Maltipoo Food Guide for Indian Pet Parents (Maltipoo)
8 min read · Updated May 2026
Maltipoos need dental-priority diets and hypoglycemia prevention (small frequent meals). Hybrid vigour helps, but dental disease is still the dominant health risk.
In this guide
- Maltipoo — Breed at a Glance
- Nutritional Personality of the Maltipoo
- What Can Maltipoos Eat Safely? (Indian Kitchen Guide)
- Danger Zone — What Maltipoos Must NEVER Eat
- 3 Homemade Recipes for Maltipoos (Indian Katori Measures)
- Maltipoo Feeding Schedule — Age-Wise Guide
- 7 Common Feeding Mistakes Maltipoo Owners Make in India
- Frequently Asked Questions — Maltipoo Food in India
- Related Food Safety Guides
Maltipoo — Breed at a Glance
Common Health Risks
- Dental disease (Maltese inheritance)
- Patellar luxation
- Hypoglycemia
- Addison's disease (Poodle)
- Epilepsy
Nutritional Personality of the Maltipoo
Maltipoos combine the Maltese's severe dental disease predisposition with the Poodle's Addison's disease risk — both require nutritional attention. Their hybrid vigour generally gives better health than either parent, but the dental issue dominates: small jaw, crowded teeth, and serious periodontal disease by age 4 if diet and hygiene are neglected. Clean whole-food diets with dental-supporting textures and low sugar dramatically reduce dental disease progression.
What Can Maltipoos Eat Safely? (Indian Kitchen Guide)
These foods are safe and nutritious for Maltipoos when prepared correctly — plain, fully cooked, no salt, no spices, no onion or garlic. All quantities assume an adult small breed dog.
Proteins
- ✅Finely shredded boiled chicken
- ✅Chopped hard-boiled egg
- ✅Crumbled low-fat paneer
- ✅Small pieces of steamed fish (fully deboned)
- ✅Plain dahi (unsweetened yogurt)
Vegetables
- ✅Finely grated boiled carrot
- ✅Mashed boiled pumpkin
- ✅Chopped steamed broccoli
- ✅Mashed sweet potato
- ✅Tiny bits of boiled spinach
Fruits
- ✅Tiny apple pieces (no seeds)
- ✅Small banana pieces
- ✅Blueberries (halved)
- ✅Watermelon (tiny cubes, no seeds)
Carbohydrates
- ✅Cooked white rice
- ✅Mashed sweet potato
- ✅Small amount of plain roti (no ghee)
- ✅Cooked daliya
Danger Zone — What Maltipoos Must NEVER Eat
All of the following are toxic to dogs regardless of breed, and many are Indian-kitchen staples. Onion, garlic and grapes can do permanent organ damage even in small quantities.
| Food | Risk Level | Why It Is Dangerous |
|---|---|---|
| Onion & Garlic (Pyaaz / Lehsun) | TOXIC | All forms — raw, cooked, powder, bhuna — cause haemolytic anaemia |
| Grapes & Raisins (Angoor / Kishmish) | TOXIC | Cause acute kidney failure; even 1–2 grapes can be fatal |
| Chocolate (Chocolate) | TOXIC | Theobromine causes seizures and heart failure; dark chocolate is most dangerous |
| Xylitol (artificial sweetener) | TOXIC | Found in sugar-free chewing gum and some protein bars; causes rapid hypoglycemia |
| Alcohol | TOXIC | Any form, including festival sweets made with alcohol or beer-based treats |
| Spiced Indian food (curry, masala, mirchi) | DANGEROUS | Salt, chilli, spices, garam masala cause digestive distress and long-term kidney damage |
| Ghee & oily scraps | DANGEROUS FOR MOST | High-fat Indian cooking fat causes pancreatitis; dangerous for Labs, Schnauzers, obese dogs |
| Roti with ghee/butter | USE CAUTION | High carb + fat combo causes weight gain and digestive issues when fed regularly |
| Raw/undercooked chicken or eggs | USE CAUTION | Risk of Salmonella; always fully cook all protein before feeding |
| Mango pit (aam ki gutli) | DANGEROUS | Choking hazard and contains trace cyanide — remove entirely before feeding mango |
| Tea or chai | DANGEROUS | Caffeine is toxic; Indian chai with milk, sugar, and spices has multiple hazards |
Feeding an Indie dog (INDog)? India's own Pariah Dog sits apart when it comes to nutrition. See the INDog Food Guide →
3 Homemade Recipes for Maltipoos (Indian Katori Measures)
All recipes use common Indian ingredients. Keep all cooking plain: no salt, no oil, no spice, no onion or garlic. We measure in katori — one standard Indian cup is about 150–180 ml.
Recipe 1: Mini Chicken Bowl ~140 kcal
- 50 g boneless chicken (boiled, finely shredded)
- 1 katori cooked white rice (small katori)
- 2 tbsp boiled mashed carrot
- 2 tbsp plain dahi
- ½ tsp flaxseed oil
Method: Boil chicken thoroughly. Shred into tiny pieces suitable for small mouths. Mix with rice, carrot, and dahi. Small breeds need smaller, more frequent meals and tinier bite sizes. No salt, no spices.
Recipe 2: Egg-Paneer Mini Meal ~120 kcal
- 1 whole egg (hard-boiled, chopped fine)
- 30 g unsalted paneer (crumbled small)
- 1 katori cooked rice
- 2 tbsp boiled pumpkin (kaddu, mashed)
- 1 tbsp plain dahi
Method: Hard-boil egg, chop finely. Crumble paneer small. Mix all together. Small breeds have tiny stomachs but high metabolisms — quality protein in small quantities is key. Never bulk-feed with rice alone.
Recipe 3: Fish-Rice Tiny Bowl ~110 kcal
- 40 g rohu or pomfret fillet (steamed, deboned completely)
- 1 katori rice
- 2 tbsp boiled spinach
- 1 tbsp plain dahi
- ¼ tsp turmeric (haldi)
Method: Steam fish. Remove every tiny bone. Flake into minute pieces. Mix with rice, spinach, dahi, and turmeric. Small breeds benefit from fish's omega-3 for their often-sensitive skin and coats.
Maltipoo Feeding Schedule — Age-Wise Guide
| Life Stage | Frequency | Approximate Quantity |
|---|---|---|
| Puppy (8–16 weeks) | 4× daily | 30–50 g per meal |
| Puppy (4–6 months) | 3× daily | 40–60 g per meal |
| Puppy (6–12 months) | 3× daily | 50–80 g per meal |
| Adult (1+ years) | 2–3× daily | 80–140 g per meal |
| Senior (7+ years) | 2–3× daily | 60–100 g per meal |
7 Common Feeding Mistakes Maltipoo Owners Make in India
- Feeding Maltipoo Indian curry or spiced food scraps — salt, onion, garlic, and chilli all cause cumulative health damage
- Using ghee or butter on roti to 'improve' the taste — fat-heavy additions risk pancreatitis and obesity in Maltipoos
- Not measuring portions and instead 'eyeballing' — most dogs in India are overfed by 20–30% by owners who underestimate portions
- Giving bones from cooked chicken or mutton — cooked bones splinter and cause internal perforations; only raw recreational bones are safe under supervision
- Switching the Maltipoo's food abruptly — always transition over 7–10 days to prevent severe digestive upset
- Ignoring water intake — dogs in Indian heat need constant access to fresh, clean water; dehydration is common in summer
- Dental disease is severe and rapid in Maltipoos — daily tooth brushing and dental diet texture from age 6 months; untreated periodontal disease shortens life significantly
People Also Ask — Maltipoo Food Questions
Indian pet parents frequently ask these questions about feeding Maltipoos:
3 Common Myths About Feeding Maltipoos in India
❌ Myth 1: "Home-cooked Indian food is perfectly fine for Maltipoos"
Plain, unseasoned home-cooked food is absolutely appropriate for Maltipoos — but the critical word is plain. Indian family meals lean on onion, garlic, salt, chilli, garam masala and ghee across the board. These ingredients are toxic or harmful to dogs. A Maltipoo eating regular dal, sabzi, or curry faces cumulative kidney damage, haemolytic anaemia (from allium vegetables), and gastrointestinal disease over time. Prepare their food separately with zero seasoning.
❌ Myth 2: "My Maltipoo has been eating this for years without problems — it must be fine"
Plenty of dangerous foods accumulate damage unseen until the body hits a breaking point. Low-dose onion, fed regularly, produces haemolytic anaemia over a matter of months. Damage to the kidneys from salt shows no signs until roughly 75% of function is lost. The fact that your Maltipoo has not collapsed or vomited does not mean their organs are unaffected. Once-a-year bloods and urinalysis flag this damage early, frequently uncovering harm from so-called harmless kitchen scraps.
❌ Myth 3: "Protein supplements from the gym are safe for dogs"
With India's fitness culture booming, many pet owners share whey protein, creatine, and gym supplements with their Maltipoo believing it will build muscle. Human protein supplements pack sweeteners — frequently fatal-to-dogs xylitol — plus artificial flavours and mineral ratios unsuited to canine physiology. For protein, lean on whole foods like boiled chicken, eggs, fish and paneer. Never give human gym supplements to your Maltipoo.
Dr. Ananya Sharma — Veterinarian Expert View
"In Indian small-animal practice the same preventable problems recur in Maltipoos: chronic kidney strain from salty food, anaemia from kitchen scraps, and obesity from uncontrolled feeding. The good news is that these are entirely preventable with simple dietary discipline. Clean proteins, measured portions, zero table scraps, and annual health checks will give your Maltipoo significantly better health outcomes and a longer, healthier life in the Indian context."
— Dr. Ananya Sharma, BVSc & AH · Veterinary Council of India Registered
Maltipoo Dental Health — Preventing India's Most Common Maltipoo Problem
The Maltipoo (Maltese × Poodle cross) combines the dental vulnerability of both parent breeds — the Maltese's tooth-crowding and the Poodle's small jaw — into one of the toy breeds most susceptible to early, severe periodontal disease. In India, where commercial pet dental products are limited and brushing routines are rarely established, Maltipoos frequently develop significant dental disease by age 3–4 that causes chronic pain and organ damage.
Why Dental Disease Is So Severe in Maltipoos
Toy breed crosses like the Maltipoo have adult-sized teeth in a miniature jaw — teeth are crowded and overlapping, creating food-trap surfaces ideal for bacterial biofilm development. India's humid climate and high-sugar treat culture (biscuits, fruits as treats, rice-and-milk meals) create optimal conditions for rapid tartar accumulation. At 4 kg, even a single tooth abscess causes proportionally enormous pain.
Dental Nutrition and Care Protocol
- Daily teeth brushing with dog-safe enzymatic toothpaste — start from puppyhood; make it a positive routine
- Include dry kibble in diet — wet-only or home-cooked-only diets deprive the teeth of any mechanical cleaning
- Raw carrot chunks as primary treat — provides mechanical dental cleaning at minimal calories
- VOHC-approved dental chews 3–4× weekly — avoid rawhide; use safer vegetable-based alternatives
- Professional dental cleaning every 18 months under anaesthesia — an investment that prevents tooth loss and bacteraemia
- Avoid sweet treats — sugar directly feeds oral bacteria that produce the acids destroying enamel
Frequently Asked Questions — Maltipoo Food in India
What is the best food for a Maltipoo in India?
Maltipoos in India do best on a home-cooked diet of boiled chicken, plain rice, boiled vegetables like carrot and pumpkin, and cooked eggs. Quality commercially available dog food formulated for small breeds is also appropriate. The real key is keeping Indian kitchen scraps — salt, spices, onion, garlic, ghee — away from the dog entirely.
How much should I feed my Maltipoo per day?
An adult Maltipoo (2–7 kg) needs 2 meals per day. The schedule below is a starting point; refine it by body condition, aiming to feel the ribs with gentle pressure without them being prominent. Puppies need 3–4 smaller meals daily. Always measure portions — never free-feed.
Can Maltipoos eat roti and dal?
Plain roti (no ghee, no salt) in small amounts is acceptable occasionally for Maltipoos. A reasonable plant-protein top-up is plain dal (moong or masoor), cooked without spices or tadka. That said, roti and dal alone leave gaps; pair them with good animal protein for a complete diet. Leave ghee and tempering out of your dog's food entirely.
Can Maltipoos eat Indian street food or hotel food scraps?
No. Restaurant and street-food scraps almost always carry onion, garlic, chilli, salt, oil and spices, none of which suit a dog. Onion and garlic damage red blood cells cumulatively, even in small doses, leading to haemolytic anaemia. The salt in restaurant food puts a strain on the kidneys. Say no to Indian cooking scraps without exception.
What are the most dangerous foods for Maltipoos in India?
The most dangerous Indian kitchen items for Maltipoos are: (1) Onion and garlic in any form — toxic to red blood cells, (2) Grapes and raisins — cause acute kidney failure, (3) Chocolate — contains theobromine which causes seizures, (4) Xylitol (in sugar-free products) — causes fatal blood sugar crash, (5) Spiced food with salt and chilli — long-term kidney and digestive damage.
Should I give supplements to my Maltipoo?
The most beneficial supplement for Maltipoos in India is omega-3 fish oil (1,000–2,000 mg per day for small breeds) — it supports coat health, reduces inflammation, and benefits joints. Where the diet is largely homemade, add a balanced canine multivitamin for micronutrients. Don't add calcium on top of the diet — too much causes bone-development problems in young dogs.
When should I call the vet for my Maltipoo's eating issue?
Call your vet immediately if your Maltipoo: (1) Refuses food for more than 24 hours (12 hours for puppies and small breeds), (2) Vomits more than twice in one day or has bloody vomit, (3) Has a visibly distended or hard abdomen, (4) Shows extreme lethargy alongside appetite loss, (5) Ate something potentially toxic (onion, chocolate, grapes, medication). Emergency contacts: IVRI Bareilly: 0581-2301418 | BlueCross Chennai: 044-22350170 | CCSEA India: check local city emergency vet.
How much should a Maltipoo eat per day in India?
Daily food intake for a Maltipoo depends on age, weight, activity level, and whether you feed home-cooked or commercial food. Begin with the feeding-schedule table and do a monthly body-condition check from there. You want palpable ribs under a soft touch, not ribs you can see. Looking down, an obvious waist behind the ribs is the goal. During hot months, raise intake slightly for active dogs and drop it well back for inactive indoor ones. Never free-feed — measure every meal.
Can Maltipoos eat curd (dahi) and paneer?
Plain, unsalted, unsweetened dahi (yogurt) is beneficial for Maltipoos — the probiotics support gut health, which is especially useful during antibiotic treatment or monsoon season when food-borne bacterial exposure is higher. Two to four tablespoons as a topper, a couple of times a week, works well. Unsalted, low-fat plain paneer makes excellent protein; home-set is best. Avoid the flavoured-dahi, sweet-yogurt and masala-paneer versions sold and cooked for people. If a dog is lactose-sensitive, expect soft stools — reduce the portion and keep an eye on it.
Sources & References
This Maltipoo food guide references the following authoritative sources:
- American Kennel Club (AKC) — Breed Nutrition Guidelines
- VCA Animal Hospitals — General Feeding Guidelines for Dogs
- ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center — Toxic Foods for Dogs
- National Institute of Nutrition (NIN), Hyderabad — Nutritional Data for Indian Foods
- Indian Council of Agricultural Research (ICAR) — Animal Nutrition Division
- Veterinary Council of India (VCI) — Professional Standards for Veterinary Practice
- Merck Veterinary Manual — Small Animal Nutrition
Related Food Safety Guides
Learn exactly which specific foods are safe or dangerous for your Maltipoo:
Popular food-safety guides Maltipoo owners check
Quick vet-reviewed answers to the foods Indian Maltipoo owners ask about most — tap any to see safe portions.




