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Dog Enrichment Toys

"The Odin" Enrichment Treat Dispenser Toy for Dogs

Up Dog Toys
Original price £19.95 - Original price £19.95
Original price
£19.95
£19.95 - £19.95
Current price £19.95

A treat dispensing enrichment dog toy with a modern, modular design. Put treats into the flaps and let your dog toss and roll The Odin around to g...

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Original price £19.95 - Original price £19.95
Original price
£19.95
£19.95 - £19.95
Current price £19.95
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FAQs

What are the best enrichment toys for dogs?

The best enrichment toys depend on your dog's personality and how they like to play. If your dog is food motivated, treat dispensers like the Woof Pupsicle, West Paw Toppls and SodaPup Honey Pots are brilliant, as they're fillable, freezable and keep dogs working for their reward. For sniffers and foragers, snuffle mats and toys are a great shout. If your dog loves a challenge, puzzle toys like the Woof Flyball 2-in-1 or the KONG Rewards Tinker will really put their brain to work. For calmer, licking-based enrichment, a lick mat like the Woof LickMat or SodaPup Lighthouse Mat is a firm favourite. The honest answer? Most dogs benefit from having a mix of all of the above.

What to put in dog enrichment toys?

The classics work brilliantly are dog peanut butter, wet food, dog pate and plain yoghurt are all great choices for lick mats and fillable toys like Toppls and Pupsicles. For treat dispensers, small training treats or kibble work well as they tumble out easily. Want to make it last longer? Fill the toy with your chosen filling and pop it in the freezer for an hour or two before giving it to your dog. It turns a 5-minute activity into a 20-minute one. You can also layer different fillings in a Toppl or Pupsicle for extra variety. Just make sure everything you use is dog-safe and there is no xylitol, onion, grapes or anything from the avoid list.

How to make dog enrichment toys?

You don't need to make enrichment toys from scratch when there are so many brilliant ready-made options, but there's plenty you can do to make them even more rewarding at home. The easiest trick is freezing. Take any fillable toy like a Woof Pupsicle, West Paw Toppl or SodaPup Honey Pot, fill it with peanut butter, wet food or dog pate and freeze it overnight. You can also hide treats or chews inside snuffle mats or bury them in a snuffle toy to create a DIY foraging activity. Layering different textures and flavours inside a Toppl like kibble, soft food and a natural treat, also adds variety and extends the challenge. Simple, but really effective.

Why are enrichment toys good for dogs?

Dogs are intelligent animals that need mental stimulation just as much as they need physical exercise and enrichment toys deliver exactly that. When a dog has to sniff, problem-solve, lick or work for their food, it activates the parts of their brain that keep them calm, focused and satisfied. The slow licking action of a lick mat has been shown to reduce anxiety and stress, which is why they're so popular for grooming sessions, fireworks nights and vet visits. Treat dispensers and puzzle toys help reduce boredom-related behaviours like chewing furniture or excessive barking. Slow feeder bowls extend mealtimes and support better digestion. In short, a dog that gets regular enrichment is a happier, calmer and better-behaved dog and that's better for everyone.