Animals will need their daily supply of nutrients to stay active and healthy, so they generate coins for us in the game. In Tiny Pasture, there are two ways we can feed the animals, either by buying food or by setting up the right decorations to generate food. However, the end goal for both ways includes generating food for animals to keep their hunger meter low. Here in this guide, we will explore various ways to feed the animals in Tiny Pasture.
Feeding Animals In Tiny Pasture
Each animal will have a health and fullness bar attached to them. To ensure the wellness of the animals, you need to pay attention to the Fullness bar. Once the Fullness bar is at the lower end under any animal, the word “Hungry ” will be seen. This is an indication to feed the animals ASAP. Feeding the animals will make the Hungry sign disappear. We will recommend keeping the Fullness bar at 60% to take care of hungry animals.
The meter will go down, here you must resort to different ways to bring food to the animals before they will starve. Not feeding them will result in less coin production and seeing your pets suffer from neglect.
Buying Food For Animals

Here we directly buy the food from the Shop menu (which can be found in the right section of the screen), here choose the Items tab until you reach the Food category. All the food will be tied to their separate boxes, under every box, you will see the name of the food and the asking price for them. Just click on the Food item boxes and the game will drop the specific fruit whether Cabbage, Carrot, Apple, Pudding, or anything else on the ground.
After a few seconds, the animals will start approaching the food on the floor to eat it. You can right-click on the food item boxes to stop buying them. Each fruit will fill up a certain amount of the Fullness bar under each animal. By default, Carrots cost only 5 Coins and will fill up 5 Fullness, whereas a slice of Cheese that costs 20 coins will fill up 23 fullness.
Food Item Lists | Coin Cost | Fullness Amount | Unlock Requirements |
Carrot | 5 Coins | 5 Fullness Recovery | Default |
Cabbage | 10 Coins | 10 Fullness Recovery | Turning One Animal into an Adult |
Paw Biscuit | 15 Coins | 16 Fullness Recovery | Turning 10 Animals into an Adult |
Cheese | 20 Coins | 23 Fullness Recovery | Turning 20 Animals into an Adult |
Acorn | 25 Coins | 28 Fullness Recovery | Turning 30 Animals into Adult |
Cherry | 30 Coins | 34 Fullness Recovery | Turning 40 Animals into Adult |
Pudding | 35 Coins | 38 Fullness Recovery | Turning 50 Animals into Adult |
Apple | 40 Coins | 45 Fullness Recovery | Turning 60 Animals into Adult |
Mushroom | 45 Coins | 52 Fullness Recovery | Turning 70 Animals into Adult |
Cake | 50 Coins | 60 Fullness Recovery | Turning 80 Animals into Adult |
Do check our guide, if you are having trouble gathering animals into your farm. We have a guide to help you learn how to breed the animals on the farm.
Note: At first, you will have Carrots, but as you gather more animals for your farm, you will soon unlock other varieties of fruits to feed the animals.
Tip: You can set up a Quick Access box to feed your animals at a much faster rate. Go to the Food selection option in the shop, and click on the Pin button to add the food item to the Quick Access option.
Growing Food for Animals
Now we look at a different way to feed the animals which is by growing the food instead of purchasing each one. This will also cost a bit, growing food in Tiny Pasture will require us to buyTrellies, Redfruit, and Strawberries, under Shop-Decoration. Unlike buying food, generating food will take some time. After you buy the plants from Shop-Decoration, these plants will take some time to grow into fully active plants.
Once the plant is grown, it will create fruits, which you can click to feed the animals. Since coins are attached to almost every mechanic Tiny Pasture has to offer, it is essential to feed the animals on a daily basis, making sure the Fullness meters stay beyond the 60% mark. Check out our guide to learn about the ways to spend Coins in Tiny Pasture.