Taste of the Wild vs Orijen Dog Food 2026
Taste of the Wild wins on value under $40; Orijen wins on ingredient quality if budget allows.
See Today’s Price →At a Glance
Showing 3 of 3 products
Taste of the Wild Pacific Stream Canine Recipe 14lb
“Smoked salmon formula at a mid-tier price with no grains.”
See Today’s Price →What we like
- Real salmon #1 ingredient
- Grain-free
- Highly digestible
Watch out for
- Grain-free debate ongoing
- Limited fiber variety
Read Full Analysis
Taste of the Wild Pacific Stream 14lb is the salmon-based grain-free formula—smoked salmon as the primary protein source with ocean fish providing the omega fatty acids that support coat health and the anti-inflammatory benefits of marine proteins. At $20–25 for 14 lbs ($1.45–1.80/lb), Pacific Stream is Taste of the Wild's seafood-focused formula for dogs that benefit from novel protein sources or fish-based diets. Taste of the Wild's grain-free formulas use alternative carbohydrate sources (sweet potatoes, peas, lentils) in place of corn and wheat—addressing the grain sensitivity that some dogs experience while providing the same caloric density. Note that the FDA has been investigating a potential link between grain-free diets and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs; current evidence is inconclusive but worth discussing with a veterinarian for dogs on long-term grain-free diets. Against Orijen on this comparison page, Taste of the Wild Pacific Stream at $1.45–1.80/lb versus Orijen at $4–5/lb is the accessible grain-free versus premium biologically appropriate raw food comparison. Both use high-quality animal protein sources; Orijen's significantly higher meat inclusion and biologically appropriate formulation justify the premium for buyers prioritizing the highest-quality ingredient sourcing.
Taste of the Wild High Prairie Canine Recipe 28lb
“Bison and venison formula for dogs with common protein sensitivities.”
See Today’s Price →What we like
- Novel proteins bison & venison
- Grain-free
- 28lb value size
Watch out for
- Pricier than chicken formulas
- Grain-free controversy ongoing
Read Full Analysis
Taste of the Wild High Prairie 28lb is the bison and venison formula—prairie-animal proteins that provide the novel protein source for dogs with chicken or beef sensitivities. At $55–65 for 28 lbs ($1.96–2.32/lb), the 28lb bag is the economy sizing for households with larger dogs or multiple dogs that goes through food volume quickly. The bison, roasted venison, and roasted quail protein sources are the novel proteins that dogs with traditional protein sensitivities tolerate—the reasoning behind novel protein diets being that dogs who haven't been exposed to a particular protein previously have a lower likelihood of developing a sensitivity to it. The prairie-inspired formula connects to Taste of the Wild's wild-diet concept. Against Orijen Regional Red (beef, wild boar, bison) on this page, Taste of the Wild High Prairie and Orijen both use non-conventional protein sources but at very different price points and ingredient quality levels. Orijen's significantly higher fresh meat inclusion (85% meat ingredients) versus Taste of the Wild's moderate meat inclusion is the quality differentiation that justifies Orijen's price premium.
ORIJEN Original Dry Dog Food
“Premium 85% animal ingredient formula — the gold standard in dry kibble.”
See Today’s Price →What we like
- 85% quality animal ingredients
- Fresh and raw inclusions
- No artificial preservatives
Watch out for
- At $36 for 4.4 lbs ($8.18/lb), costs 3–4x more than premium-tier competitors like Purina Pro Plan at $3.50/lb — appropriate primarily for owners prioritizing a biologically appropriate raw-inspired diet over cost
- 38% protein content calibrated for highly active working breeds — sedentary dogs, seniors, or those with kidney disease require veterinary clearance before consuming protein at this density
- Rapid protein-level transition causes loose stools in the first 7–10 days — transition by mixing with current food at a 75/25 ratio (old/new) and increase the Orijen proportion over 10 days
Read Full Analysis
ORIJEN Original is Orijen's foundational dry dog food formula—the biologically appropriate raw food (BARF) diet philosophy in dry kibble form with 85% high-quality animal ingredients (free-run chicken and turkey, wild-caught fish, cage-free eggs). At $100–120 for 25 lbs ($4–4.80/lb), Orijen is the most expensive dry dog food in the mainstream category. Orijen's Champions Pet Foods (Alberta, Canada) manufactures using WholePrey ratios—the same proportion of muscle meat, organs, and bone that a dog would consume from whole prey animals in the wild. The freeze-dried raw coating on the kibble preserves some of the raw ingredient nutrition that cooking destroys in standard dry food processing. Against Taste of the Wild on this comparison page, Orijen Original's ingredient quality, domestic Canadian manufacturing, and biologically appropriate formulation justify the $2.50–3.00/lb premium over Taste of the Wild for buyers who prioritize the highest-quality commercial dog food available. For buyers who want grain-free quality at accessible pricing, Taste of the Wild provides excellent ingredient quality at 60–70% less cost.
Great for: Dog owners wanting AAFCO-complete nutrition, anyone managing a dog with allergies, and puppy owners needing life-stage-specific formulas
Not ideal if: Your vet has recommended a prescription diet — OTC food, even premium, may not meet your dog's medical needs

Related Guides
What to Look For in Dog Food

- AAFCO life stage statement: "Complete and balanced for all life stages" covers puppies through seniors. "Adult maintenance" is not appropriate for puppies. Large-breed puppies specifically need food formulated for large breeds — standard puppy food has too much calcium and phosphorus for giant breeds, which can cause skeletal problems.
- Protein source: Named meat should be the first ingredient (chicken, beef, salmon, lamb). "Meat meal" is acceptable and actually more protein-concentrated than whole meat; "by-products" are nutritionally acceptable but a lower-quality signal.
- Calorie density: Compare calories per cup, not just price per bag. A denser food fed in smaller portions often costs less per day than a cheaper food fed in larger amounts. Most 30-lb bags cost $1.50–$3.00 per day depending on dog size.
- Brand recall history: Check the FDA's pet food recall database before committing to a brand. Some brands have clean 10-year records; others have had multiple recalls for salmonella or aflatoxin contamination.
Common Mistakes
Feeding a large-breed puppy standard "puppy formula" rather than a large-breed specific formula is a developmental risk — excess calcium accelerates bone growth in ways linked to hip dysplasia. A second mistake is switching to senior food too early; most healthy adult dogs don't need senior formula until 7–9 years old (larger breeds age faster). Finally, free-feeding (leaving food out all day) is the leading cause of canine obesity — scheduled meals allow you to monitor intake and catch illness early.
Price Context

Budget dry dog food (Pedigree, Purina Dog Chow) runs $0.80–$1.20 per pound. Mid-tier options (Purina Pro Plan, Blue Buffalo, Hill's Science Diet) run $1.80–$2.80 per pound but have better ingredient quality and research behind them. Veterinary nutritionists consistently rank Purina Pro Plan and Hill's Science Diet as the best evidence-based options — both invest heavily in feeding trials, which most boutique brands skip.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is Orijen worth the extra cost over Taste of the Wild?
Are both Taste of the Wild and Orijen grain-free?
Which is better for dogs with chicken allergies?
What are the top 3 healthiest dog food brands?
Why did Chewy stop selling Orijen dog food?
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Prices shown reflect Amazon pricing at the time this page was last generated. Click “See Today’s Price” to get the current live price on Amazon. Read our full methodology →


