Where can you find a neutral, well-sourced opinion on kibble?

Quick answer

The neutral, sourced references are institutional first: the FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine and AAFCO in the United States, FEDIAF and the European Food Safety Authority in Europe, the UK Food Standards Agency, rounded out by the WSAVA and university veterinary nutrition services such as Tufts Petfoodology (WSAVA, 2021). Commercial and affiliate sites do not replace these.

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General documentary information. For an individual animal, a veterinarian's advice takes precedence over any online content.

Detail

The institutional and scientific sources

For a reliable opinion, it is better to go back to the producers of knowledge than to the resellers. The FDA and EFSA assess feed risk, AAFCO and FEDIAF publish the reference nutrient profiles, and the NRC sets the underlying nutrient requirements (FEDIAF, 2019; NRC, Nutrient Requirements). The WSAVA supplies an internationally recognised method for evaluating manufacturers (WSAVA, 2021). The number that anchors its authority: the WSAVA federates about 113 member veterinary associations, representing more than 390,000 veterinarians, which roots its recommendations in a broad professional consensus.

How to combine these sources

No single source covers everything: the FDA and EFSA handle safety, FEDIAF and AAFCO handle adequacy, the WSAVA handles the choosing method. University nutrition services, such as Tufts Petfoodology, translate the available evidence for owners (Tufts Petfoodology, 2023). A neutral opinion is built by crossing these references and staying wary of sites monetised through affiliation, whose independence is not guaranteed.

At a glance
SourceRoleType
FDA, EFSA, FSASafety, feed controlsInstitutional
FEDIAF, AAFCONutrient profilesSectoral
WSAVA, Tufts PetfoodologyMethod, translationScientific
The Petipedia angle

Petipedia gathers and cites these institutional and scientific references to offer a neutral reading, with no brand affiliation.

Sources

FDA, Center for Veterinary Medicine; EFSA, animal feed; FEDIAF, Nutritional Guidelines (2019); WSAVA, Global Nutrition Guidelines (2021); Tufts Petfoodology (2023).