Homemade vs Commercial Pet Food: What's Best?
The pet food debate is passionate on both sides. Here's the evidence-based breakdown.
Commercial Pet Food
Pros
- Nutritionally complete — formulated to meet AAFCO standards
- Convenient — no prep time
- Consistent — same nutrition every meal
- Cost-effective — especially premium brands
- Research-backed — major brands invest in feeding trials
Cons
- Quality variation — ingredient quality ranges widely
- Processing — high-heat processing can degrade nutrients
- Fillers — some brands use corn, wheat, soy as primary ingredients
- Recalls — contamination incidents do occur
- Opacity — hard to know exact sourcing
Reading Labels
Ingredients are listed by weight. Look for:
Homemade Pet Food
Pros
- Full ingredient control — you choose everything
- Fresh ingredients — minimal processing
- Customisable — adapt to allergies or preferences
- No preservatives — if that matters to you
Cons
- Nutritional imbalance risk — the #1 concern. Studies show 95% of homemade pet food recipes found online are nutritionally incomplete.
- Time-intensive — daily prep required
- Expensive — quality ingredients cost more
- Requires expertise — or professional formulation
- No safety net — no quality control beyond your kitchen
If You Go Homemade
The Middle Ground: Fresh Commercial Food
Brands like The Farmer's Dog, Nom Nom, and JustFoodForDogs offer:
- Fresh, minimally processed ingredients
- Formulated by veterinary nutritionists
- Delivered portioned for your pet
- More expensive than kibble but less risky than DIY
Raw Diet: The Controversial Option
Proponents say: Ancestral diet, shinier coat, cleaner teeth, smaller stools.
Veterinary consensus: Risks outweigh benefits for most pets. Bacterial contamination (Salmonella, E. coli) risk to pets AND humans in the household. Bones can fracture teeth or cause intestinal blockage.
If you choose raw: Source from a reputable raw food company, not DIY. Handle with same care as raw meat for humans. Not recommended in homes with young children or immunocompromised people.
Age-Specific Needs
- Puppies/Kittens: Higher calorie, higher protein, specific calcium:phosphorus ratio. Always use a growth formula.
- Adults: Maintenance diet matched to activity level
- Seniors: Lower calorie, higher protein quality, joint support
- Pregnant/Nursing: Significantly higher calorie and nutrient needs
The Verdict
For most pet owners, a high-quality commercial food (premium kibble or fresh food service) is the safest, most practical choice. Save homemade as a supplement or treat, not the primary diet — unless guided by a veterinary nutritionist.
Pet Capsule helps you track your pet's diet, set feeding reminders, and log any food sensitivities or allergies.