🍕 Processed Foods
Open-data reference.
Packaged and prepared foods
Processed Foods: Safety Breakdown Across Dogs and Cats
Our database currently tracks 1 processed foods rated for dogs and 1 rated for cats. For dogs, 0 are rated safe, 0 require caution, and 1 are classified as unsafe or toxic. For cats, 0 are safe, 0 require caution, and 1 are unsafe or toxic. Cats and dogs do not always share the same rating for a given food — differences reflect real metabolic distinctions between an obligate carnivore (the cat) and a facultative omnivore (the dog), including variations in hepatic enzyme capacity, body size, and nutrient requirements. Pet owners should never assume a food safe for one species is safe for the other.
The processed foods category covers foods grouped by shared nutritional, toxicological, or culinary characteristics — not just superficial similarities. This means foods that look different may belong together if their active compounds or risk profiles are comparable, and foods that look similar may be separated if their effects on pets differ materially. Rating a food in this category requires checking for species-specific reactions to common components — for example, the Allium family (onions, garlic, chives) is universally toxic to cats, while many fruits with pits require pit removal before being safe for either species. When browsing this category, treat caution ratings as a signal to read the full page before feeding, not as a blanket green light.
Ratings are drawn from veterinary toxicology references, ASPCA Animal Poison Control guidance, and peer-reviewed nutrition research — the same sources a practicing vet would cite. Each food page provides species-specific portion size, preparation instructions, benefits, risks, and warning signs, so you can move from this category overview into the precise guidance for your dog or cat. If you suspect a pet has consumed a toxic or unsafe food from this category, the ASPCA Animal Poison Control hotline at 888-426-4435 operates 24/7. The lists below are organized by pet type: dogs first, then cats — click any food card for the full safety page.
🐕 Processed Foods for Dogs (1)
🐈 Processed Foods for Cats (1)
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Disclaimer: This information is provided for informational purposes only and does not constitute professional advice. Data is sourced from FDA and AAFCO product databases. Consult a qualified professional before making decisions based on this data.
Learn more: How to Read Pet Food Labels | Understanding Ingredients
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.