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Pet Food Ingredient Encyclopedia

Scientific analysis of key ingredients used in pet foods

Based on AAFCO, FEDIAF and NRC standards

A
Alfalfa in Pet Food Aloe Vera in Pet Food Anchovy Oil in Pet Food Animal By-Products Animal Fat in Pet Food Apple Pomace in Pet Food
B
Barley in Pet Food Beet Pulp in Pet Food BHA (Butylated Hydroxyanisole) BHT (Butylated Hydroxytoluene) in Pet Food Biotin in Pet Food Blueberry in Pet Food Borage Oil in Pet Food Brewer's Yeast in Pet Food Burdock Root in Pet Food
C
Carrageenan Chamomile in Pet Food Chicken Cartilage in Pet Food Chicken Fat Chicken Meal Chickpeas in Pet Food Chicory Root in Pet Food Choline in Pet Food Chondroitin Sulfate in Pet Food Copper in Pet Food Corn Gluten Meal Corn in Pet Food Cranberry in Pet Food
D
DL-Methionine Dried Egg Products in Pet Food Dried Herring
E
Ethoxyquin in Pet Food
F
Fish Meal in Pet Food Fish Oil Flaxseed in Pet Food Folic Acid in Pet Food Fresh Meat in Pet Food Fructooligosaccharides (FOS) in Pet Food
G
Glucosamine in Pet Food
H
Hydrolyzed Protein Hydrolyzed Yeast in Pet Food
I
Insect Protein in Pet Food Iodine (I) Iron in Pet Food
L
L-Carnitine Lamb Meal in Pet Food Lavender in Pet Food Lentils in Pet Food Lysine (L-Lysine)
M
Mannan-Oligosaccharides (MOS) in Pet Food Marshmallow Root in Pet Food Meat Meal in Pet Food Milk Thistle in Pet Food Mixed Tocopherols
N
Natural Flavors and Animal Digest in Pet Food Nucleotides
O
Oatmeal in Pet Food
P
Pea Fiber Pea Protein in Pet Food Peas in Pet Food Potassium Chloride in Pet Food Potatoes in Pet Food Poultry Fat Powdered Cellulose in Pet Food Probiotics in Pet Food Psyllium in Pet Food Pumpkin in Pet Food
R
Rice in Pet Food Rosehip in Pet Food Rosemary Extract in Pet Food
S
Salmon Meal in Pet Food Salmon Oil in Pet Food Salt (Sodium Chloride) in Pet Food Seaweed in Pet Food Selenium in Pet Food Soybean Meal in Pet Food Starch in Pet Food Sweet Potato in Pet Food
T
Taurine Turkey Meal in Pet Food Turmeric in Pet Food
V
Vegetable Protein Isolate Vitamin A (Retinol) in Pet Food Vitamin C in Pet Food Vitamin D (Cholecalciferol) in Pet Food Vitamin E in Pet Food
W
Wheat Gluten in Pet Food Wheat in Pet Food
Y
Yucca Schidigera in Pet Food
Z
Zinc in Pet Food

BHA (Butylated Hydroxyanisole): Synthetic Preservative and the Carcinogenicity Debate

BHA antioxidant Koruyucu Kanserojen IARC
Full Page

BHA (Butylated Hydroxyanisole) is a synthetic antioxidant preservative used in pet food to slow fat oxidation and extend shelf life. It is effective and inexpensive, but animal studies have raised concern about its possible carcinogenic potential. For that reason, premium formulations increasingly favor natural antioxidant systems.

Identity Card
Chemical nameButylated Hydroxyanisole (E320)
Source typeSynthetic
Primary roleAntioxidant / Preservative
Use in foodDelay rancidity and improve shelf life
Regulatory statusAllowed with limits in major markets
Debate levelHigh
VetKriter Assessment
1/5 quality score

BHA is legally permitted in many regions, but it remains a high-caution ingredient. Natural alternatives exist, so premium foods generally avoid it and VetKriter treats it as a negative quality signal.

How It Works

BHA interrupts free-radical reactions in fats. By slowing oxidation, it protects flavor, odor, and fat-soluble nutrients and can help maintain product stability through long distribution and storage periods.

Safety Concerns

Carcinogenicity Classification
  • IARC: classified in Group 2B, meaning possibly carcinogenic to humans
  • NTP: lists BHA among substances reasonably anticipated to be carcinogenic
  • Animal data: high-dose rodent studies reported forestomach tumor formation
  • Clinical reality: actual risk at pet-food inclusion rates is debated, not ignored

Regulatory Status

RegionStatusTypical limit
United States (FDA/AAFCO)PermittedGenerally limited to 0.02% of fat content
European Union (EFSA)RestrictedUse allowed only under additive rules
JapanControversialUse is more tightly scrutinized in some foods
Turkey (MoAF)Aligned with EU-style limitsFollows controlled additive practice

Natural Alternatives

Mixed Tocopherols (Vitamin E)

A natural antioxidant. It protects fats effectively, although shelf life is shorter than with BHA, usually 6 to 12 months. Preferred by premium foods.

Rosemary Extract

Contains carnosic acid and carnosol. Provides strong antioxidant activity and is often paired with tocopherols in premium formulas.

Ascorbyl Palmitate (Vitamin C)

A fat-soluble vitamin C form that helps regenerate tocopherols and supports a synergistic antioxidant effect.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is food containing BHA harmful for my dog or cat?

Acute toxicity risk at pet food inclusion rates is considered low. The concern is long-term exposure and the availability of safer natural alternatives. For pets with chronic liver or kidney problems, BHA-free diets are usually preferred.

What is the difference between BHA and BHT?

Both are synthetic antioxidants used to delay fat oxidation. BHT carries similar concern signals, and premium manufacturers commonly avoid both compounds.

Related VetKriter Tools

Smart Food Finder

References
  1. IARC. Some Naturally Occurring and Synthetic Food Components. IARC Monographs, 1986.
  2. NTP. Report on Carcinogens, 15th edition, 2021.
  3. EFSA. Re-evaluation of butylated hydroxyanisole (E320) as a food additive. EFSA Journal, 2012.

Statistics

49
Foods Using This Ingredient
74.7
Average VetScore

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