A dog with allergies is often on several treatments at once, and the real question is always the same: is any of it actually helping? PetHealthLog lets you schedule each allergy medication, catch missed doses, and note how itchy your dog is day to day - so doses and symptoms sit on one timeline and you can see whether the plan is working. Free, no account, and it works offline.
Start tracking - it's freeDog allergies tend to be a long game. The itching comes and goes, the seasons change, and a dog is often on more than one thing at once - a daily tablet, a periodic injection, a medicated wash, drops for the ears. Keeping all of that straight in your head is hard enough; remembering whether last month was better or worse than this one is nearly impossible.
That memory gap matters, because allergy treatment is judged by the symptoms. A vet adjusting a plan wants to know whether the scratching has actually settled, how often the flare-ups come, and whether the doses were being given consistently in the first place. "He still seems itchy, I think" is a weak basis for a decision.
A dog allergy medication tracker closes that gap. PetHealthLog keeps it simple: it is free, asks for no account, and works offline, so the doses and a quick daily note on how your dog is doing build into a record you and your vet can actually read.
An allergy log only helps if it is quick to keep up day to day and clear to show a vet later. Here is how PetHealthLog handles both.
Add each one by name - tablets, injections, washes, ear or eye treatments - and set how often and when it is due. A daily tablet and a monthly injection both show up correctly, so nothing quietly drops off.
Tick a dose as you give it, and a dose that was not given stays visible rather than disappearing. Consistency matters when you are trying to judge whether a treatment works, and a missed dose is something you can see.
Note how itchy your dog is, or mark a flare-up day, on the same timeline as the medication. Over weeks that becomes the picture of whether things are settling - exactly the evidence a vet uses to adjust the plan.
Keep weight and each vet visit in the same place, so one private timeline holds the medications, the symptoms and the medical history together.
Export a clean PDF of the medications, the itch notes and the weight to take to the vet. The appointment starts from a real record of what was given and how your dog responded, not a recollection.
Allergies in dogs can come from many sources - environmental triggers, fleas, food and more - and they often show up as itchy skin, recurring ear trouble or paw licking rather than the sneezing people expect. Treatment is usually about managing the symptoms over the long term rather than a quick cure, which is exactly why a steady record of doses and how your dog is doing is so useful.
PetHealthLog does not diagnose allergies, choose the medication, or set the doses. It gives you a dependable place to record what you have given and what you have seen, so you and your veterinarian are looking at the same clear history. Diagnosis, the treatment plan and any change to it should always come from your vet.
Allergy logging is something you do most days, often in passing - a tablet with breakfast, a quick note that the scratching was bad after a walk. The last thing that should stand in the way is a login screen or a dead signal in the back garden.
PetHealthLog stores everything locally on your device. There is no account to create, nothing is uploaded to a server, and there is no tracking. It opens instantly, lets you mark a dose or note an itchy day whether or not you are online, and keeps the data yours. You can export a backup any time and restore it on another phone.
Free, offline, and ready the moment you open it.
Start with PetHealthLogSchedule each medication, catch up on missed or late doses, and keep an adherence streak for senior and chronic-care dogs.
For an older dog on several long-term medications - schedule each one, catch missed doses, and keep meds, weight and vet visits on one offline timeline.
Keep monthly flea and tick prevention on schedule, mark each dose given, and catch a missed month before it opens a gap.
Run separate medication schedules for every animal in the house on one offline timeline, so no pet's dose gets mixed up with another's.