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Label facts comparison

Farmina N&D Prime Chicken and Pomegranate Adult Mini Dry Dog Food vs Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food

Farmina and Instinct, compared on source-backed label facts. Public scoring is not active on comparison pages — neither product is placed above the other; the facts sit side by side so the trade-offs are readable.

Label fact

Farmina

Farmina N&D Prime Chicken and Pomegranate Adult Mini Dry Dog Food

Instinct

Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food
Protein (min)34%36.5%
Fat (min)18%20.5%
Fiber (max)2.6%3.5%
Moisture (max)9%10%
Calories3999 kcal/kg4460 kcal/kg
First ingredientsFresh deboned chicken (26%), dried chicken meat (25%), sweet potato, chicken fat, dried whole eggsRabbit, Salmon Meal, Menhaden Fish Meal, Chickpeas, Canola Oil (preserved with Mixed Tocopherols)

Listed label values

Scaled to the larger listed value per axis. Larger means a larger listed amount — not better. Missing values stay at zero and are reported as not listed.

ProteinFatFiberCarbsCaloriesIngredientquality
  • Farmina N&D Prime Chicken and Pomegranate Adult Mini Dry Dog Food
  • Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food
Per-axis percentages for the compared items.
AxisFarmina N&D Prime Chicken and Pomegranate Adult Mini Dry Dog FoodOriginal Rabbit Dry Dog Food
Protein34%36.5%
Fat18%20.5%
Fiber2.6%3.5%
CarbsNot listedNot listed
Calories432 kcal/cup524 kcal/cup
Ingredient qualityNot listedNot listed

Differences worth noting

  • Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food lists a higher protein minimum (36.5% vs 34%). Whether that fits depends on the pet, not the number alone.
  • Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food is more calorie-dense (4460 vs 3999 kcal/kg) — feeding amounts differ accordingly.
  • Farmina N&D Prime Chicken and Pomegranate Adult Mini Dry Dog Food is labeled grain-free; Original Rabbit Dry Dog Food is not. Ask your veterinarian which matters for your pet.

Similar comparisons

Label facts come from official sources and can change with reformulations. This page compares recorded facts only — it does not evaluate fit for an individual pet. For diet questions tied to a health condition, ask your veterinarian.