Walk into any pet store and the aisles are organized by toy type — chew, fetch, plush, puzzle. The packaging is organized by dog size — small, medium, large. Neither of those tells you anything useful about whether a specific toy will work for a specific dog.
A 40lb Border Collie and a 40lb Basset Hound are the same size. They need completely different toys. A power chewer pit mix and a toy-cautious senior lab can both weigh 65lbs. One will destroy a Kong in three days; the other has never broken a toy in her life. Size is noise. The real inputs are chew strength, drive level, behavioral need, and supervision context.
This framework is how we think about it in our training work. Four questions, four answers. Your answers map to one of six dog profiles, and each profile maps to specific categories (and specific products we’ve actually tested in our 2026 Durability Study).
Your four answers point to one of six profiles below. Each profile includes the category of toy that actually works, the products we’ve tested that earned a B grade or better in our Durability Study, and what to avoid.
A+B
Calm
If you answered mostly
The Anxious Dog
Gentle-to-moderate chew style, low-to-moderate drive, anxiety or under-exercise-driven restlessness as the main problem, often semi-supervised. The goal for most anxious dogs is self-soothing through licking, sniffing, and slow food work — but a meaningful subset of “anxious” dogs are actually under-exercised dogs whose nervous system has no outlet.
Matched products
- Kong Classic — stuffed and frozen. The gold standard for alone-time calming.
- PAW5 Wooly Snuffle Mat — for foraging-based calming
- Silicone lick mat with frozen peanut butter or yogurt
- Whimsy Stick Rugged XL — only if the anxiety is rooted in under-exercise. A short, structured flirt pole session before alone-time can dramatically reduce anxious behaviors in dogs whose real problem is unspent energy, not separation distress.
Avoid: Squeaky toys (arousal spike), fast-dispense treat toys (frustration spike). Calming means slow — except when the anxiety is actually unspent drive, in which case a pre-crate physical outlet is the real answer.
B+B
Average
If you answered mostly
The Average House Dog
Moderate chew, moderate drive, general boredom as the main behavioral need, any supervision level. The majority of family dogs land here. You need toys that handle normal use, offer some enrichment, and don’t require professional-grade materials.
Matched products
Avoid: Cheap “variety packs” — buying four mediocre toys instead of one great one wastes money and teaches the dog that toys are disposable.
D+D
Drive
If you answered mostly
The Working Dog
High-to-extreme drive, reactivity or prey-drive fixation as the main problem, supervised or semi-supervised use. Malinois, Border Collie, working lines of any breed. This dog doesn’t need toys — they need training tools that satisfy the predatory motor pattern.
Matched products
Avoid: Any flirt pole with a fixed rigid pole under 36 inches, any fetch ball that fits fully inside the dog’s mouth (choking hazard on high-drive dogs).
A+A
Senior
If you answered mostly
The Senior Dog
Gentle chew, low drive, boredom or mental stimulation as the main need, typically supervised. Jaw strength and joint health matter more than durability now. The dog still needs engagement — just gentler.
Matched products
- Soft rubber Kong Senior — easier on older teeth and gums
- Snuffle mat or licky mat — mental work without physical strain
- Light plush with squeaker — supervised only, for comfort
Avoid: Hard nylon (splintering risk on softer older teeth), flirt poles (too much torque on aging joints), fetch at full sprint.
C+B
Power
If you answered mostly
The Power Chewer
Aggressive chew style, moderate-to-high drive, boredom or destructive chewing as the main behavioral need. Your dog needs something built for tough jaws — and enough enrichment to prevent chewing from becoming property damage.
Matched products
- West Paw Qwizl — B+ durability, safest nylon-alternative stuffable
- Kong Extreme (Black) — upgraded rubber for power chewers
- Goughnuts MAXX Stick — engineered rubber built specifically for aggressive chewers
Avoid: Nylon bones (splintering), rope toys (ingestion), anything marketed “indestructible” without a durability guarantee.
D+C
Safety
If you answered mostly
The Destroyer
Destructive chew, moderate-to-high drive, history of ingesting toy fragments. This dog is one bad toy choice from a vet visit. Safety comes before every other criterion — including durability and engagement.
Matched products
- West Paw Qwizl (Large) — one-piece, non-fragmenting
- Goughnuts MAXX Stick — designed specifically for aggressive chewers, with a built-in safety indicator
- Supervised-only play with high-drive outlets like the Whimsy Stick Rugged XL to burn the intensity that drives the destruction
Avoid: Everything with stuffing, squeakers, ropes, plastic, nylon, or marketing claims that contradict your dog’s actual track record.