• expired

30% off K9 Natural Dog Food Freeze Dried Beef Feast 3.6kg $167.99 + Delivery ($0 SYD C&C / with $200 Order) @ Peek-a-Paw

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Best Before Date: 02-Nov-2025

Please also check Google Shops to find all the prices of this product from the biggest online stores in Au if needed.

All the expiry dates show on the product page. Peekapaw is the Australian 1st website which could show expiry date of every stocked item.

All Deals at competitive prices.

Shipping:
Sydney Metro: $5 (order value $50-$199.99), $0 (order value $200+), for everything
Melbourne | Brisbane | Adelaide | Canberra | Gosford | Newcastle | Wollongong | Tweed Heads | Gold Coast | Sunshine Coast | Geelong: $8 (order value $50-$199.99), $0 (order value $200+), for everything
Everywhere in Australia: Free Delivery on Orders $200+ and MUST ONLY include free-shipping-range products(can be found on the product page), otherwise real-time rate by the third-party app.

FYI, if shipping is not friendly for your locations, you're welcome to take our prices to do price match with other big stores, like petbarn, petcircle.

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closed Comments

  • +5

    $46.66kg dog food + delivery. I knew inflation was bad but how did we get here?

    • +2

      cost more to feed a dog than kids🤣🤣

    • +1

      $39.99/kg for whole eye fillet at my local Supabarn.

      • +1

        I can buy whole lobsters at coles for $25.

        • +1

          Surf & turf for the dogs :)

    • +1

      RRP is $66.67/kilo

      Hills Science Diet specialty blends for specific conditions are nowhere near as expensive.

      This is insane.

      • +2

        There is no comparison. Not defending pet food prices, but what is insane is how mislead and ill-informed majority of people are. Hill science are junk i would avoid as much as possible. Clever marketing and affiliations suckers people. One look at the ingredients you can see extent of the junk fillers they put in.

        • +1

          The J/D blend is what we were advised to use by the vet surgeon after our cocker had a double ulnar ostectomy (partial). Who else to believe in this case? We buy it from wherever is cheapest, not from the vet…

          • +1

            @The Judge: I did a lot of reading on dog food when we got our current dog and was completely surprised to find that pretty much all of the most popular brands were rated very low in terms of quality of ingredients.

            The whole pet food industry seems completely shoddy and unregulated and I don't believe you can trust most vets. Like the poster above, I also speculate that there are some very strong affiliations between the veterinary industry and certain brands. Put a famous vet's name on a dog food packet, 'subsidise' the industry to flog it and people will buy it blindly without considering anything else.

          • @The Judge: I understand. Im not going to comment further on a specific product, im sure there were reasons to recommend i.e. to avoid certain things due to the animal's condition. My comment about ingredients, all the other crap in many of the kibbles for the purpose of bulking out the product, not because the dog needs or benefits from it.

            Vets are heavily incentivised by the pet food industry from top to bottom. Heavily. They dont care whether you buy from them or not, a little word, a poster or shelf in store, combined with their general advertising is all they need. After all, as you say, we love our pets and trust the vet. Cha-ching $$$. Should not be surprising when think about it (i.e. big pharma, tobacco and so forth).

            Sadly, nutrition is little more than a footnote during the journey to become a vet. Its so tiny its trivial. It's no more their job than nutrition is of a GP, they repeat whatever crap is handed to them. Except for pets there is negligible regulation or transparency. Unless a vet later takes a particular interest in the field or does further education such as animal science/nutrition (those vets do exist!), more often than not, they know less than your average joe googling for a few hours. It's a daunting thought i've had re-affirmed numerous times with a vet saying generic dumb crap. Once you know how the game works, what a vet is, and what a vet is not, you start to make more informed discerning choices (whatever they are).

            • @Xizor: Of course, hence anyone with half a brain who cares for their pet's welfare makes their own. We use HSD kibble as a medium for pooch to get the green oyster or whatever other supplements the vet specialist insisted he have (it was HSD or a specific supplement powder) to help with his joints, but the bulk of his diet is vegies and turkey mince plus the occasional egg and whatever the toddler throws on the floor.

    • -3

      All the dog food we're selling is absolutely not cheap, but cheaper.

      • +2

        That sounds like something a major supermarket chain would say -

        Down down, prices are down.

        • +1

          "At peek-a-paw, Prices are down, slightly down👇🏽
          Down, down, … I mean down, up" 🎶

      • What the (fropanity) does that even mean??

        It’s not cheap but it’s cheaper? I don’t get it. It’s cheaper than what? Everyone else selling the same dog food? It’s more expensive than everyone else, but it’s cheaper than you normally sell it? It’s not the best price it’s ever been, so it’s cheaper than RRP, but not the best price ever?

  • +1

    I am no dog expert nor I have a dog, but isn't on average a grown dog consume 500g of food a day? If I am right then with this food cost $24 to feed a dog daily? That cost more than feed a normal human being😱😱😱

    • My two dogs eat about 1kg a day each.

      • You better plan your dogs medical bill, unless they are really big!!

        God 2KG a day, your dog food bill likely more that my food bill at home🤣🤣

        • +2

          Nah they're super healthy and perfect weight. They're bigboys and very active. We cook them human grade food - meat (normally tuna) + pasta/rice and vegies.

          • +1

            @Bdawg: That's exactly how we feed our doggo - home cooked meat/veg/rice, alternating the type of meat/veg from time to time.

            • @apey2000: Yeah it's the way to go. Just chuck it all in the electric pressure cooker, bob's ya uncle! Forgot to mention we chuck in half a jar of passata or a tin of tomatoes.
              Most of the time we use tinned tuna but we also give them minced beef and chicken and sometimes eggs from our chooks if we have spare. Depends on what's cheap. It works out cheaper than most dog foods and unlike with biscuits, they don't fart up the joint!

    • average is 250g/day i think.

      blackhawk calculator https://blackhawkpetcare.com/au/feeding-calculator/
      (which suggests a 25kg doggo, 7yo, gets around 250g/day.. for a cost of about $2/day)

    • +1

      It’s freeze dried food that you wet to increase volume

    • No. Freeze dried and air dried dog foods have a higher nutritional density and therefor they require less of that food. That said, feeding higher nutritional quality dog foods can certainly cost more if you dont DIY. Just as is the case for feeding ourselves.

  • Wish there was a comprehensive site which compared kibble sizing with key ingredient percentages. Just would be nice which brands have larger kibble sizing. So hard to find that information. Geez it's expensive now though and quality of food shaming is rife. Lol

    • +1

      hmm.. kibble size info might be a good suggestion for https://www.petfoodreviews.com.au

      • VOUCH - these guys are great! The community also answers any questions and they stay on top of the manufacturers for any changes to brands

    • Why do you care about the kibble size?

    • Ingredients are ingredients. Its a simple choice just like we feed ourselves. Nutritional facts are what they. People should not shame others, but sharing information is also reasonable because the level of misleading information perpetuated by the industry is epic, with little regulation or consequence.

    • +1

      I did a spreadsheet last month of about 45 grain-free dog food products from 18 brands and 8 stores. Because the price of kibble had gone up so much I wanted to see how much they are charging per kg.
      The spreadsheet shows the main ingredients and amount of crude protein each contain, and their respective unit prices per kg, but I didn't get round to finding out the kibble sizes.

      Like others have said, pet food is now more expensive per kg than cheap meat with some of the brands costing $8-$10 per kg, and that's when you buy a big bag of it.
      After making the spreadsheet, I decided to buy meat or chicken and mince it up in a grinder, and now feed the dog half meat and half kibble.
      It isn't costing much more than feeding all kibble, and because of the amount of vegetables and fillers they put in the dried food, I think it is a better diet for the dog.

  • +1

    Not a bargain.
    www.petso.com.au offer it for the same price, except they have free shipping at $69+, whereas this deal requires $200+

  • +1

    I can't even feed myself. :*(

  • Yeah not a deal. Pass

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