Top 15 Cat Food Ingredients to Avoid in Commercial Cat Food
Let’s start by focusing on the positives: commercial cat food is a blessing! It gives us convenient and affordable options for giving our cats the best life we can give them. Without commercial cat food, we’d be forced to make our own food or let our kitties run free outside to catch mice and other critters.
I recommend a lot of really great cat foods, and most of them are “commercial” options. However, I’ve come across a lot of ingredients to avoid in cat food. Why? They just aren’t something I’d ever want to feed my cat.
You see, since releasing a full database of cat food ingredients, information, and ratings to compliment our “best cat foods” page on my new website, Catological.com, I’ve been neck-deep in cat food analysis. While it’s been eye-opening for me, allowing us to give really high-quality recommendations to our readers, I’ve also been exposed to the “dark side” of the industry.The pet food industry is what I’ll call “loosely” regulated. The FDA has rules and AAFCO publishes guidelines. But, between rendering plants, low-quality ingredients, and foods made internationally, there are a lot of questionable practices conducted by pet food distributors that may surprise you. So, what ingredients should you avoid in cat food?
Let’s examine a list of 15 ingredients that should send up red flags when reading a commercial cat food label.
These cat food ingredients are not necessarily bad or harmful to your furry companion. In most cases, however, extended exposure seems likely to increase the risk of a negative side effect. I suggest keeping this list of what to look for in cat food as well as the bad ingredients in cat food handy so you can make better-informed decisions on your next purchase to keep your kitty happy and healthy.
1. Butylated hydroxyanisole (BHA)
Used as an artificial preservative in food.
BHA is “reasonably anticipated to be a human carcinogen,” according to The National Toxicology Program of the Department of Health and Human Services (source). While it’s labeled as being safe in low doses, it has been shown to cause tumors in lab animals. So, is this one of those cat food ingredients to avoid?
A little BHA every now and then is unlikely to harm to your cat. But, BHA adds more health-deterioration risks to your cat’s well-being than necessary. This is especially the case if your cat is eating BHA every day. There are better, natural alternatives to preserving your cats’ food.
2. Caramel
Added to some foods to help give it a richer color.
There is no reason for cat food to be colored, except to make it appeal to cat parents. Your cat does not care what color their food is. Is caramel another one of those cat food ingredients to avoid? Since it is a 100% marketing gimmick, it is unnecessary, and usually a sign of cheap cat food.
Many coloring options, including caramel, are potential carcinogens (source), or otherwise potentially harmful to your cat.
3. Carrageenan
Red seaweed is used as a thickening agent.
Carrageenan is a controversial cat food ingredient because one of its forms is a potential carcinogen, called degraded carrageenan. While the degraded form is not used in food applications, some have concerns that it could become degraded once ingested by cats due to their stomach acid; thus, potentially increasing cats’ cancer risk.
Carrageenan may be completely fine (some controversial ingredients are only controversial because they’re not well understood), but with so many other options on the market, many people choose not to take the risk.
4. Cellulose
A filler high in insoluble fiber.
Too much insoluble fiber can interfere with digestion and inhibit protein and nutrient uptake. The worst part is that it’s typically wood pulp (sawdust) from pine trees. Last I checked, cats didn’t eat sawdust! Cellulose is typically indicative of a lower quality cat food.
5. Glucose / Dextrose
Glucose is sugar (plain + simple).
It is not an appropriate ingredient for felines. Glucose could cause obesity and potentially even diabetes.
Dextrose is a crystallized form of glucose.
It is typically used in pet food as a sweetener and as an agent to help develop browning (i.e., to make meat or gravy ingredients look better). Dextrose, like most sugars, can be considered a nutritionally unnecessary addition to cat food and is likely harmful over time. Keep an eye out for this one when wondering what to avoid in cat food.
6. Garlic
One of the main ingredients to avoid in cat food is garlic which can be highly toxic to cats. While we are sure cat food companies who add this for the supposed low-dose health benefits have taken steps to ensure a very small amount of garlic enters the food, it is unnecessary.
Plus: why take the risk?
7. Glyceryl Monostearate
An emulsifier used in lower-grade pet foods.
Glyceryl monostearate may contain BHA (covered above) and BHT among other glycerols and chemicals. Because its makeup typically contains unknown chemicals, glyceryl monostearate should be avoided.
8. Iron Oxide
Used to color food and give it a more red, meaty color.
Since it is a 100% marketing gimmick, iron oxide is unnecessary, and usually a sign of cheap cat food. This ingredient can even be cultivated from rust! From foodcolor.com: “Common rust is a form of iron oxide. Iron oxides are used as inexpensive, durable pigments in paints, coatings and colored concretes.”
While iron oxide in commercial cat food is likely safe, not readily absorbed into the body, and likely non-toxic, it’s fair to say that any coloring additive is questionable. Moreover, iron oxide has not been thoroughly studied as a food additive, so the overall side effects- good or bad- of ingesting it remains unknown.
9. Meat & Bone Meal
Described by AAFCO as a “rendered product from mammal tissues, including bone, exclusive of any added blood, hair, hoof, horn, hide trimmings, manure, stomach, and rumen contents.”
Meat & bone meal is one of those rendered products that could contain anything, from euthanized pets to zoo animals to roadkill, to expired meat, and even the styrofoam wrapper it comes in. I know this may sound startling, but some alarming information about the meat goes into these “meat & bone meal” ingredients at the rendering plants.
If you’re not squeamish and want some more reading on this topic, here are a few resources.
10. Meat By-Products
According to AAFCO, meat by-products are “non-rendered, clean parts, other than meat, derived from slaughtered mammals. Includes, but is not limited to lungs, spleen, kidneys, brain, livers, blood, bone, partially defatted low-temperature fatty tissue, and stomachs and intestines freed of their contents. It does not include hair, horns, teeth, and hoofs.”
This means is that anything left over on the carcass after the good, human-grade cuts of meat are removed, gets thrown into a vat and processed. Since it just says “meat,” and not chicken or beef, you have no idea what’s actually in it.
The rules surrounding cat food ingredient labeling allow for less-than-ideal animals to be used in pet foods (see the links above). Like meat & bone meal, meat by-products come from rendering plants that claim to use “4-D” animals as ingredients (i.e. dead from means other than slaughter, like diseased, dying, disabled, and even euthanized pets).
Whether you consider “by-products” a good use of otherwise wasted animal matter, or a just a poor-quality ingredient, there’s no arguing with the fact that unnamed animal products can be bad news.
11. Red, Yellow, and Blue Food Coloring
You will usually find a number after the color, like Red 40, for example. A little food coloring isn’t going to hurt, but it’s been linked to issues like hyperactivity in children and even containing a carcinogen. As mentioned above, there is no reason to add color to cat food. Even if the risk is tiny, food colorings aren’t the best ingredients for cat food and are absolutely unnecessary.
12. Sodium Nitrite
A color and maybe flavor enhancer for meat.
Upon entering a cat’s body, sodium nitrate may become a carcinogen (source). Whatever the case, flavor and color-enhancing ingredients, like sodium nitrate, are completely unnecessary for cats to consume, whether commercial cat food or treats.
Sodium nitrate is also claimed to be a botulinum controller, but many countries do not use this as an ingredient in their cat food for this purpose.
13. Sodium Tripolyphosphate
Allegedly used as a rancid meat preservative, and used “to help moist foods to retain moisture so that they appear fresher for longer” (source). It’s also a dental additive, used to reduce calcium build-up.
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (a division of the CDC), suspects sodium tripolyphosphate may be a neurotoxin. And the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) recognizes sodium tripolyphosphate as “an insecticide, fungicide, and rodenticide.”
14. Titanium Dioxide
A potentially carcinogenic artificial color used as a white pigment.
Want to know what ingredients to avoid in cat food? This one! Nanoparticles from titanium dioxide have been found to cause a breakdown in chromosomes when ingested. This can cause DNA damage, inflammation, cancer, and genetic disorders in animals.
15. Wheat Gluten
According to Wikipedia, wheat gluten is “made by washing wheat flour dough with water until all the starch granules have been removed, leaving the sticky insoluble gluten as an elastic mass which is then cooked before being eaten.”
It’s a popular ingredient in a vegan diet because you can use it to make a high-protein, meat-like food called seitan. As an ingredient in cat food, though, wheat gluten isn’t one of the best ingredients in cat food.
For the most part, wheat gluten is used to boost the crude protein numbers, without adding more meat (meat is expensive for manufacturers). In fact, when you see chunks of “meat” in a low-quality food, it is often just chunks of wheat gluten.
The Bottom Line
Don’t panic. Exposure to one or multiple of the bad ingredients in cat food listed above is unlikely to cause your cat issues. But, I would argue that constant exposure to most of the ingredients on this list increases the risk of your cat having health issues.
There are other ingredients that can be used to make good quality cat food, and the ingredients listed here are typically unnecessary, as they’re only used to keep manufacturers’ costs down.
I recommend finding cat food that is mostly made out of meat with few or no filler ingredients. Look for high protein, moderate fat, and very low carbohydrate options. Foods like this are close to what cats eat in the wild, and it’s what their bodies are adapted to eating since they are obligate carnivores.