BoonPets

Does Petco still own Chewy?

Market rumors can mess up your strategy. You might be planning your next quarter assuming these two retail giants are the same entity, which leads to bad competitive analysis1.

The short answer is no. In fact, Petco never owned Chewy. It was PetSmart that acquired Chewy in 2017 before eventually spinning it off. Today, Chewy is an independent public company, while Petco operates as a separate major competitor focusing heavily on physical retail and veterinary services.

PetSmart building

Let’s clear up this corporate confusion so you can build a procurement roadmap2 based on facts, not industry gossip.

Overview of Petco's Ownership History with Chewy?

Mixing up the biggest players in our industry creates bad data for your own business planning.

PetSmart bought Chewy for $3.35 billion to fight back against Amazon’s dominance. Petco was never involved in that deal. Understanding this distinction helps you see how the market is actually divided and where the real gaps satisfy your need for high-margin products.

Pet shop

The History and Why It Matters to Your Margins

Pet retailers and distributors often view "the giants" as one monolithic block. However, seeing them as separate entities reveals their weaknesses. PetSmart bought Chewy to save itself from the e-commerce wave. They operated together for a few years, but the cultures were different. One was old-school retail; the other was a tech startup. Eventually, this led to a split.

Why does this matter to you as a Procurement Manager? Because these giants are distracted. They spent years focusing on mergers, IPOs, and splits. While they focused on corporate finance, they often neglected product innovation3 in favor of mass-market generic items.

This is your opening. While they fight over who sells the cheapest bag of dog food, you can focus on what they ignore: high-quality, distinctive accessories. At Boonpets, I have seen this first-hand. When the big players focus on volume, quality drops. You can step in with our premium harnesses or custom collars that offer the durability the giants have stopped providing.

Event Player Impact on Industry
2017 Acquisition PetSmart buys Chewy Consolidated mass-market power.
Petco's Path Remained Independent Focused on services (vet/grooming) over pure e-com.
Separation Chewy spins off Created two distinct, fiercely competitive pricing models.

Current Ownership Status and Corporate Structure of Chewy [Information Increment]?

You need to know exactly who you are fighting against on the digital shelf to win.

Chewy is now traded on the NYSE under the ticker CHWY. While the investment group BC Partners (which also owned PetSmart) retained significant influence for a long time, Chewy functions independently. This creates two distinct massive competitors rather than one conglomerate, changing how they source products.

pet shop

The Structure of Independence and Sourcing

Chewy operates like a tech company that sells pet stuff. Their structure is built entirely around "Autoship"—getting customers to subscribe to food deliveries. This is their moat. However, this structure has a flaw. Because their logistics are optimized for heavy bags of food and cat litter, they often treat accessories as an afterthought.

They source accessories based on what fits easily in a box with a bag of kibble. This creates a "generic" trap. They buy massive quantities of standard nylon leashes from the cheapest bidder to fill cart space.

This is where you win. As an independent distributor or retailer, you don't need to optimize for a 50lb bag of food. You can optimize for style, comfort, and safety. You can work with a manufacturer like Boonpets to create a "Tactical Series" or an "Eco-Friendly Line" that Chewy’s algorithm ignores because it doesn't fit their volume model.

Feature Chewy's Model Your Opportunity
Primary Goal Recurring Food Orders (Autoship) Unique Brand Experience
Accessory Strategy Add-on items, generic styles High-Margin, Differentiated Quality
Sourcing Style Massive MOQ, lowest bidder Flexible MOQ, Premium Partner (Boonpets)

Strategic Implications of Petco-Chewy Separation for B2B Retailers and Distributors?

When giants split or stay separate, it creates cracks in the market where agile businesses can grow.

Since Petco and Chewy are rivals, they fight for mass-market dominance using price wars. This races to the bottom on pricing leaves the premium, specialized niche wide open for mid-sized distributors who can offer unique products they don't carry.

pet retail shop

Avoiding the Price War

Petco and Chewy are locked in a battle with Amazon. They try to match prices on everything. If you try to sell the same generic products they do, you will lose. You cannot beat their economies of scale. If you import the same generic harnesses from Alibaba that look just like their private label brands, your only lever is price. That kills your profit.

The strategic implication here is "Differentiation or Death." Since they are separate, they are both desperate for market share. They are flooding the market with cheap goods. You must go the other way.

You need a manufacturing partner who acts as your R&D department. At Boonpets, we handle the technical side—tensile strength testing, material sourcing, and custom molding. This allows you to present a product to your customers that looks, feels, and performs better than the mass-market options. You aren't selling a leash; you are selling a solution that the giants are too big to care about.

Market Segment The Giants (Petco/Chewy) The Agile Distributor (You)
Pricing Low Margin, High Volume High Margin, Lower Volume
Product Life Fast Fashion / Disposable Durable / Long-lasting
Customer Loyalty Based on Price/Convenience Based on Trust/Quality

Comparative Analysis: Petco vs. Chewy Market Positioning and Business Models [Information Increment]?

Blindly copying the big guys is a recipe for failure because you lack their volume.

Petco pivots to "Health & Wellness," focusing on vet clinics and grooming services to drive foot traffic. Chewy pivots to "Logistics & Speed." Identifying these pillars shows you exactly where your private label brand can offer something different: Design and Craftsmanship.

Finding the Third Pillar

Let's look at the data. Petco wants to be the "Health Center." Chewy wants to be the "Delivery Truck." Neither of them is trying to be the "Style Icon" or the "Performance Leader."

This analysis reveals your specific procurement target.

  1. Petco: Their shelves are shrinking to make room for vet clinics. They have less space for diverse accessories.
  2. Chewy: Their interface makes it hard to "feel" the quality of a product.

You can exploit this. You can source products that have tangible selling points—like a harness with a specific load-bearing buckle or a leash with a patented soft-grip handle. This is the "Product differentiation" goal you have. We help our partners design products that solve specific problems, like "pulling dogs" or "nighttime safety," using materials that stand out on a physical shelf or pop in a high-res photo. We fill the gap between the Clinic and the Box.

Competitor Core Focus The Gap They Leave
Petco Services (Vet/Groom) Limited shelf space for variety.
Chewy Logistics/Speed zero "touch and feel" experience.
Your Brand Curated Quality High-touch, high-performance gear.

Procurement Considerations: Leveraging Chewy's Platform for Supply Chain Optimization?

Your inventory budget is tight, and you cannot afford dead stock.

While you might not sell on Chewy, watching their "Out of Stock" lists and "Best Sellers" gives you free market data. Use their supply chain gaps to inform your procurement of high-margin accessories that customers want but can't find.

![Supply chain (https://boonpets.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/01/ba49e6bc6b2d65fbe0e56474f9ba486b.png)

Using Their Data Against Them

You don't have Chewy's data team, but you have their website. I often tell my partners to look at the reviews on Chewy’s top-selling private label items. Look for the 3-star reviews. What are customers complaining about?

  • "The clasp broke after a week."
  • "The color faded in the sun."
  • "The material chafes my dog's skin."

These complaints are your procurement instructions. This is exactly where we start our manufacturing conversation. If the giant's supply chain is failing on hardware quality to save two cents, we spend those two cents. We use zinc alloy hooks instead of cheap plastic. We use reinforced stitching.

By fixing the errors in their supply chain, you build a product that commands a higher price. You reduce your inventory risk because you are making what customers are actively asking for but failing to get from the big guys.

Insight Source What to Look For Actionable Sourcing Decision
Negative Reviews Breakage points Upgrade hardware specs with Boonpets.
Out of Stock High demand colors Order these colors for immediate availability.
Customer Q&A Confusion on sizing Create better, adjustable sizing charts/products.

Future Outlook: Potential Partnerships, Market Trends, and Opportunities for Retailers [Information Increment]?

The market shifts fast, and staying reactive means you are already behind.

Trends point toward distinct "lifestyle" brands where pet owners view accessories as fashion statements or safety gear. Partnerships with agile manufacturers allow you to tell that story and launch new designs faster than the slow-moving corporate giants.

Future trends in pet retail

The Era of Premiumization

The future isn't about selling more; it's about selling better. Data from industry reports shows a massive spike in spending on "premium" pet care. Owners treat pets like children. They don't buy the cheapest stroller for their baby, and they won't buy the cheapest harness for their "fur baby."

Petco and Chewy are too big to pivot quickly to micro-trends like "sustainable bamboo fibers" or "tactical training gear" without months of corporate approval. You can move fast.

This is where our partnership model shines. We keep low MOQs so you can test these future trends without locking up all your cash flow. If you see a trend rising in Europe, we can prototype it and have it in your warehouse before Chewy’s purchasing committee even schedules a meeting about it. Speed and quality are your future.

Trend The Big Box Response The Agile Response (You)
Sustainability Greenwashing / Basic Packaging Genuine eco-materials and story.
Safety/Tactical Generic naming Certified durable materials.
Personalization Hard to scale Easy to implement with right partner.

Conclusion

Petco and Chewy are separate entities with different weaknesses. Don't copy them; beat them by partnering with manufacturers like Boonpets to deliver the quality, speed, and differentiation they cannot offer.


Footnote:


  1. Gain valuable techniques for analyzing competitors to enhance your business strategy.

  2. Learn how to build a procurement roadmap that aligns with market realities.

  3. Explore the significance of innovation in maintaining a competitive edge.

Picture of Abraham Long

Abraham Long

Author Introduction

Hey, I’m Abraham, the Founder of BoonPets. My story with pets began with a mischievous rescue dog named Buster who had a talent for chewing through every leash I bought. Frustrated with products that broke style or broke promises, I became a man on a mission.

That mission—crafting gear you can truly trust—started at my kitchen table and has now grown into a global community. When I’m not obsessing over new designs or the perfect durable-yet-soft material, you’ll probably find me hiking with my two loyal Labradors. They’re my chief inspiration officers, and their wagging tails (or lack thereof) are the final seal of approval on everything we make.

I believe that great partnerships are built on more than just transactions; they’re built on shared values. For me, that means integrity in our craftsmanship, joy in our creations, and a relentless drive to help your business thrive. I’m not just a supplier; I’m your partner in passion, dedicated to making products that tell your brand’s story.

So, let’s create something beautiful together. Reach out anytime—I’d love to hear your story and share more of mine.

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Picture of Abraham Long

Abraham Long

Author Introduction

Hey, I’m Abraham, the Founder of BoonPets. My story with pets began with a mischievous rescue dog named Buster who had a talent for chewing through every leash I bought. Frustrated with products that broke style or broke promises, I became a man on a mission.

That mission—crafting gear you can truly trust—started at my kitchen table and has now grown into a global community. When I’m not obsessing over new designs or the perfect durable-yet-soft material, you’ll probably find me hiking with my two loyal Labradors. They’re my chief inspiration officers, and their wagging tails (or lack thereof) are the final seal of approval on everything we make.

I believe that great partnerships are built on more than just transactions; they’re built on shared values. For me, that means integrity in our craftsmanship, joy in our creations, and a relentless drive to help your business thrive. I’m not just a supplier; I’m your partner in passion, dedicated to making products that tell your brand’s story.

So, let’s create something beautiful together. Reach out anytime—I’d love to hear your story and share more of mine.

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