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Primal Venison Organ Mix

Power-packed organ blend with multivitamins and minerals for vitality, immunity, and lean energy

$18.99
Goat Testes

Nutrient-rich goat testes — a natural source of protein and essential nutrients for overall health and vitality.

$10.00
Chicken Hearts

Protein-packed chicken hearts – a natural source of taurine, iron, and B vitamins to support energy, heart health, and overall vitality.

$8.00
Chicken Giblets

Nutrient-rich chicken giblets – a natural source of iron, B vitamins, and essential nutrients to support overall health in cats and dogs.

$7.50
Chicken Organ Jerky

Delicious chicken organ jerky — a nutrient-dense vitamin boost that supports overall health and vitality for both cats and dogs.

From $17.99
Primal Emu Organs

Nutrient-rich emu organs that support skin, muscle, and overall vitality naturally.

$13.90 $16.99
Emu Organ Jerky

Nutrient-dense emu organ jerky — a natural, vitamin-rich treat that supports overall health and vitality.

From $18.99
Deer & Emu Organ Combo Pack

Power-packed organ blend with multivitamins and minerals for vitality, immunity, and lean energy

$25.00 $35.98

Raw organs for dogs and cats are the missing piece in most modern pet diets, and the single biggest reason kibble-fed pets quietly run low on vitamins, minerals and trace nutrients their bodies need. Our range covers the full spread: nutrient-dense venison and emu organs, chicken hearts and giblets, novel cuts like goat testes for fussy or allergic pets, and freeze-dried jerky for owners who want the benefits without the freezer logistics.

Everything is real Australian and wild-sourced produce, shipped frozen through our cold chain. Whether you're feeding a working Border Collie that needs serious nutrient density, a senior dog whose coat has lost its shine, or a cat that's an obligate carnivore by design, this is where to get the food your pet was built to eat.

 

Why Organs Matter in a Raw Diet

Muscle meat alone won't keep a dog or cat healthy. In the wild, dogs and cats eat the entire prey animal, and most of the dense nutrition lives in the organs, not the steak. Liver alone is the most concentrated natural source of vitamin A, copper, B12, folate and iron you can put in a bowl. Kidney brings selenium and B vitamins. Spleen carries iron and immune-supporting compounds. The brain delivers DHA for cognition. Heart, though technically muscle, brings the highest concentration of CoQ10 and taurine, which cats can't make on their own.

When raw feeders talk about "balanced," they mean a meat-bone-organ ratio that mirrors a whole prey animal. Skip the organs and you're feeding the equivalent of someone living on rump steak: enough protein, almost no micronutrients.

The fastest way to lift the nutrition of any home-prepared raw bowl is to add the right organs in the right proportions. If you've been told to give your dog a multivitamin to "balance" a meat-only diet, real organs do the same job better and cheaper. Our  common raw feeding mistakes  guide covers this in more depth.

 

What's in the Organ Range

The range is built to cover both the staple organs and the high-value novel options.

Mixed organ blends are the easiest way to feed properly without sourcing individual cuts. The  Primal Venison Organ Mix  combines venison liver, heart, kidney and other organs into a single ready-to-feed product. It's lean, wild-sourced, and a great rotation away from beef or lamb. The  Deer and Emu Organ Combo Pack  goes further, pairing two novel proteins in one combo at a sharper price.

Single organs from emu and deer are unusual finds. The  Primal Emu Organs  deliver a unique fatty acid and mineral profile you simply don't get from common livestock. Emu is also one of the gentlest proteins on sensitive dogs. Our  full case for emu organs  sits on the blog.

Chicken organs are the affordable staples.  Chicken Hearts  bring high-value taurine and CoQ10 both essential for heart health and especially important for cats.  Chicken Giblets give you a ready-made organ mix at the lowest cost point in the range. The  Chicken Organ Jerky  is the same nutrition in treat form, perfect for training rewards or owners who want organ benefits without thawing.

Goat testes sit in the "yes really" category.  Goat Testes  are nutrient-rich, novel, and surprisingly popular with fussy dogs that have lost interest in the same old proteins. They're also useful for hormonally balanced support in working and breeding dogs. The full breakdown is in our  are you feeding goat testes blog.

Jerky-form organs like the  Emu Organ Jerky  keep the nutritional payload but turn it into a treat or topper format. Useful for travel, training and cats that prefer drier textures.

 

What Each Organ Actually Does

Liver

The most nutrient-dense organ on earth. Fed correctly, liver covers vitamin A, copper, B vitamins, iron and folate. Overfed, it causes loose stools and vitamin A excess. The right amount sits at around 5% of the total diet.

 

Heart

Technically a muscle, but treated like a hero ingredient because of its taurine and CoQ10 content. Critical for cats, who can't synthesise taurine. Counts as muscle meat in the 80/10/10 ratio, not organ.

 

Kidney, spleen and pancreas

The "other secreting organs" that fill out the remaining 5% of the organ slice. Each brings unique trace minerals and enzymes. Kidney for selenium, spleen for iron, pancreas for digestive enzymes.

 

Brain

The most underrated organ. High in DHA omega-3 and phospholipids, both supporting cognition in puppies and seniors.

 

Testes and reproductive organs

Hormonally interesting, novel proteins, and excellent variety. Useful for dogs that have developed sensitivities to common proteins and need a clean reset.

 

Tripe

Technically the stomach. Carries digestive enzymes and probiotic bacteria your dog can't get anywhere else. Worth pairing organ feeding with our take on  why dogs need green tripe.

 

How to Feed Raw Organs to Dogs and Cats

The 80/10/10 rule

A balanced raw diet runs roughly 80% muscle meat, 10% edible bone and 10% organ. Of that organ portion, 5% should be liver and the other 5% should be other secreting organs like kidney, spleen, pancreas or testes. The heart counts as muscle meat, not organs.

 

What that looks like in grams

For a 20kg adult dog eating 2 to 3% of body weight daily (around 500g), that's roughly 40g of liver and 40g of other organs per day. You don't need to be exact daily weekly totals matter more, so feeding bigger organ portions twice a week works just as well as small daily amounts.

 

Start slow

Organs are rich. Going from zero to full ratio overnight will give your dog explosive stools. Introduce one organ at a time over a couple of weeks. Liver is the most likely to cause loose stools, so start with a small portion mixed into a meal your dog already eats.

 

Cats are different

Cats are obligate carnivores and need organs even more than dogs do. Taurine from heart, vitamin A from liver, and B vitamins from kidney are non-negotiable. Cats also tend to prefer organs cut small, lightly chilled rather than frozen. Our piece on  why cats need raw food covers the bigger picture.

 

Storage and thawing

Keep organs frozen until needed, thaw in the fridge over 12 to 24 hours, never at room temperature. Once thawed, use within two to three days. For owners who want the nutrition without the freezer logistics, the  Chicken Organ Jerky  and  Emu Organ Jerky  work at room-temperature.

 

Pair with the rest of the bowl

Organs are one piece of a balanced raw diet, not the whole thing. Round things out with our full raw dog food range,  raw meaty bones,  and pre-built raw meal packs that already balance the ratios for you. Run your dog's portions through our  raw feeding calculator  for exact daily amounts.

 

Related Collections

Round out your pet's raw diet with the  full raw dog food range,  raw food for cats,  raw meaty bones  for the bone portion,  pre-mixed meat tubs raw meal packs,   natural pet supplements  and  natural pet treats.  New to organ feeding? Start with our  food selector guide  and  what a natural raw diet actually is.

Frequently Asked Questions

Raw organs for dogs and cats are nutrient-dense secreting organs like liver, kidney, spleen, brain and testes, fed raw to deliver vitamins, minerals and trace nutrients that muscle meat alone can't provide. They're the single highest-value addition to a raw diet, and the easiest way to cover the micronutrients dogs and cats are designed to get from whole prey.
Around 10% of total daily intake, split as roughly 5% liver and 5% other secreting organs. For a 20kg dog eating 500g a day, that's about 40g of liver and 40g of other organ. Weekly totals matter more than daily, so larger feeds a couple of times a week is fine.
Right here, with Australian-sourced and wild-caught organs across venison, emu, deer, chicken and goat, shipped frozen through our cold chain. Supermarkets occasionally stock chicken livers, but the variety and freshness needed for proper raw rotation is hard to find outside specialist raw suppliers.
Yes, and they need them more than dogs do. Cats are obligate carnivores and can't synthesise taurine, so heart and kidney are essential. Liver provides vitamin A that cats can't convert from plant sources. Start small, cut organs into bite-sized pieces, and serve lightly chilled rather than frozen for best acceptance.
Yes, when sourced and stored properly. Buy from a cold-chain supplier, keep frozen until needed, thaw in the fridge over 12 to 24 hours, never at room temperature. Use within two to three days of thawing. Wash hands and surfaces after handling. Raw organs are no riskier than handling raw meat for your own meals.