Cat Safe Foods
Sharing food with your cat? Make sure it's safe first
Sharing food with your cat? Make sure it's safe first
You can also search for foods that are 👍 safe or 👎 unsafe
Read the tips below before sharing any food with cats
Cats should never be given bones. Not only can meat bones carry bacteria like salmonella or e-coli, they are also likely to splinter and crack when your cat chews on them—regardless of whether they are cooked or uncooked. They can become a choking hazard and cause also cats digestive upset, fractured teeth, or gastrointestinal obstruction or perforation. Though giving cats the most natural option always seems like the best choice, in the case of meat bones, it's best to opt for a high-quality dental bone as an alternative. Cats should never eat any type of meat bone—cooked or uncooked.
Caution: Cats should avoid canned versions of foods due to their high sodium and/or sugar content, and opt for the fresh or frozen version instead. Read more.
Pork is not toxic to cats, but ham, bacon, sausage, and salami are all incredibly rich, fatty, high-sodium foods, and are unhealthy for cats. Even preservatives used in these foods are loaded with nitrates and nitrites, which are sodium-based. Processed meats such as bacon, sausage, and salami contain known carcinogens linked to cancer. Holiday hams are even more problematic for cats because they are usually cooked with butter or oils, seasoned with salt, pepper, herbs, or spices, or stuffed with onions, garlic, or herbs. For cats, this is a recipe for disaster. Pork bones should also be avoided. They are very brittle and if ingested, can lead to choking, fractured teeth, or gastrointestinal obstruction or perforation, especially if they splinter. Cats shouldn't eat ham, bacon, sausage, salami, or any meat bones, but cats can eat plain, unseasoned, cooked pork in small quantities.
Caution: Processed foods are unhealthy for cats and can even conceal toxic ingredients. Read more.
Caution: Foods that are high in fat should only be fed in moderation, as the link between too much fat and pancreas problems in cats is still being studied. Read more.