Dog Bowls

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PupClub Couture - Designed in the UK

Designed in the UK

Worldwide shipping and easy returns - pupclub couture

Worldwide Shipping & Easy Returns

5 products

Collection: Dog Bowls

Shop stylish, durable dog bowls designed for real UK conditions — from heavyweight ceramic everyday bowls to slow-feeders that turn 30-second meals into 8–15 minutes of calm enrichment. Whether you need a sturdy ceramic set for home feeding, a collapsible travel bowl that clips to a dog walking bag, or a raised feeder for an older dog, you'll find a bowl built to last across the range.

Read more about Dog Bowls

About Our Dog Bowls

Our Dog Bowls collection is curated for British dog parents who want feeding time to be tidy, healthy, and on-brand with the rest of their home. We hand-pick designs in materials that hold up to daily use — heavyweight ceramic that resists tipping, food-safe stainless steel that's dishwasher friendly, and clever slow-feeder shapes that turn meals into mini enrichment sessions. Every bowl is sized for real UK kitchens and real UK dogs, with non-slip bases and edges that won't scratch tile or laminate.

What's in the Dog Bowl Range

The collection groups into three core types. Ceramic dog bowls are the heavyweight everyday option — thick walls, glazed interiors that won't harbour bacteria, and weighty bases that stay put on hard floors. Slow-feeder bowls use raised ridges or maze patterns to slow eating to 8–15 minutes, easing digestion and reducing bloat risk for fast eaters (especially handy for Labradors, Cockers, and any pup who treats kibble like a race). Travel and walk bowls include collapsible silicone designs, leak-proof options, and lightweight bowls that clip to a walking bag. We also stock raised feeders for older or larger dogs, and our bowls pair naturally with our dog lick mats for full mealtime enrichment.

How to Choose the Right Dog Bowl

Three things decide the right bowl: your dog's size, their eating style, and where they'll eat. Match bowl capacity to one full meal's volume — a Chihuahua needs roughly 100–200ml, a Labrador 400–600ml. Width matters too: flat-faced breeds (Pugs, French Bulldogs, Cavaliers) do better with shallow, wide bowls that don't press on their nose.

If your dog inhales food in under 60 seconds, a slow-feeder is the single biggest welfare upgrade you can make — it lowers the risk of bloat and helps with weight management. Calm, methodical eaters can stick with a standard ceramic. A bowl on tile or laminate needs a non-slip silicone base or a weighted ceramic body. For travel, prioritise lightweight collapsible silicone. Households with two dogs should pick clearly different patterns or colours to avoid food-bowl squabbles.

Types of Dog Bowl Explained

  • Ceramic dog bowls — heavy, dishwasher-safe, scratch-resistant; best for everyday home feeding.
  • Stainless steel bowls — light, virtually unbreakable, hygienic; popular for kennels and active households.
  • Slow-feeder bowls — raised patterns slow eating to 8–15 minutes; ideal for fast eaters and bloat-prone breeds.
  • Raised / elevated feeders — reduce neck strain for senior, large, or arthritic dogs.
  • Collapsible travel bowls — silicone, clip-friendly; great for walks, the car, and holidays.
  • Lick mats & enrichment bowls — turn mealtime into a 15-minute calming activity; read our creative ways to use lick mats guide for ideas.
  • Twin / double bowls — built-in food + water in one frame, good for tight kitchen spots.
  • Personalised dog bowls — engraved or printed designs that make a thoughtful gift.

When to Use Each Type

Different bowls earn their keep at different moments. Reach for a slow-feeder at every meal if your dog's a gobbler, or use one a few times a week alongside a standard bowl for variety. Pull out a collapsible travel bowl for walks longer than an hour, road trips, beach days, and holiday cottages — most clip straight to a dog walking bag. Raised feeders belong in the kitchen 24/7 for senior dogs or any breed over 25kg. Keep a lick mat in the freezer with yoghurt or wet food for thunderstorms and vet visits. A sturdy ceramic set is the right call for the main home feeding station — pairs naturally with our dog treats for full mealtime kit.

Cleaning & Care

Most ceramic and stainless steel bowls are dishwasher-safe on the top rack — check each product page for confirmation. Hand-wash silicone travel bowls in warm soapy water and air-dry to keep them flexible. Lick mats benefit from a quick soak before scrubbing, and the textured side should be cleaned with a soft brush rather than a scourer. Wipe ceramic bases regularly to prevent slime build-up, and replace any bowl that develops cracks or deep scratches — they trap bacteria and become impossible to deep-clean.

Why PupClub Couture

At PupClub Couture we obsess over the things you use every day. Every dog bowl is chosen for build quality first, design second — we won't list a bowl we wouldn't put down for our own dogs. Materials are food-safe, finishes are scratch and stain-resistant, and bases stay put on real kitchen floors. UK delivery is fast and returns are simple. If you're already shopping our toys & treats (and our dog collar buying guide is worth a read too), you'll recognise the same care here — bowls that look intentional in your home and last well past the puppy phase. We offer free UK shipping on orders over £40 and same-day dispatch before 1pm.

Dog Bowl FAQs

What's the best dog bowl for a fast eater?
A slow-feeder bowl is the right choice. The raised ridges or maze pattern stretch a 30-second meal into 8–15 minutes, which reduces the risk of bloat, helps with weight management, and adds light mental enrichment. They're especially worth using for Labradors, Cockers, Beagles and any dog that finishes meals before you've sat down.
Are ceramic dog bowls dishwasher-safe?
Most ceramic dog bowls are dishwasher-safe on the top rack — we confirm this on each product page. Glazed ceramic stands up to repeated hot washes far better than plastic. We'd still recommend a quick rinse after each meal, plus a deeper dishwasher cycle every few days.
What size dog bowl should I get?
Match bowl capacity to one full meal's volume, with a little headroom. As a guide: toy breeds (under 5kg) need 100–200ml, small breeds (5–10kg) 200–350ml, medium breeds (10–25kg) 350–500ml, and large breeds (25kg+) 500–800ml or more. Flat-faced breeds feed more comfortably from shallow, wide bowls.
Do slow-feeder bowls actually work?
Yes — veterinary studies show slow-feeders extend eating time by 3–10× depending on the pattern's complexity. The benefits are practical (less bloat, less regurgitation) and behavioural (calmer dogs, lower food-guarding). They work for both kibble and wet food. Start with a simpler pattern if your dog gets frustrated easily.
Should I get a raised dog bowl?
Raised feeders make sense for senior dogs, dogs with arthritis or neck issues, and very large breeds where bending to the floor is uncomfortable. For healthy adult dogs of medium size or smaller, a raised feeder isn't necessary — and in deep-chested breeds the bloat-risk research is mixed, so check with your vet if your dog is at-risk.
Can I use the same bowl for food and water?
No — use separate bowls. Food residue contaminates drinking water quickly, and dogs drink less when water tastes off, which can lead to dehydration. The simplest setup is two matching ceramic bowls (or a twin/double bowl frame) kept side-by-side, with the water bowl refilled at least once a day.
  • Free Shipping available - PupClub Couture

    Free Shipping over £40

  • PupClub Couture - Designed in the UK

    Designed in the UK

  • Worldwide shipping and easy returns - pupclub couture

    Worldwide Shipping

  • easy returns - pupclub couture

    Easy & Simple Returns - whatever the reason!

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