Veterinarian Approved Content
This content has been prepared by Doç. Dr. Mehmet ÇOLAK based on scientific sources.
Ingredient Encyclopedia

Chicken Fat: Energy Source and Linoleic Acid in Pet Food

Doç. Dr. Mehmet ÇOLAK 18 February 2026 119 views

Chicken Fat: Energy Source and Linoleic Acid in Pet Food


Chicken fat is one of the most common named animal fat sources in pet food. It is valued for high energy density, strong palatability, and its contribution of linoleic acid, an essential omega-6 fatty acid important for skin and coat health. A named fat source is generally much more transparent than a generic “animal fat” label.

Identity Card
AAFCO termChicken Fat
Source typeAnimal-derived
FunctionEnergy / palatability / omega-6 supply
EnergyAbout 9 kcal/g
Linoleic acidTypically 18-23%
Debate levelLow
VetKriter Assessment
4/5 quality score

Named chicken fat is a quality energy source and improves formula transparency. Its linoleic acid content supports skin barrier function and coat quality, while its palatability value can improve food acceptance.

Fatty Acid Profile

Fat sourceLinoleic acidOleic acidEPA+DHASaturated fat
Chicken fat18-23%37-43%Low28-30%
Beef fat2-5%40-50%Very low45-55%
Fish oil1-2%10-20%20-35%20-30%
Sunflower oil55-70%15-25%None10-12%

Advantages

  • High energy: useful in active or high-demand animals
  • Linoleic acid: supports skin barrier, coat quality, and reproduction biology
  • Palatability: improves taste acceptance
  • Carrier role: helps absorption of fat-soluble vitamins
“Animal Fat” vs “Chicken Fat”

A label that specifically says Chicken Fat signals traceability and better transparency. A vague Animal Fat description leaves the source uncertain and is less informative in ingredient evaluation.

Frequently Asked Questions

Is chicken fat unhealthy?

No. It is a legitimate energy and essential fatty acid source. The real issue is total calorie load and overall diet balance, not the named fat source itself.

Related VetKriter Tools

References
  1. NRC. Nutrient Requirements of Dogs and Cats. 2006.
  2. AAFCO. Official Publication. 2024.
Tags: chicken fat linoleic acid Omega-6 energy palatability

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