Which packaging trends are dominating pet food in 2026?
Three developments currently stand out particularly: Firstly, the product world is changing due to the trend towards smaller dogs. This is noticeably increasing demand for smaller packaging sizes. Secondly, the phenomenon of "pet parenting" is shaping many customers' expectations. Pet owners increasingly view their animals as family members, which heightens the emotionality of purchasing decisions. Accordingly, more elaborate packaging designs and simultaneously highly functional, practical solutions are in demand. And thirdly, sustainability remains the dominant cross-cutting theme – as in virtually all other consumer goods categories.
Are there packaging formats or types that are particularly in high demand?
In the dry food sector, pouches and sacks continue to dominate, albeit with a clear trend towards smaller packaging sizes that nevertheless contain multiple portions. In the wet food segment, however, individual portion sizes are clearly the standard.
Particularly interesting is the growing demand for packaging with so-called paper feel. These surfaces are intuitively perceived by consumers as more sustainable. The sustainability impulse arises not only rationally, but also emotionally. It manifests immediately in haptics and appearance and can significantly influence purchasing decisions.
What must retailers pay attention to when selling pet food?
Clarity and consistency in product presentation are crucial. The product must be correctly positioned and effectively showcased, for example through displays. Furthermore, the brand should be recognisable to the buyer at first glance. Customers shouldn't have to search. Those who are displayed confusingly on the shelf lose out to the competition, regardless of how good the product is.
What's also important: products should be clearly and consistently linked to their brand. Brand trust arises primarily through visual recognition, and that begins with the packaging.
What role does packaging design play in pet food?
An immense one. A new customer often decides within seconds based on appearance whether they'll even pick up a product. Given the multitude of market participants, design is a central lever for differentiation. This begins with colours, for instance natural tones for natural food. It continues with imagery, such as depicting specific dog and cat breeds that convey emotions like health, activity and joie de vivre. And it extends to targeted control of brand perception. Premium or discount – customers decide this within seconds.
Beyond this, packaging is the most important information carrier on the shelf. Particularly in the pet food market, few customers read the ingredients list. Instead, claims and icons take over this communication function: "70% meat", "grain free", "for joints", "senior" – these are the messages that are perceived.
Finally, packaging transports the entire brand world. This involves storytelling about the origin of ingredients, clear colour codes for different varieties, or a consistent premium look with matt surfaces. Many customers remain loyal to a brand because they've developed trust in its appearance. Packaging thus forms the bridge between product and brand.