If you've ever handed your dog a "long-lasting" chew and watched it vanish before your tea had even cooled, you already know the problem. Not all natural dog chews last. Some are gone in three minutes; others keep a determined chewer settled and absorbed for the best part of an hour. This guide breaks down the natural chews that genuinely last in the UK in 2026 — which dogs they suit, what makes a chew last in the first place, and how to choose so you're not just buying a very expensive snack.
The short answer: which natural dog chews last longest?
For most dogs, the longest-lasting natural chews are dense, single-ingredient, air-dried options matched to your dog's size and chewing strength. In rough order of how long they keep a dog busy: antlers (longest, but very hard), ostrich bones (long-lasting and unusually gentle on the stomach), and rabbit ears (shorter, but the most digestible and the kindest on sensitive tummies). The "best" one isn't a single product — it's the densest chew your dog can handle safely. We'll explain why below, and tell you which of these we actually stock.
What actually makes a chew last?
Three things, mostly.
Density. Hard, air-dried natural chews — bone, antler, certain dried meats — take far longer to work through than baked biscuits or soft treats, which a dog can crunch down in moments. The harder and denser the material, the longer the job.
Single-ingredient simplicity. Chews made from one natural ingredient tend to be both more digestible and harder-wearing than processed chews bulked out with starches, glues and fillers. Fewer ingredients usually means a denser, cleaner chew — and far less to upset a sensitive stomach.
The right size for your dog. A chew that's properly sized for your dog's jaw lasts longer than one they can fit in their mouth and crunch in two bites. Too small is also a choking risk. Always size up to your dog's mouth, not down.
A quick word on safety before we get to the list: always supervise chewing, always pick a size suited to your dog, take any very hard chew away once it wears down to a piece small enough to swallow, and introduce a new chew gradually if your dog has a delicate stomach. Fresh water alongside, always.
The longest-lasting natural dog chews, compared
1. Ostrich bones — the surprise standout
Ostrich is a brilliant, under-the-radar chew, and it's the one we reach for most. Our Metatarsus Ostrich Bones (£8.99) are 100% natural and single-ingredient — ethically sourced ostrich feet bone, air-dried with nothing added, no chemicals or preservatives. They're a genuinely long-lasting dental chew for medium chewers, high in protein and essential minerals.
But the real edge is digestibility. Ostrich is hypoallergenic and low in fat, so it's gentle on sensitive stomachs and a smart choice for dogs that react to richer chews like beef, pork or rawhide. If your dog finds the usual chews too much — or comes out the other side with an upset tummy — this is the one to try. Suitable for dogs from 12 weeks.
Best for: medium chewers, sensitive stomachs, dogs with common-protein intolerances.
Lasts: a solid stretch — longer than most dried-meat chews, supervised.
Watch: take it away once it wears down to a small, swallowable piece.
2. Rabbit ears — gentle, digestible and great for fussy chewers
Our Rabbit Ears with Fur (£13.99 for a 500g bag of roughly 30–35 ears) are 100% natural rabbit, gently air-dried with the fur left on. No additives, no fillers, no preservatives — just a single ingredient that's high in protein (82%) and very low in fat (4%).
They don't last as long as a dense bone, but that's rather the point: they're a gentler, lower-intensity chew that the fur makes especially good for digestion (the natural fur adds fibre and acts as a mild, traditional gut-cleaner). They're also brilliant value when you want a daily wind-down chew rather than an hour-long project, and they suit dogs with sensitivities. A great pick for smaller dogs, lighter chewers, and puppies from 12 weeks.
Best for: small dogs, gentle chewers, digestion, daily treating.
Lasts: minutes rather than an hour — but very easy on the gut.
Watch: as with any chew, supervise and provide fresh water.
3. Antlers — the marathon option
Naturally shed antler is about the longest-lasting chew there is — a single piece can keep a power chewer occupied across many sessions. The trade-off is hardness: antlers are extremely tough, so they're best avoided for dogs prone to tooth fractures, for hard "gulper" chewers who go at everything full-force, and for puppies with developing teeth. If you do try one, choose a split antler so the marrow is exposed (gentler and more appealing) and supervise closely.
We don't currently stock antlers, so for the dogs we'd point at this category, we'd usually suggest starting with the ostrich bone above — it lasts well without the fracture risk of a solid antler.
Best for: serious, established power chewers (with healthy teeth).
Watch: very hard — not for dogs with dental issues, puppies, or aggressive gulpers.
How to match the chew to your dog
The genuinely "best" chew depends on the dog in front of you, not on a leaderboard. A gentle senior with a delicate stomach wants a rabbit ear or an ostrich bone, not a rock-hard antler. A young Labrador who treats every object as a personal challenge wants the densest, hardest option you can give safely. And a dog with food intolerances wants a single, novel protein with as little else in it as possible — which is exactly where ostrich earns its place.
As a rule of thumb: start gentler and more digestible, then move up in toughness only if your dog clearly needs more of a project to settle. A dog that chews to wind down is doing something healthy — it's how they self-soothe and take the edge off a restless afternoon. The goal is to give them a job that lasts, not to win a durability contest.
Our pick for most dogs
If we had to choose one chew for the broadest range of households, it's the ostrich bone (£8.99). It threads the needle between lasting properly and staying kind to sensitive stomachs — which covers most dogs most of the time. Pair it with a rabbit ear for everyday wind-down, and you've sorted the restless warm-afternoon stretch without a cupboard full of half-chewed disappointments.
And if the real issue isn't the chew but the dog — the one who reacts to half the treats and foods you try — then it's worth looking at the diet itself, not just what's in the treat jar. Our guide to the best dog food for sensitive stomachs in the UK covers novel-protein and grain-free options (including ostrich-based food) and how to switch a dog over gently.
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Frequently asked questions
What is the longest-lasting natural dog chew?
Naturally shed antler lasts longest of all, but it's very hard and not suitable for every dog. For a long-lasting chew that's also gentle on the stomach, a dense air-dried ostrich bone is a better all-round choice for most dogs, with rabbit ears for lighter, more digestible daily chewing.
Are ostrich bones safe for dogs?
Yes — single-ingredient, air-dried ostrich bone is a safe, natural chew when given correctly: choose a size suited to your dog, always supervise, provide fresh water, and take the chew away once it wears down to a small piece that could be swallowed. Ostrich is hypoallergenic and low in fat, so it's also one of the gentler options for dogs with sensitive stomachs. Suitable from 12 weeks.
What are the best chews for a dog with a sensitive stomach?
Single-ingredient, low-fat, novel-protein chews are kindest on a sensitive stomach because there's very little in them to react to. Ostrich bones and rabbit ears are both single-ingredient and naturally low in fat, which makes them good starting points. Introduce any new chew gradually and watch how your dog gets on.
How long should a chew last my dog?
It varies hugely by dog and by chew — anywhere from a few minutes (a rabbit ear for a gentle chewer) to the best part of an hour or more (a dense bone for a moderate chewer), to many sessions (an antler for a power chewer). Match the density of the chew to how hard your dog chews: gentle chewers do well with softer, more digestible chews, while strong chewers need denser options to get a proper, lasting job out of it.
How often can I give my dog a natural chew?
Natural chews are treats, so they're best given alongside a balanced diet rather than instead of meals. A daily wind-down chew is fine for many dogs; just factor the calories into their day and always supervise. If your dog has a sensitive stomach, start with one smaller chew and build up slowly.
Featured in this guide: Metatarsus Ostrich Bones (£8.99) · Rabbit Ears with Fur (£13.99). Both 100% natural, single-ingredient and gentle on sensitive stomachs. Free UK shipping over £30.