When people ask us what makes Loyal Saints different, we give them a long list: human-grade ingredients, no soy, no corn, no GMOs, AAFCO-complete, made in the USA. All true. All important.
But the real answer is simpler than that.
Loyal Saints was built by a dog mom who refused to accept that her dog had to suffer through a life of processed food, chronic inflammation, and vet visits that never quite got to the root cause.
The Dog Behind the Brand
King is a dog. He's also the reason Loyal Saints exists.
A few years ago, King started showing signs that something was wrong. Dull coat. Persistent digestive issues. Low energy. The kind of slow decline that vets often chalk up to "getting older" or "sensitive stomach." Kristina Voltin, King's owner and the founder of Loyal Saints, knew it wasn't that simple.
She started researching. Not just pet food blogs — actual canine nutrition science. She learned about the difference between bioavailable protein and processed meal. About what high-heat extrusion does to enzymes. About what soy, corn, and artificial preservatives do to a dog's gut microbiome over time.
And she started feeding King differently.
The change was not subtle. Within weeks, King's coat came back. His digestion normalized. His energy returned. He was a different dog — or rather, he became the dog he was always supposed to be.
From Kitchen Research to Real Brand
Kristina didn't set out to build a pet food company. She set out to solve a problem for her dog. But when the results were that clear — and when she realized most dog owners had no idea this kind of food even existed at an accessible price point — she couldn't not build it.
Loyal Saints launched in 2024 out of Minneapolis, MN. It is 100% woman-owned and woman-led. Every formula, every sourcing decision, every design choice reflects what Kristina would choose for King. Because she is choosing it. Every day.
Why Woman-Owned Matters
Women make the majority of pet food purchasing decisions in US households. The premium pet food market has been dominated for decades by brands built by corporations, for profit margins, marketed back at the very women doing the buying.
Loyal Saints is different not just because a woman owns it — but because the brand exists to serve dog moms, not extract from them. The formulas are built around what's best for the dog, not what's cheapest to produce. The marketing tells the truth about ingredients instead of hiding behind vague terms like "real meat" and "balanced nutrition."
It's the clean beauty ethos applied to pet food: your dog deserves the same ingredient standards you hold for yourself.
The Brand You Can Actually Trust
Woman-owned businesses in the consumer space — from Skims to Glossier to Rare Beauty — have built loyal followings not through mass advertising but through radical transparency and product quality that actually backs up the promise.
That's the standard Loyal Saints holds itself to. Not because it's a marketing angle. Because Kristina's dog eats this food every single day.
If you've been looking for a dog food brand you can actually trust — from someone who has the same skin in the game you do — you found it.
