
What Is AAFCO Certification and Why It Matters for Cat Food
The Pet Parent Podcast · Total Pet Parent
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Show Notes
Ever picked up a bag of cat food, seen "meets AAFCO standards" on the label, and assumed that meant the product was tested, certified, and officially approved? You're not alone—but that assumption isn't quite accurate. In this episode, Steven Whitlow breaks down what AAFCO actually does (and doesn't do), how cat food nutritional standards really work, and why understanding the difference matters when you're choosing what to feed your cat.
- AAFCO doesn't certify, test, or approve any cat food products—they're a regulatory body that establishes nutritional standards and labeling guidelines, while manufacturers self-report whether their products meet those standards.
- There are two methods for claiming AAFCO compliance: the Formulation Method (theoretical calculations based on ingredients) and the Feeding Trial Method (actual cats fed the food for at least 26 weeks with monitored health outcomes)—and the feeding trial is far more reassuring.
- Life stage designations on cat food labels aren't marketing fluff—foods formulated for "Adult Maintenance" won't provide adequate nutrition for kittens, and kitten formulas can cause weight gain in sedentary adult cats.
- Cats have unique nutritional requirements as obligate carnivores, including preformed vitamin A, taurine for heart and eye health, arachidonic acid, and higher protein levels than dogs or humans need.
- AAFCO standards helped reduce serious health issues like taurine deficiency-related heart disease by establishing minimum requirements, but meeting these standards represents a baseline for survival—not a guarantee of ingredient quality or optimal nutrition.
- Two products can both meet AAFCO standards while using completely different ingredient quality, digestibility levels, and manufacturing processes, so compliance is a starting point for evaluation, not the finish line.
Read the full article: https://totalpetparent.com/what-is-aafco-certification-and-why-it-matters-for-cat-food