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VetriScience Composure Review (2026 Label)

VetriScience Composure review
Illustration — Comparing calming products

Published July 13, 2026 · Reviewed July 13, 2026 · By Best Melatonin for Dogs Editorial Team · Reviewed against the manufacturer label dated July 2026

VetriScience Composure is a thiamine-forward calming chew that discloses its three actives per chew and is backed by manufacturer-hosted, product-specific study material — an unusual strength in this category. It contains no melatonin, so it targets daytime stress rather than sleep.

Ownership disclosure: This website is owned and operated by Pure Majesty Pets, which makes and sells a melatonin liquid for dogs that we mention in our comparisons. We rank and describe products using their labeled ingredients and published research, not paid placement — but you should read our owned-product coverage with that relationship in mind. Read the full disclosure.

What the current label lists

VetriScience Composure (Chicken 45-count), active ingredients per 1 chew (3.2 g). Reviewed July 2026.
ActivePer chew (3.2 g)
Thiamine (Vitamin B1)134 mg
Colostrum Calming Complex (biopeptide blend)22 mg
L-theanine21 mg

Strengths

  • Discloses each active with an exact amount — no proprietary blend hiding the numbers.
  • Manufacturer has product-specific study material, which most competitors (including Pure Majesty) lack.
  • L-theanine has supportive dog evidence for situational anxiety (Araujo 2010; Pike 2015).

Limitations

  • Contains no melatonin, so it is not aimed at sleep-cycle support.
  • A chew format offers fixed amounts, with less fine adjustment than a liquid.
  • As with any finished blend, product-level results still vary by dog.
Always screen inactive ingredientsActives are only half the label. Read the inactive ingredients and reject anything containing xylitol (FDA), especially in flavored or human products.
Read alsoCompare this against other products — see where it lands in the full, same-unit calming comparison.
Read alsoHow melatonin evidence actually stacks up — understand what melatonin does and does not do before choosing a melatonin product.
Pure Majesty Pets Melatonin for Dogs — labeled actives per 1 mL
Manufacturer-supplied formulation, current as of July 2026
Active ingredientPer 1 mL
Melatonin3 mg
L-theanine50 mg
Alpha-casozepine25 mg
Water-soluble chamomile extract25 mg
Elemental magnesium5 mg
Vitamin B6 (as P5P)0.5 mg

Pure Majesty publishes this six-active formula on its product page (labeled per 1 mL, updated July 2026); confirm the panel printed on the bottle you receive. Ingredient amounts describe what is in the bottle; they do not by themselves prove a calming or sleep outcome, and this exact six-active blend has not been tested in a published canine clinical trial.

See the current Pure Majesty label and product details

Frequently asked questions

Does VetriScience Composure contain melatonin?
No. Its labeled actives are thiamine, a colostrum calming complex, and L-theanine. It targets daytime stress, not sleep.
Is VetriScience Composure backed by research?
The manufacturer hosts product-specific study material, which is a genuine advantage over most calming chews. Ingredient evidence for L-theanine also exists (Araujo 2010; Pike 2015).
How is it different from a melatonin product?
It has no melatonin; it relies on L-theanine and a colostrum peptide. For sleep-cycle or situational melatonin use, a melatonin product is a different tool.

Sources

  1. Araujo JA, de Rivera C, Ethier JL, et al. ANXITANE tablets reduce fear of human beings in a laboratory model of anxiety-related behavior. Journal of Veterinary Behavior. 2010;5(5):268–275. doi:10.1016/j.jveb.2010.02.003
  2. Pike AL, Horwitz DF, Lobprise H. An open-label prospective study of the use of L-theanine (Anxitane) in storm-sensitive client-owned dogs. Journal of Veterinary Behavior. 2015;10(4):324–331. doi:10.1016/j.jveb.2015.04.001
  3. U.S. Food & Drug Administration. Paws Off Xylitol; It’s Dangerous for Dogs. Consumer update. fda.gov
  4. VCA Animal Hospitals. Melatonin. Hamilton A, Gollakner R. vcahospitals.com
Veterinary disclaimer. This article is educational and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice, diagnosis, or treatment. Melatonin and calming supplements are not approved drugs for treating anxiety or insomnia in dogs. Always talk to your veterinarian before starting any supplement, especially if your dog is pregnant, a puppy, older, on medication, or has a health condition. In a suspected poisoning, contact your veterinarian, the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435, or the Pet Poison Helpline at (855) 764-7661.