Free Dog Poop Analyser — Poop Inspector by Superwild

Free Dog Poop Analyser — Is Your Dog's Poop Healthy?

The free 10-second AI tool that reads your dog's stool and tells you what it really means. A dog poop colour and consistency checker for UK dog owners.

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Free · Private · Instant · No signup needed

How Poop Inspector Works

  1. 1. Snap a photo

    Snap your dog's stool. Phone camera, daylight, fill the frame.

  2. 2. AI analyses

    Our AI reads consistency, colour, content and volume in seconds.

  3. 3. Get your plan

    A Bristol Scale read, a Gut Score out of 100, and what we'd do next.

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What We Check in Your Dog's Stool

We assess your dog's stool against the Bristol stool scale used by veterinary professionals worldwide. We look at consistency, colour, content and volume to spot the signals that matter for dog gut health.

Consistency

Bristol Stool Scale 1-7, the single biggest tell of gut health.

Colour

Healthy brown vs. shifts to black, red, grey, yellow or green.

Content

Undigested food, mucus, foreign objects, parasites, blood.

Volume

Relative to breed and age. Larger-than-expected can flag poor absorption.

Dog Poop Colour Guide: What Each Colour Means

A dog poo colour chart for UK owners. Stool colour shifts before other symptoms appear, so knowing what each colour means is the earliest read on dog gut health.

Brown (chocolate)

Healthy. Your dog's digestion is doing its job. The expected colour for a balanced diet.

Black or tarry

Worth a vet visit. Can indicate digested blood from the upper digestive tract.

Red streaks

Worth a vet visit. Fresh blood, often from the lower gut. Sometimes minor, sometimes not. Get it checked.

Yellow or orange

Worth monitoring. Can indicate liver, pancreas, or bile-related issues, especially if persistent.

Green

Often grass-eating, sometimes more. If your dog hasn't been grazing, it's worth a vet check.

Grey or clay-coloured

Worth a vet visit. Can indicate bile duct or pancreatic issues.

Want a personalised read on your dog's stool colour and consistency? Take a photo →

The Bristol Stool Scale for Dogs

We use the Bristol stool scale, the same 7-point system veterinarians use to assess canine stool consistency. Healthy dog stool falls in the 3-5 range. Anything outside this range is worth investigating.

Healthy

Types 3 to 5. Sausage shaped to soft blobs with clear edges.

  1. Bristol stool scale type 3: cracked sausage
    Type 3

    Cracked sausage

    Sausage shaped with cracks on the surface. The firmer end of ideal.

  2. Bristol stool scale type 4: smooth sausage shape
    Type 4

    Smooth sausage

    Smooth, soft sausage. The textbook example of what healthy dog poop looks like.

    Ideal
  3. Bristol stool scale type 5: soft blobs
    Type 5

    Soft blobs

    Soft blobs with clear edges. Still in the healthy range, on the slightly soft side of ideal.

Watch list

Types 1, 2, and 6. Worth changing something at home, vet visit if it persists.

  1. Bristol stool scale type 1: hard lumps
    Type 1

    Hard lumps

    Separate hard lumps, like nuts. Likely constipation, usually a hydration or fibre issue.

  2. Bristol stool scale type 2: lumpy sausage
    Type 2

    Lumpy sausage

    Sausage shaped but with visible lumps. On the firm side of normal, often hydration related.

  3. Bristol stool scale type 6: mushy with ragged edges
    Type 6

    Mushy

    Soft pieces with ragged edges, mushy. The gut is reacting to something. Usually food, sometimes stress.

Vet now

Type 7. Vet visit, especially if it lasts more than 24 hours.

  1. Bristol stool scale type 7: entirely liquid
    Type 7

    Liquid

    Entirely liquid (diarrhoea). Always worth a vet check if it lasts more than 24 hours.

Want a Bristol score for your dog right now? Snap a photo →

Type 6 cases (soft, mushy stool) often respond to dietary tweaks alongside a Super Everyday daily supplement, which combines kefir-derived probiotics and prebiotic pumpkin in the doses most-evidenced for canine gut health.

What Poop Inspector Isn't

Poop Inspector observes. It doesn't diagnose. For anything serious, see a vet. For everything else, here's an extra pair of trained eyes.

For consistency and colour the AI applies the same Bristol scale framework a vet uses on visual inspection. It cannot palpate the abdomen, weigh the dog, or run a faecal float, so it is a useful early signal rather than a replacement for professional care. If your dog is showing other symptoms (lethargy, vomiting, off food), see a vet regardless of what we say. For a broader read across skin, joints, energy and gut, take Super Score's full health audit.

Frequently Asked Questions

Yes. No signup required to use it, no payment, no hidden tier. We make money when dogs whose results suggest they'd benefit from gut support try Super Everyday, but you're never required to.

We treat the tool as a structured first read, not a diagnostic. The AI applies the same Bristol scale framework a vet uses on visual inspection. It cannot palpate the abdomen, weigh the dog, or run a faecal float. We are conservative on red flags and we escalate when in doubt. We are working toward publishing a benchmark of AI versus vet observation across a fixed photo set. Until that benchmark is published we describe accuracy qualitatively rather than with a number.

By default, photos are sent to our AI for analysis and immediately discarded, never stored. You can optionally let us keep your photo to improve the tool (opt-in checkbox), in which case it goes to a private encrypted store. Either way, photos are never shared with third parties or used for marketing.

No, and we'd never claim that. Poop Inspector observes; vets diagnose. We're useful for tracking trends and flagging things worth a closer look, but if your dog is showing other symptoms (lethargy, loss of appetite, vomiting), see a vet regardless of what we say.

Healthy dog poop is chocolate-brown, log-shaped, firm enough to pick up without smearing, and free of mucus, blood, or visible undigested food. On the Bristol stool scale, types 3-5 are considered healthy. Your dog's stool should look like this most of the time. Occasional variation is normal.

Stool colour reflects what's happening in your dog's digestive tract. Brown is healthy. Yellow or orange can indicate liver or pancreas issues. Black or tarry suggests upper-gut bleeding. Red streaks point to lower-gut issues. Grey or clay-coloured stool can signal bile duct problems. Persistent off-colour stool that lasts more than a day or two is worth a vet check. The full dog poop colour guide walks through each one. Inconsistent digestion can also be helped by a kefir-based probiotic, but a vet should rule out anything serious first.

Want the complete picture of your dog's health?

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