Chicken By-Product Meal: The Most Misunderstood Ingredient in Dog Food
What chicken by-product meal actually is
The AAFCO definition: "consists of the ground, rendered, clean parts of the carcass of slaughtered chicken, such as necks, feet, undeveloped eggs and intestines, exclusive of feathers, except in such amounts as might occur unavoidable in good processing practice."
Translated: it's the parts of the chicken that aren't muscle meat, internal organs (liver, kidney, heart, gizzards, lungs), bones (necks, frames), feet, undeveloped eggs from laying hens, and intestines. The AAFCO definition specifically EXCLUDES feathers (despite the persistent rumor that by-product meal is mostly feathers, it's not, by definition).
The reason for the bad reputation is partly the unappealing image of "rendered organs and feet" and partly the actual quality variation across suppliers. A premium by-product meal from a single-species facility is one thing. A budget by-product meal from a multi-species rendering operation is another. Both meet the AAFCO definition.
Why brands use chicken by-product meal
- Protein density. Like chicken meal, by-product meal is dehydrated and concentrated, delivering 55 to 65 percent protein by weight.
- Nutrient density. Organ meat is some of the most nutrient-dense food on earth. Liver alone is one of the best natural sources of vitamin A, B12, iron, and zinc. Heart is rich in CoQ10 and taurine. By-product meal captures these in concentrated form.
- Cost efficiency. By-product meal costs less than chicken meal because it uses parts the human food industry doesn't want. This lets brands deliver high-protein recipes at lower price points.
- Sustainability. By-product meal uses parts of the chicken that would otherwise be wasted. From an environmental standpoint, it's more sustainable than using only muscle meat and discarding the rest.
The quality variation is real
Not all by-product meal is created equal. Three tiers:
- Premium tier: Sourced from human-grade poultry processors, processed at dedicated chicken facilities, low-temperature dehydration, consistent batch-to-batch composition. Used by brands like Purina Pro Plan and Hill's Science Diet.
- Standard tier: Sourced from large rendering operations that primarily handle poultry, with some quality controls but more variation. Used by mid-tier mainstream brands.
- Low tier: Sourced from rendering operations that handle multiple species, with quality that varies significantly batch to batch. Used by budget brands.
The brand's transparency is the best signal. Brands that proudly use chicken by-product meal (like Pro Plan) typically explain their sourcing and quality controls. Brands that use it without discussing it are often pulling from lower tiers.
| Ingredient | What's in it | AAFCO inclusion |
|---|---|---|
| Chicken by-product meal | Organs, necks, feet, frames | Excludes feathers, heads, intestinal contents |
| Poultry by-product meal | Same as above but unnamed bird species | Same exclusions |
| Chicken meal | Muscle meat and skin, dehydrated | Excludes organs, feet, frames |
| Chicken liver / heart (named) | Specific organ | Premium ingredient when named separately |
Quality grade explained
We grade chicken by-product meal at B. The grade reflects the genuinely good nutritional profile (organs are nutrient-dense) tempered by the quality variation across suppliers. A premium brand using high-quality by-product meal earns the implicit B+ or A-. A budget brand using cheap by-product meal is closer to C+.
The 'avoid by-products entirely' position is too strong. The 'by-products are the same as muscle meat' position is too weak. By-product meal sits in a middle tier where context matters.
Common myths debunked
Frequently asked
Is chicken by-product meal bad for my dog?
No, not inherently. Quality named by-product meal is a defensible ingredient with high nutrient density. The catch is sourcing variation, not all by-product meal is equal. By-product meal from a feeding-trial-validated brand (Pro Plan, Hill's) is reliable. By-product meal from a budget brand with no QA disclosure is variable.
Should I feed by-product meal to my puppy?
If the recipe is from a major brand with feeding trials and the recipe is AAFCO-compliant for growth, yes. The nutrient density of by-product meal is genuinely useful for puppies. If the recipe is from a budget brand with opaque sourcing, look elsewhere.
Why do some brands market themselves as 'by-product free'?
Marketing differentiation. The 'by-product free' positioning is a way to compete against legacy mainstream brands without competing on nutritional substance. Some brands genuinely believe they're delivering a better product by avoiding by-products. Others know it's mostly marketing but it sells.
Are by-products the same as 'meat' on a label?
No. 'Meat' on a label is unspecified muscle from any mammal (cattle, pigs, sheep, goats). By-products are specifically NOT muscle meat, they're organs, frames, and feet. Both terms are AAFCO-defined but they refer to different parts of the animal.
Can a dog with chicken allergy eat chicken by-product meal?
No. By-product meal is still chicken protein, just from different parts of the animal. A dog with a true chicken allergy will react to both chicken muscle meat and chicken by-product meal.
Why does my vet recommend a brand that uses by-product meal?
Because the major science-led brands (Hill's, Purina Pro Plan, Royal Canin, Iams, Eukanuba) use by-product meal as part of their nutritional formulation, and vets trust the QA standards of these brands. The vet isn't recommending it despite the by-products, the by-products are part of why the recipe works nutritionally.