For dog owners who care about the details

Everything about your dog's health — organized in one place.

Track vaccinations, medications, symptoms, weight, allergies, food safety and veterinary visits with PetSynk's modern dog health platform. One calm timeline per dog. Built for households, designed for everyday owners — not data scientists.

Private by design. Works for one dog or a whole household.

petsynk.com / max's dog profile
Max
Labrador · 6 yrs · 28.4 kg
All current
  • Rabies boosterDue in 42 days
  • Apoquel · once dailyAdherence 96%
  • Weight 28.4 kg+0.6 kg / 90d
  • Annual wellness examLogged 12 days ago
  • Chicken sensitivityConfirmed by veterinarian
Why it matters

Most of what your veterinarian needs lives in your head.

Dog health is rarely one event — it's a slow accumulation of small things. A booster from 2022. A skin flare-up last spring. The new food you tried in July. The mild limp that came and went. None of it lives in one place, and most of it gets forgotten by the next veterinary visit.

Veterinary records are fragmented by default

Different clinics, paper printouts, email PDFs and lab portals — your dog's history is scattered across systems that don't talk to each other. When something serious happens, that scattering costs time.

Vaccines and boosters are easy to forget

Annual rabies, DHPP boosters, leptospirosis, kennel cough, lyme — schedules vary by region, lifestyle and breed. A single missed reminder can mean a kennel turns you away or a travel plan falls apart.

Medication adherence quietly slips

Long courses of antibiotics, daily allergy meds, joint supplements — they all rely on routine. Without a record, it's hard to know whether a dose was missed, doubled, or simply skipped because nobody could remember.

Long-term symptoms only show in patterns

An itch in March, again in May, again in July — three isolated events on paper, an obvious seasonal allergy in a timeline. Most chronic dog conditions reveal themselves through patterns owners can't see without help.

Emergencies don't wait for paperwork

If your dog ingests something toxic, gets injured on holiday, or needs an after-hours veterinarian, the first question is always: what's their history? Having vaccinations, allergies and medications in one place can change the outcome.

Multi-dog households compound the chaos

Two dogs, three caregivers, four veterinarians over a lifetime — without one shared record, doses get repeated, appointments get missed, and you end up answering the same intake form for the fifth time.

What you can track

One profile per dog. Everything that matters, in the right place.

PetSynk doesn't try to log every step or count every kibble. It focuses on the records owners actually revisit — the ones veterinarians ask about, the ones that matter when something changes.

Vaccinations

Core and lifestyle vaccines, lot numbers, due dates and reminders — for every dog in your home.

Veterinary visits

A chronological history of every consult: reason, diagnosis, treatment and follow-up.

Medications

Doses, frequency, start and end dates, with adherence tracking and refill awareness.

Allergies

Known allergens, reactions and severity — visible the moment you open your dog's profile.

Symptoms

Quick notes for itching, limping, coughing, GI issues — patterns surface over weeks, not guesses.

Weight tracking

Body weight and condition score over time, with trend lines that catch quiet drift early.

Food & ingredient safety

Scan or search foods and treats. Flag risky ingredients before they become a problem.

Dog documents

Veterinary reports, lab results, prescriptions and pet passports — uploaded, tagged and searchable.

Microchip information

Chip ID, registry, tag number and emergency details — instantly available if your dog gets lost.

Emergency contacts

Your primary veterinarian, emergency clinic and a backup contact, kept where you can find them under pressure.

Educational hub

The dog health topics owners search most.

Short, practical overviews of the conditions and questions that come up most often. None of this replaces your veterinarian — but knowing what to look for, and what to track, makes every visit more useful.

Vaccinations

Core vaccines (DHPP, rabies) protect against the most dangerous and contagious diseases and are recommended for nearly every dog. Lifestyle vaccines — leptospirosis, lyme, bordetella, canine influenza — depend on where you live, where your dog goes, and who they spend time with. Keeping a clean record of what was given, when, and by which clinic makes it easy to answer the only question that really matters: is your dog protected today?

Food allergies & sensitivities

True food allergies are less common than people think, but food sensitivities — chicken, beef, dairy, certain grains — are a frequent cause of recurring itching, ear infections and GI upsets. The fastest way to identify a trigger is a clear log: what your dog ate, how their skin and stool looked, and when symptoms appeared. Without that record, elimination diets become guesswork.

Weight management

Roughly half of dogs in many countries are overweight or obese, which quietly shortens lifespan and worsens joint, heart and metabolic health. The fix is rarely a dramatic diet — it's portion accuracy, treat awareness and consistent monthly weigh-ins. A simple weight curve is one of the most useful long-term health signals you can keep.

Digestion issues

Occasional loose stool is normal. Repeated GI upsets — especially after specific foods, treats or new environments — are not. Logging stool quality, vomiting, appetite and what was eaten in the previous 24 hours turns vague "my dog has a sensitive stomach" into a real conversation with your veterinarian.

Aging & cognitive change

Most dogs are considered seniors somewhere between 7 and 10, depending on breed and size. Aging shows up gradually: slower stairs, longer naps, more hesitation in the dark, occasional accidents indoors. None of these are individually alarming. Together, over months, they tell a story that's worth catching early.

Skin & coat problems

Itching, hot spots, recurring ear infections and dull coat are some of the most common reasons dogs visit the veterinarian. Most are linked to allergies, parasites, diet or grooming. A short note each time it flares — what it looks like, how severe, what changed — is far more useful than trying to remember at the consult.

Exercise & wellness

Dogs need consistent activity matched to their breed, age and joint health. Too little leads to weight gain and behavioural issues; too much, especially in puppies and seniors, can cause injury. There's no single right number, but tracking how walks change with age and weather often reveals problems before lameness appears.

Preventative care

Annual wellness exams, parasite prevention (fleas, ticks, heartworm), dental hygiene and breed-appropriate screening tests are the foundation of long-term dog health. Most chronic disease in dogs is caught earlier and treated more cheaply when these basics are kept consistent — and that consistency is much easier when everything lives in one record.

Food & ingredient safety

The food bowl is the easiest health decision you make every day.

Most dog food problems aren't dramatic — they're quiet, recurring and tied to a few ingredients you don't think about. PetSynk's food scanner makes it easier to see what's in the bowl before it becomes a veterinary visit.

Scan dog food ingredients with PetSynk

Scan a barcode or search a brand. See the ingredient list, flagged additives and risky components, and compare against your dog's known sensitivities — before you fill the bowl.

Ingredient awareness

Reading a dog food label is harder than it should be. Knowing the first three ingredients, the protein source and the additive list tells you most of what you need.

Artificial additives

Artificial colours, BHA/BHT and excessive sugar add nothing nutritional and are linked to long-term issues. Cleaner labels are usually a quiet upgrade.

Toxic ingredients

Chocolate, xylitol, grapes, raisins, onions, garlic, macadamia nuts, alcohol — common in human food and dangerous in even small amounts for dogs.

Food sensitivities

Recurring ear infections, itchy paws and inconsistent stool often track back to a single protein or grain that's easy to identify with a short food log.

Treat safety

Treats can quietly contribute 20–30% of daily calories. Choosing single-ingredient treats and counting them like food is one of the highest-leverage habits.

Senior dogs & longevity

The years that matter most often need the most organization.

Senior dogs benefit enormously from small, consistent changes — earlier detection, lighter doses, calmer routines. A clean health record makes every one of those changes easier to spot and act on.

Twice-yearly check-ins

Senior dogs typically benefit from two wellness exams per year so subtle changes get caught earlier.

Mobility tracking

Stairs, jumping, getting up after rest — small declines in mobility are early signals of joint or pain issues.

Weight trends

A steady weight curve is one of the best longevity signals. Both gradual gain and unexplained loss matter.

Early symptom detection

New lumps, increased thirst, appetite changes, behavioural shifts — log them the day you notice.

Medication organization

Older dogs often take multiple medications. Clean schedules, refill reminders and adherence prevent costly mistakes.

Veterinary monitoring

Recurring blood work and urine tests are the foundation of senior care. Keep results in one place to see trends.

Why PetSynk

Not a reminder app. Not a social pet feed. A real health record.

Most pet apps either remind you when a vaccine is due or let you post photos. PetSynk is built for the quiet, structural work in between — the lifelong record that makes every other decision easier.

  • Lifelong dog health timeline
    Yes — every dog, every record
    No
    No
  • Veterinarian-ready summary export
    Yes, in seconds
    No
    No
  • Symptom + weight pattern detection
    Yes, AI-assisted
    No
    No
  • Multi-dog households
    Built in
    Limited
    Sometimes
  • Owner-controlled, private records
    Yes
    Varies
    No
  • Mobile-first, calm UI
    Yes
    Varies
    Feed-driven
Owner-controlled

Your dog, your data. You decide what's logged and who can see it.

AI-assisted

Patterns surface automatically. The AI explains; it never decides for you.

Mobile-first

Designed for the phone in your pocket at the veterinarian, on a walk, or at home.

Privacy-first

Encrypted records, no advertising, no selling of pet data — ever.

Coming next

In-depth guides for dog owners.

We're building out a library of detailed, veterinary-aware articles for the questions owners ask most. New pieces are added regularly — bookmark this page or join the waitlist to be notified.

Visit the blog
Guide

Dog vaccination guide

Core vs. non-core vaccines, schedules and what to bring to each visit.

Coming soon
Guide

Why is my dog itchy?

Allergies, parasites and skin conditions — what to track before the veterinary appointment.

Coming soon
Guide

Best food for senior dogs

Reading labels, joint support and how to adjust portions as activity drops.

Coming soon
Guide

Dog weight tracking guide

Body condition scoring, healthy ranges and when small changes matter.

Coming soon
Guide

Signs of allergies in dogs

Skin, gut and ear symptoms that often point to food or environmental triggers.

Coming soon
Guide

Senior dog care checklist

Mobility, dental, screening labs and the small daily habits that add up.

Coming soon
FAQ

Dog health, answered clearly.

The simplest approach is to log each vaccine the day it's given — name, date, lot number and clinic — and let your tracker calculate when the next booster is due. PetSynk stores every vaccination in one timeline per dog, sends gentle reminders before due dates, and lets you export a clean record for boarding, travel or a new veterinarian.
One calm place for everything that matters

Your dog's health deserves better organization.

PetSynk gives dog owners one calm, organized place for vaccinations, medications, symptoms, weight, food safety and veterinary records — for every dog in the household.