pet Gala™ |
| Price read | $33.99 one time or $27.19 Subscribe & Save for 90 chews; cost changes with dog weight. | from $79 one time; Standard 90 sachet pack $175; 90 day subscription $169 ($56/mo). | Pet Gala™ for 90 day system clarity; Pet Honesty for starting price. |
The Genuine Appeal of the Pet Honesty Chew
The Pet Honesty product deserves credit for understanding the way many dog parents shop. It uses a familiar chew format, a salmon flavor, a 90-count jar, and a benefit cluster that maps to common search language: allergy, skin, coat, itch, and seasonal discomfort. It also avoids the intimidation that can come with powders or multi-step routines. A chew is easy to explain to a family member, a sitter, or a boarding facility.
The ingredient names also help. Quercetin, turmeric, biotin, zinc, vitamins C and E, omega sources, and probiotics all sound relevant to the problem the buyer is trying to solve. The quality story is not bare either. The current label records NASC Primary Supplier and Quality Seal signals, GMP language, an FDA-registered US facility claim, and SQF and APHIS facility certifications. Those are better than an anonymous supplement page with only lifestyle copy.
Pet Gala™ should not flatten that appeal. The fair comparison is that Pet Honesty is easier to start and less expensive at the jar level, while Pet Gala™ is easier to interrogate. Pet Gala™ asks the owner to value a more complete printed plan: collagen peptides, omega 7, ceramides, hyaluronic acid, silica, MSM, biotin, zinc, and a lot-level quality path.
Where the Allergy Language Needs Caution
The word allergy carries weight. It attracts owners whose dogs may be scratching, chewing paws, licking hot spots, rubbing faces, or dealing with seasonal triggers. A supplement can support skin condition, but allergy-like signs can also come from parasites, infections, atopic disease, food reactions, endocrine issues, environmental exposure, or a combination of factors. A nutrition chew should not become a substitute for diagnosis.
That is why the comparison should separate retail language from label clarity. Pet Honesty can be a reasonable support product, but the buyer still has to ask what the dog is receiving each day. Omega-source names are not EPA/DHA milligrams. Probiotic strain names are not CFU. Quercetin identity is not a quercetin dose. Vitamin and mineral names do not show how much is in each chew.
Pet Gala™ stays out of the allergy-treatment lane and competes on visible-condition support. It is a better match for a dog parent who says, “I want to run a structured skin, coat, nail, paw, hydration, and barrier routine for 90 days, and I want to see the amounts before I commit.” Veterinary care still leads when symptoms are medical rather than cosmetic or routine-support concerns.
The Dose-Disclosure Gap
The central label finding is straightforward: Pet Honesty names many interesting actives, but it does not publish per-chew quantities. That matters because the serving rule can multiply the number of chews by body weight, yet the buyer still cannot see the active load that one chew contributes. A 90-count jar also means very different duration by dog size. A small dog may get a long trial; a large dog may move through the jar quickly.
For skin-and-coat supplements, dose visibility is not pedantry. Omega support depends on meaningful fatty-acid delivery. Biotin and zinc are useful only within an appropriate daily context. Probiotic blends should ideally show CFU, and a probiotic identity list without CFU tells only half the story. Quercetin and turmeric can be attractive label names, but the owner cannot evaluate their practical contribution without amounts.
Pet Gala™ is stronger here because the buyer can read marine collagen peptides 500 mg, hydrolyzed whey protein 250 mg, beef gelatin 200 mg, bone broth 100 mg, omega 3-6-9 150 mg, omega 7 50 mg, ceramides 8 mg, hyaluronic acid 50 mg, biotin 50 mcg, zinc 1.5 mg, silica 10 mg, MSM 100 mg, and L-carnitine 20 mg. The page is not asking shoppers to infer the system from ingredient names alone. It gives a concrete plan to compare with diet, veterinary advice, and other supplements already in the dog’s routine.
The Missing Skin-Barrier Lanes
Pet Honesty covers several familiar skin-support ideas, especially omega sources, antioxidant language, biotin, zinc, and probiotics. What it does not cover in the current label is just as important: no disclosed collagen peptide dose, no hyaluronic acid, no ceramide amount, no silica, and no MSM. For a product cross-shopped against a premium skin-and-coat system, those absences change the purchase logic.
The visible-condition category is broader than shine. Owners are often watching coat texture, shedding context, paw-pad feel, nail strength, dry-skin appearance, and whether the dog’s skin seems supported during seasonal swings. A lipid-led chew can help part of that conversation, but it does not automatically become a complete barrier and structural-support routine.
Pet Gala™ is designed to sit in those missing lanes. Marine collagen peptides 500 mg and hydrolyzed whey 250 mg support the structural-protein story. Ceramides 8 mg and omega 7 50 mg add a barrier-oriented angle. Hyaluronic acid 50 mg is the hydration piece. Silica 10 mg and MSM 100 mg give nails and connective tissue a more explicit place in the plan. That is the real premium difference.
“Start with the product you can explain, verify, track, and keep for 90 days.”
Format, Compliance, and the 90-Day Trial
A soft chew can be the easiest supplement format in a house where the dog loves treats. There is no scoop, no mixing, and no powder texture to negotiate. For Pet Honesty, the weight-based chew rule is also simple enough that an owner can keep it on the counter and know what to feed. That is a real advantage for busy households.
The tradeoff is jar math and consistency. A 90-count jar does not equal 90 days for every dog. A 51 to 75 lb dog uses three chews a day, and a 76 to 100 lb dog uses four. That means the 90-day cost and reorder pattern change quickly with size. It also means a large dog gets a higher total of an undisclosed active blend, which may be fine, but it is still not transparent.
Pet Gala™ is built around a clearer 90-day routine. The Standard 90-sachet one-time pack is $175, and the 90-day subscription plan is $169 ($56/mo). The value is not that the math can be made to sound tiny per day. The value is that the owner can run the same inspectable system through the period when coat, skin comfort signals, nail changes, and paw-pad feel are more realistically judged.
Quality Signals and What They Do Not Prove
Pet Honesty’s quality signals are worth noting. NASC participation and Quality Seal language suggest the brand is not operating as a fly-by-night supplement seller. GMP and FDA-registered facility language, plus SQF and APHIS facility certifications in the current label, are meaningful manufacturing-adjacent signals. They reduce some buyer anxiety and should be acknowledged.
But quality signals are not the same as dose transparency or lot-specific analytical access. The current label does not present a named third-party lab, a public lot-level COA, or a batch lookup that a buyer can use before purchase. A customer may still trust the brand, but the comparison has to be precise: Pet Honesty shows brand-level quality signals; Pet Gala™ shows a COA Lookup path as part of its quality story.
That matters most for owners who are already paying premium prices elsewhere or stacking multiple products. When the routine lasts 90 days, the buyer benefits from knowing not only what categories are named, but what quantities are printed and how the brand exposes quality review.
Price, Jar Math, and Real Value
Pet Honesty has a clear advantage on starting price. The current label lists $33.99 one-time and $27.19 Subscribe & Save for the 90-count jar. For a small dog receiving one chew a day, that can look very economical. For a large dog receiving four chews a day, the jar duration changes, and the owner should calculate the cost against the dog’s actual serving band.
Pet Gala™ starts at $79 one-time for 30 sachets. The Standard 90-sachet one-time pack is $175, and the 90-day subscription plan is $169 ($56/mo). That is a different spending tier, so the comparison should not pretend otherwise. The question is what the owner is buying with that difference.
The stronger 90-day value case for Pet Gala™ is system completeness. Instead of buying a soft chew and still wondering about collagen, hydration, ceramides, silica, MSM, and amount visibility, the owner gets a single visible-condition plan with printed support lanes. For dogs where the goal is just an inexpensive allergy-positioned chew, Pet Honesty may be enough. For owners trying to reduce ambiguity across a quarter, Pet Gala™ is the more inspectable spend.
When Pet Honesty May Be the Better Fit
Pet Honesty can be the better fit when the household wants a chew first, the dog is small enough that the jar lasts meaningfully, and the owner is mainly looking for broad skin-and-coat support language rather than a premium visible-condition system. It may also suit a dog who refuses powders but accepts salmon-flavored chews easily.
Another reasonable use case is a buyer who already has veterinary guidance for the main skin issue and wants a lower-cost daily support product alongside the plan. In that case, the owner should still check the full ingredient list, serving amount, calorie context, and overlap with other supplements.
Pet Gala™ is not the automatic answer for every owner. It asks for a higher commitment and food mixing. Its advantage appears when the owner wants printed amounts, a broader support map, and a 90-day period long enough to judge visible-condition changes with less guesswork.
When Pet Gala™ Is the Stronger Choice
Pet Gala™ becomes the stronger choice when the buyer’s real concern is not merely “itch chew” but visible condition across coat, skin, nails, paw pads, and hydration. The formula is built to make that broader job legible. Each sachet has a support role the owner can point to: structural proteins, barrier lipids, hydration support, keratin support, and connective-tissue adjacent nutrients.
That visibility also helps with discipline. A 90-day routine works best when the owner can keep the serving steady, watch tolerance, and avoid constantly switching products because each purchase leaves unanswered questions. Pet Gala™ is positioned for that kind of owner: someone who wants to know what is in the plan and why it is there.
Pet Honesty still has the easier chew story. Pet Gala™ has the stronger label story for a premium buyer who values ingredient amounts, category breadth, and a quality path before the first month is over.
“Start with the product you can explain, verify, track, and keep for 90 days.”
The Probiotic Angle
The Pet Honesty file names eight probiotic strains: Bacillus subtilis, Lactobacillus acidophilus, Bifidobacterium bifidum, Lactobacillus delbrueckii, Lactobacillus plantarum, Lactobacillus brevis, Enterococcus faecium, and Lactobacillus fermentum. That is a more specific list than many supplement pages provide. For owners who like the gut-skin connection, the strain list will be attractive.
The limitation is that the total CFU is not disclosed in the current label. Without CFU, the owner cannot evaluate the daily probiotic load, compare it with another probiotic product, or understand how weight-based chew multiplication changes intake. The strain names are useful, but they do not complete the picture.
Pet Gala™ does not try to win by being a probiotic chew. It wins, if it wins, by being a visible-condition routine with disclosed structural, lipid, hydration, and keratin-support amounts. If a veterinarian specifically wants a probiotic, that guidance should govern the choice. If the shopper wants a broader skin-and-coat plan, Pet Gala™ is more coherent.
How to Compare Ingredient Lists Without Being Fooled
A long ingredient list can feel reassuring because every familiar name becomes a tiny vote of confidence. Omega-3, quercetin, turmeric, biotin, zinc, probiotics, vitamin C, and vitamin E all have buyer recognition. But a supplement label has two jobs: name the ingredients and show the amounts. When only the first job is done, the owner is still doing a lot of guessing.
The smarter comparison is to ask which roles are explicit. Pet Honesty explicitly names many roles but does not quantify them per chew. Pet Gala™ explicitly prints the amounts for the roles it claims to fill. That does not make every ingredient in Pet Gala™ automatically more important; it makes the plan easier to evaluate.
For a 90-day routine, that evaluation matters. The owner can decide whether the dog needs a broad visible-condition plan, a targeted veterinary product, a diet change, a flea-control review, or simply a lower-cost chew. Clear labels do not replace judgment, but they make judgment easier.
Palatability and Food-Mixing Reality
Pet Honesty has the palatability advantage of a salmon-flavored chew. Many dogs enjoy chewable supplements because they feel like treats, and owners like the clean handoff. The risk is that picky dogs may reject the chew, dogs with dietary restrictions may need ingredient review, and larger dogs may need multiple chews per day.
Pet Gala™ is food-mixed, which creates a different compliance pattern. It works best for dogs who reliably finish meals and whose owners are willing to mix a sachet rather than hand over a treat. That is less grab-and-go than a chew, but it can be easier for owners who prefer not to count multiple chews or handle jars that disappear faster for larger dogs.
The right format is the one the household will actually run for 90 days. If the dog refuses powders, the best formula on paper will not matter. If the owner wants a repeatable, measured, food-based routine with printed amounts, Pet Gala™ earns its place.
Safety and Veterinary Boundaries
Skin discomfort can become medically complicated quickly. Constant scratching, broken skin, ear odor, hair loss, hot spots, paw inflammation, flea exposure, and repeated gastrointestinal changes are not problems to solve by supplement shopping alone. Both products should be kept in the support category.
Pet Honesty’s allergy language can make the product feel closer to treatment than a cautious owner should assume. It may support skin and coat, but it is not a diagnostic tool. Pet Gala™ also should not be treated as a treatment for allergies, infections, immune disease, endocrine disorders, or parasites.
The best 90-day supplement trial starts after the owner has ruled out urgent issues and understands the dog’s diet, medications, and sensitivities. When in doubt, a veterinarian can help decide whether omega support, a probiotic, a skin-barrier routine, an elimination diet, or medical therapy belongs first.
The Best Buyer Question
The best buyer question is not “Which label sounds more impressive?” It is “What job am I hiring this product to do for the next 90 days?” If the job is a lower-cost allergy-positioned chew with omega and probiotic language, Pet Honesty is easy to understand. If the job is a broader visible-condition system with printed quantities, Pet Gala™ is built for that task.
That question keeps the comparison fair. Pet Honesty is not weak just because it is cheaper. Pet Gala™ is not stronger simply because it has more premium positioning. The distinction is whether the owner wants a chew built around named support categories or a sachet routine that prints the amounts and expands the skin-and-coat plan beyond omegas.
Once the job is clear, the choice becomes less emotional. Budget, dog size, format preference, symptom seriousness, ingredient overlap, and quality review can be weighed against the actual 90-day plan.
That framing also keeps the owner from mistaking a cheap first jar for the cheapest useful routine. If a small dog takes one Pet Honesty chew and the owner only wants a simple support product, the math may be perfectly reasonable. If a larger dog needs multiple chews per day, already receives fish oil, or still needs separate hydration, barrier, nail, or paw-pad support, the low ticket price may not answer the whole household question. Pet Gala™ costs more because the owner is buying an inspectable support map: printed amounts, food-mixed dosing, COA Lookup access, and a quarter-long routine that can be discussed with a veterinarian without inventing missing active numbers.
How to Run a Fair 90-Day Comparison
A fair 90-day comparison starts with a baseline. Take notes on coat feel, visible flakes, shedding context, paw licking, nail brittleness, stool tolerance, appetite, and any veterinary concerns. Do not change five things at once and then expect the supplement to explain the result.
For Pet Honesty, calculate the jar duration at the dog’s weight band and write down how many chews are being fed. Because per-chew active amounts are not visible in the current label, consistency becomes even more important. For Pet Gala™, keep the sachet routine steady and watch whether food mixing works in real life.
At 30, 60, and 90 days, look for practical signals rather than miracle claims. Is the dog tolerating the product? Is the routine easy enough to keep? Are visible-condition markers moving in the right direction? Does the owner still feel confident about what is being fed? Pet Gala™ has the advantage when that last question matters.
Final Verdict
Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health is a credible, easy-to-understand chew with a strong shopper hook: allergy, skin, coat, omega sources, quercetin, biotin, zinc, vitamins, and probiotics in a salmon-flavored 90-count jar. It is also less expensive to start, especially for small dogs.
The label weakness is dose visibility. The current label does not publish per-chew mg, IU, mcg, or CFU amounts for the named active ingredients. It also does not cover collagen peptides, hyaluronic acid, ceramides, silica, or MSM. Those gaps matter for owners who are comparing it with a premium visible-condition system rather than just another chew.
Pet Gala™ is the stronger pick for a 90-day skin, coat, nail, paw, hydration, and barrier routine with printed amounts and COA Lookup access. Pet Honesty is the simpler, lower-ticket chew. The right answer depends on whether the dog needs a casual support chew or a more inspectable visible-condition plan.
Bottom Line for the Shopper
Choose Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health when the household wants a salmon-flavored chew, the dog’s weight makes the jar economical, and the owner is comfortable with ingredient names without per-chew amounts. It is a reasonable support product to discuss with a veterinarian if allergy-like signs are part of the picture.
Choose Pet Gala™ when the goal is a deliberate 90-day visible-condition system. The higher price buys broader lane coverage, printed active amounts, hydration and barrier support, structural proteins, paw and nail nutrients, and a quality path the owner can inspect.
The fairest short version: Pet Honesty is easier to start; Pet Gala™ is easier to understand in depth. For premium buyers trying to reduce guesswork across the first 90 days, that clarity is the difference.
“Start with the product you can explain, verify, track, and keep for 90 days.”
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
Term
Plain meaning
Active amount
The printed quantity of an ingredient per serving, usually in mg, mcg, IU, or CFU.
COA
Certificate of Analysis, a lab document tied to quality checks for a product or lot.
90-day system value
The value of running a complete, inspectable routine long enough to judge consistency, tolerance, and visible progress.
Support product
A nutrition product for routine support, not a treatment for disease.
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• Biotin for Dogs
• Silica for Dogs
• Hyaluronic Acid for Dogs
• Ceramides for Dogs
References
Product facts, public claims, ingredient details, and quality-language checks were checked against the references below.
- Source Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health product page
- Source La Petite Labs Pet Gala
- Source La Petite Labs COA Lookup
FAQ
Is PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health a skin and coat supplement?
It is sold into an allergy, itch, skin, and coat lane, but its disclosed detail is ingredient identity led. Pet Gala™ is more direct for owners who want printed amounts for collagen peptides, omegas, ceramides, hyaluronic acid, biotin, zinc, silica, and MSM.
Does PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health disclose EPA and DHA amounts?
The current label names omega 3s from fish oil, flaxseed, krill, and algae and names EPA and DHA, but it does not show EPA or DHA mg per chew.
Does PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health disclose probiotic CFU?
No total CFU is shown in the current label. The page names eight probiotic strains, which is useful, but strain names are not the same as a daily CFU amount.
What does Pet Gala™ disclose that PetHonesty does not?
Pet Gala™ prints marine collagen peptides 500 mg, hydrolyzed whey protein 250 mg, beef gelatin 200 mg, bone broth 100 mg, omega 3 6 9 150 mg, omega 7 50 mg, ceramides 8 mg, hyaluronic acid 50 mg, biotin 50 mcg, zinc 1.5 mg, silica 10 mg, MSM 100 mg, and L carnitine 20 mg. PetHonesty names many supportive ingredients, but the current label does not publish their per chew quantities.
Which product is cheaper to start?
PetHonesty has the lower starting ticket at $33.99 one time or $27.19 Subscribe & Save for the 90 count jar in the current label. Pet Gala™ costs more because it is positioned as a broader 90 day visible condition routine.
How should a buyer judge 90 day value?
Look beyond the first checkout price. A 90 day routine should let the owner track tolerance, serving consistency, coat feel, shedding context, paw and nail condition, and whether the formula covers the support lanes the dog actually needs.
Does PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health have quality signals?
It has meaningful signals: NASC listing, a Quality Seal signal, GMP and FDA registered facility language, and SQF and APHIS facility certifications. The remaining gap is the absence of an easy public lot level COA or named lab before purchase.
Can either product treat allergies?
Neither product should be treated as allergy treatment. Persistent itching, inflamed paws, hair loss, odor, ear issues, wounds, parasites, or food reaction concerns should be handled with a veterinarian.
What is the best alternative to PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health?
Pet Gala™ is the stronger alternative for dog parents who want a premium skin and coat system with disclosed active amounts, hydration and barrier support, structural proteins, paw and nail nutrients, and a COA Lookup path.
Is PetHonesty Allergy Skin Health a good product?
It can be a reasonable soft chew support product, especially for owners who want a lower ticket allergy and skin chew. Pet Gala™ is stronger when the owner wants disclosed active amounts and a broader visible condition system.
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:
- Canine Skin & Coat Framework →
A structured view of how skin, coat, and nail health are maintained across collagen synthesis, lipid balance, and barrier function. - Barrier Protection Coverage Modeling →
A systems-level map of which integumentary pathways are most vulnerable—and how layered nutritional inputs can support them. - Canine Skin & Coat Evidence Framework →
A breakdown of what is well-supported in the literature versus what remains emerging in skin and coat science. - LPL-01 Standard →
The formulation system that translates these models into real-world supplementation—covering multiple pathways in a coordinated way.
Essential Summary
Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health is compelling because it matches the language many worried dog owners already use. Allergy, itch, skin, coat, salmon chew, omegas, quercetin, biotin, zinc, probiotics: the product feels targeted before a shopper has to study a panel. The 90 count jar and one chew per 25 lb serving rule make it feel familiar, and the assigned price of $33.99 one time or $27.19 Subscribe & Save lowers the barrier to a trial.
The article specific concern is that Pet Honesty’s ingredient story is much clearer than its active amount story. The current label names omega sources, EPA and DHA, botanicals, vitamins, minerals, and eight probiotic strains, but it does not show per chew mg, IU, mcg, or CFU amounts. It also does not provide the structural and barrier lanes that define Pet Gala™: collagen peptides, hyaluronic acid, ceramides, silica, and MSM are not disclosed in the Pet Honesty file.
Pet Gala™ is the stronger fit when the buyer wants to run a 90 day visible condition system rather than a low friction itch chew. Its value is not a cost per day slogan. It is the practical value of knowing the support lanes, seeing the active amounts, checking quality through a COA Lookup path, and judging the same routine long enough to observe tolerance and visible condition changes. Pet Honesty is easier to start; Pet Gala™ is easier to inspect.
Pet Gala™
Starting at $79/mo
The scratching is completely gone, his coat looks healthy and shiny!
— Lena
He was struggling with itching, now he's glowing.
— Grace
Category Context
Compare the full 2026 dog skin and coat rankings.
Use the full 2026 skin and coat rankings to compare products by dose visibility, barrier support, hydration support, dermal matrix support, keratin support, testing access, and daily usability.
Learn about how our DVMs think about the canine barrier
Dr. Sarah Calvin DVM
Pet Gala™
Starting at $79/mo
Learn about how our DVMs think about dog aging
Related Reading
Pet Honesty Allergy Skin Health is a 90-count salmon-flavored soft chew for dogs, including all life stages, dosed at one chew daily per 25 lb of body weight. The current label lists omega-3 sources from fish oil, flaxseed, krill, and algae; EPA and DHA are named; turmeric, vitamin C, zinc proteinate, quercetin dihydrate, black pepper, biotin, vitamin E, and an eight-strain probiotic blend are also part of the story. Its strength is broad recognition. A dog owner can understand why these categories belong near skin and coat support. The weakness is that no active amounts are visible per chew, including total probiotic CFU. Pet Gala™ costs more, but it publishes marine collagen peptides 500 mg, hydrolyzed whey protein 250 mg, beef gelatin 200 mg, bone broth 100 mg, omega 3-6-9 150 mg, omega 7 50 mg, ceramides 8 mg, hyaluronic acid 50 mg, biotin 50 mcg, zinc 1.5 mg, silica 10 mg, MSM 100 mg, and L-carnitine 20 mg. That makes the comparison less about “which label sounds more natural” and more about how much clarity the owner wants during the first 90 days. If the dog needs veterinary workup, neither product replaces that. If the owner wants a premium support routine with less label ambiguity, Pet Gala™ has the stronger fit.