Treats ยท 6 min read

Safe Cat Treats: A Buyer's Guide

Most 'cat treats' on shop shelves are mostly cereal and flavour. The genuinely good ones are simpler, healthier, and not much more expensive. Here's what to look for and what to avoid.

Why this guide exists

If you're reading this site, you probably want to share something with your cat without poisoning them. The good news: there's a whole category of cat-formulated treats that are genuinely safe, complete, and even nutritionally useful. The bad news: a lot of supermarket cat treats are nutritionally junk food โ€” high in cereals, salt, and sugar, low in actual protein.

Treat types, ranked by usefulness

1. Single-ingredient freeze-dried meat (best)

Just protein. No fillers, no salt, no preservatives. Mostly chicken, turkey, salmon, or whitefish. These are functionally a topper as much as a treat โ€” you can crumble them on food.

2. Lickable / creamy treats

Like Churu โ€” meat puree in a tube. Cats love these for the licking action, they're low-calorie, and good for syringe-feeding water (squeeze a small amount in water for cats reluctant to drink). Excellent for medication-distraction.

3. Dental treats (VOHC-approved)

The Veterinary Oral Health Council approves dental treats whose abrasive texture genuinely helps with plaque. Most "dental" treats don't have this approval โ€” look for the VOHC seal.

4. Calming treats (occasional use)

L-theanine or alpha-casozepine based. Useful for vet visits, fireworks (Bonfire Night), or moves. Not a daily supplement.

Treats to avoid

  • Anything with onion or garlic powder โ€” surprisingly common in flavoured treats
  • Anything with xylitol โ€” rarer in cat products than dog products, but check labels
  • Treats with artificial colours โ€” your cat doesn't care what colour the treat is
  • "Tuna in spring water" tinned tuna as a treat โ€” too salty, lacks taurine, can cause overconsumption issues

How much treat per day?

Treats should be โ‰ค10% of your cat's daily calorie intake. For an average 4โ€“5 kg adult cat eating ~250 kcal/day, that's only ~25 kcal of treats โ€” about 5โ€“8 small freeze-dried pieces, or one Churu tube. Overdoing treats is the most common cause of feline obesity in indoor cats.

Last reviewed: ยท By the What Can My Cat Eat? editorial team

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