K9 Advanced Relief Spray 16oz Size Guide for Dogs | Draw It Out®

K9 size guide

K9 Advanced™ Relief Spray 16oz Size Guide

The 16oz K9 Advanced™ Relief Spray size is for dog owners who use dog-specific external care often enough that the small bottle is not enough. It belongs in the barn, truck, grooming shelf, dog room, or active-dog kit.

Who should choose 16oz

Choose the 16oz size when you have more than one dog, an active outdoor dog, a senior dog, a barn dog, or a routine that happens several times a week.

  • Better fit for repeat use than a travel bottle.
  • Useful for post-walk, post-play, and outdoor dog routines.
  • Simple to keep by the door, in the barn, or with grooming supplies.

Dog-specific matters

Do not guess with horse liniment on dogs. Dogs lick, roll, chew, react differently, and need products built for dog care instead of borrowed horse routines.

  • Use K9 products on dogs, not horse liniment.
  • Apply externally and avoid eyes, nose, mouth, and broken skin unless the label directs otherwise.
  • Let the product dry before the dog rubs or rolls on bedding.

Routine fit

The best K9 routine is boring in a good way: check the skin, spray lightly, let dry, and watch how the dog responds.

  • Use after walks, play, grooming, or outdoor exposure.
  • Pair with K9 TheraMud™ when the routine needs a heavier wash-off mud step.
  • Stop use and ask a veterinarian if irritation, licking, heat, odor, swelling, or worsening skin appears.

Care note: These pages are practical product and routine guides, not veterinary diagnosis. If a horse or dog is lame, ill, worsening, bleeding, infected, overheated, struggling to breathe, or not acting right, pause the routine and contact the right professional.

Quick questions

Can I use horse liniment on my dog?

No. Keep horse liniment for horses and use dog-specific K9 products for dogs.

Who needs the 16oz size?

Multi-dog homes, active outdoor dogs, senior dogs, and owners using K9 care several times a week are the best fit.

When should I call a vet?

Call a veterinarian for infection signs, open wounds, severe itching, swelling, allergic reaction, pain, or symptoms that are not improving.