Updated 12 May 2024
368 368 people have viewed this product in the last 30 days
Overview
Similar foods
Nutrition
Pricing
Company
Comments 1
Update

Burns Alert Review

Type of food

Complete dry extruded

Dog types

Pet dogs

Breed sizes

Suitable for toy breed dogs
Adult weight 1-4kg. e.g. Chihuahua, Pomeranian, Yorkshire Terrier
Suitable for small breed dogs
Adult weight 4-10kg. e.g. Beagle, Dachshund, Jack Russell
Suitable for medium breed dogs
Adult weight 10-25kg. e.g. Border Collie, Staffie, Springer, Vizsla
Suitable for large breed dogs
Adult weight 25-45kg. e.g. Boxer, Labrador, Greyhound
Suitable for giant breed dogs
Adult weight 45kg+ e.g. Bernese, Great Dane, Mastiff

Dog ages

From 9 months to old age

Pack sizes

2kg, 6kg & 12kg bags

RRP

12kg bags = £57.49

AADF rating

64%

At a glance

Natural: Free from added artificial preservatives, antioxidants, colourings, flavourings or other controversial synthetic ingredients
Not high in meat: Contains less than 30% meat ingredients (on a dry matter basis) or meat percentage is unspecified
Hypoallergenic: Free from wheat, maize, dairy products, soya products and artificial additives
Clearly labelled: Free from wheat, maize, dairy products, soya products and artificial additives
Certified nutritionally complete: This food complies fully with the complete food nutrient tolerances as recommended by FEDIAF and/or AAFCO

Price per day

£

Similar foods

Burns Large & Giant Breed Original

Per 100g

£0.36

Rating

64%
Burns Original Adult/Senior

Per 100g

£0.57

Rating

61%
Oscar Working Dog Chicken with Salmon

Per 100g

£0.37

Rating

64%
Burns Weight Control+

Per 100g

£0.33

Rating

61%
Ava Large Breed Adult

Per 100g

£0.35

Rating

66%

Nutrition

Composition

Mixing bowl:

Brown Rice 67%, Chicken Meal 20%, Oats, Peas, Salmon Oil 1%, Chicken Oil, Sunflower Oil, Seaweed, Minerals, Green Tea Extract, Blueberry Extract.

As fed (BETA):

Nutritional additives (per kg)

Vitamin a 25000 Iu/kg, Vitamin D3 2000 Iu/kg, Vitamin E 200 Iu/kg, Vitamin C 50 Iu/kg, Taurine 1000mg/kg, Copper (Copper II Chelate of Amino Acids Hydrate) 12mg/kg, Iodine (Calcium Iodate) 1mg/kg, Manganese (Manganous Chelate of Amino Acids Hydrate) 20mg/kg, Zinc (Zinc Chelate of Amino Acids Hydrate) 50mg/kg.

Technological additives

Typical Analysis

Energy

0.0 kcal/100g

Dry weight nutrients

Above average

Average

Below average

Pricing

12kg bags RRP

£57.49

Grams per day

g

Cost per day

£

Buy locally:

Store finder

Company

See more
Company info
Name: Burns Pet Nutrition
HQ: United Kingdom
Parent company: Assisi Pet Care Group
Brands: Burns 2929 Burns foods listed 11 Burns treats listed
HiLife 1212 HiLife foods listed
Pet Munchies 1212 Pet Munchies treats listed
Manufacturer's product description

Comments

7 Comments AADF Privacy Policy Sign in to comment
Sign in to comment
Guthrie Bessom 3 days ago
This food is mostly carbs, looking after a 3 year old BC who is on this rubbish, sends him hyper, no body muscle and incredibly thin. If you want your dog to thrive, don't feed them this. Since when did canines thrive on a highly processed food like this. My 10 year old BC x Huskie x Malamute is fed raw, has nice muscle mass, stamina and is not triggered all the time, he can out run the 3 year old BC too - work that one out.
Sign in to reply
Praetorian85 4 months ago
This dog food has been rebranded - with almost identical ingredients - as 'Burns Alert Assistance', and the RRP is now £58, not £37!!!
Sign in to reply
Becky Wheeler 8 years ago
I bought this for my husky and noticed over the weeks that he was having diarrhoea and losing weight! His personality also changed and he was depressed and becoming aggressive! I recently took him off burns and put him on csj champ with sweet potato, carrots, peas and white fish and now he's just on csj and his stools are solid, he's happy and eating better.
Sign in to reply
Nova 10 years ago
I've got my 2 year old castrated Lurcher on Burns Alert as I was told the ingredients would help him calm down a bit. Not likely! It hasn't had the desired effect at all and although he tolerates it, he doesn't really seem to like it much. I mix it with half a tray of Naturediet twice a day and he always picks out the meat first and leaves the dried until he's really hungry. Should he be on a higher protein dried food? I want to do my best, but find it all v confusing!
Sign in to reply

Advertisement

Disclaimer | Privacy Policy | Terms of Use | Advertisers | Site map | Contact Us

Copyright © 2011 - 2024 All About Pet Food. All Rights Reserved. Company registered in Finland (why?) #3230956-3