Raw combo packs for dogs and cats take the work out of raw feeding by bundling everything your pet needs into a single, balanced pack. Instead of sourcing organ meats, raw meaty bones and muscle proteins separately, you get them combined in the right ratios, ready to thaw and serve. Whether you're feeding a working Kelpie, a senior Staffy with stiff joints, or a cat trying raw for the first time, a combo pack is the simplest way to feed real, biologically appropriate food without overthinking it. Browse the range below and grab the pack that matches your dog's diet stage.
Why Raw Feeding Combo Packs Make Sense
Raw feeding works when the ratios are right. The classic balance is roughly 80% muscle meat, 10% edible bone and 10% organ, plus some natural tripe and connective tissue for gut and joint support. Getting that mix right week after week takes work, which is exactly the problem combo packs solve.
Each pack is portioned, balanced and built around real Australian produce. You stock the freezer, thaw what you need, and feed it. That's it.
The convenience side
Sourcing individual cuts, organs and bones takes time. A combo pack puts the day's nutrition into one container so you're not opening three different bags for one meal. Busy owners with active dogs benefit the most.
The savings side
Buying bundled is almost always cheaper than buying each component separately. Combo packs and combo deals also rotate through our weekly specials page, so checking back regularly is worth your time.
The balance side
A combo pack ensures bone, organ and muscle meat all show up in the bowl in the right proportions. Too much bone makes stools hard and chalky. Too little leaves the diet short on calcium. The combos take that variable out of your hands.
What's Usually in a Raw Combo Pack
The exact contents depend on the pack, but most combos include the same core categories.
Muscle meat
The base of every raw diet. Combo packs lean on real, single-protein muscle cuts from lamb, beef, venison, duck, turkey or kangaroo. Variety across proteins is one of the cheapest forms of nutritional completeness.
Raw meaty bones
The calcium and phosphorus source, plus the dental workout. Most combos include soft bones like chicken necks, duck necks or turkey necks, or recreational chews like lamb necks. The full range sits in our raw meaty bones collection if you want to stock up further.
Organ meat
The most nutrient-dense part of the diet. Liver, kidney, heart and other secreting organs cover the vitamins and minerals muscle meat alone misses. Browse the dedicated raw organs range if your combo doesn't include enough for your dog's size.
Functional extras
Treats, jerky, supplements or chews sometimes get bundled in too. These are the value-adds that make a combo more than just the sum of its parts.
Who Raw Combo Packs Suit Best
Combo packs work for almost every raw feeder, but they're especially useful for some situations.
Owners new to raw feeding
If you're transitioning a dog or cat off kibble, a combo pack is the safest entry point. The ratios are sorted, the variety is built in, and you don't have to learn raw feeding theory before your first meal. Just read up on our common raw feeding mistakes guide before you start.
Busy owners with active dogs
Working dogs, sporting breeds and high-energy pets eat a lot. Combo packs let you keep up with the volume without spending Sunday afternoons portioning meals.
Multi-pet households
If you've got more than one dog or a mix of dogs and cats, combos reduce the variety hunting. Pull from the same combo across the week and rotate proteins within it.
Owners who want to stop micromanaging the bowl
Some people enjoy mixing their own raw rotations. Some don't. Combo packs are for the second group. If you'd rather think about the dog and not the diet maths, this is your category.
How to Get the Most From Your Combo Pack
Match the pack to your dog's size and stage
The right combo depends on body weight and life stage. Run your dog's daily portion through our raw feeding calculator to work out how many days a pack covers, then adjust your order frequency from there.
Transition gradually if coming off kibble
Introduce raw over a week or so rather than switching cold turkey. Most dogs handle the change well, but a slower transition means firmer stools and less digestive drama.
Pair with the rest of the range
Combo packs are a great base. Round out the diet with extras like our full raw dog food range, supplementary organs, raw meaty bones for dental days, and natural supplements for joint or skin support. For a complete weekly meal solution, the dedicated raw meal packs are worth a look.
Store and thaw properly
Keep combo packs frozen until needed. Thaw in the fridge over 12 to 24 hours, never on the bench. Once thawed, use within two to three days. Refreezing partially thawed product is fine if it hasn't fully come down to room temperature.