Chicken Meal in Dog Food: Why the 'Meal' Is Sometimes Better Than the Meat
The water trick that makes 'meat first' misleading
Pet food labels list ingredients by weight before processing. Fresh chicken is about 70 percent water. So when you see "Chicken" as the first ingredient on a kibble bag, what's actually being weighed is roughly 30 percent chicken protein and 70 percent water that's about to be cooked off in the extruder.
By contrast, chicken meal is the dehydrated form. The chicken has already been cooked down and ground into a dry powder containing about 65 percent protein, 12 percent fat, and 5 percent moisture. When chicken meal is listed in position three, the actual contribution to the finished kibble's protein content can be larger than the fresh chicken in position one.
This is why a label that reads "Chicken, Chicken Meal, Brown Rice..." is nutritionally stronger than a label that reads "Chicken, Brown Rice, Pea Protein...", even though both lead with the same ingredient. The second ingredient matters as much as the first.
What 'chicken meal' actually means
The AAFCO definition: "the dry rendered product from a combination of chicken flesh and skin with or without accompanying bone, derived from the parts or whole carcasses of chicken, exclusive of feathers, heads, feet, and entrails."
Translated: it's chicken muscle meat with skin and bones, cooked, ground, and dehydrated. It does not include feathers, heads, feet, or organs (those would be classified as chicken by-product meal).
The "exclusive of feathers, heads, feet, and entrails" language is the legal line that separates chicken meal from chicken by-product meal. Chicken meal is the higher-quality, more regulated ingredient.
Why brands use chicken meal
- Protein density. Chicken meal delivers 2 to 3 times the protein per pound of fresh chicken. Brands trying to hit a high protein percentage on the label without using massive quantities of fresh meat use chicken meal as a concentrator.
- Cost efficiency. Chicken meal is the cost-effective way to boost protein content in a kibble formula. Brands competing on price use it heavily.
- Shelf stability. The dehydrated form is shelf-stable in ways fresh chicken is not. Manufacturing logistics are simpler.
- Marketing tactic. Some brands use both fresh chicken AND chicken meal so they can lead the ingredient panel with "Chicken" while still hitting their protein target with the meal in position two or three.
Sourcing matters more than buyers realize
Not all chicken meal comes from the same place. The quality range is wide:
- Premium tier: Made from the same chicken cuts that go into human food, processed at facilities that handle only chicken, dehydrated at low temperatures to preserve nutrients.
- Standard tier: Made from chicken byproducts of the human food industry (parts not selected for human retail), processed at dedicated chicken facilities.
- Low tier: Made from rendering operations that handle multiple species, with quality and consistency that varies batch to batch.
The brand's sourcing transparency is the best signal. Premium brands name their chicken meal supplier or describe their facility standards. Budget brands say nothing.
| Ingredient | What's in it | Protein density |
|---|---|---|
| Chicken (fresh) | Whole muscle meat with water | 18 to 22% |
| Chicken meal | Cooked, dehydrated chicken muscle and skin | 60 to 70% |
| Chicken by-product meal | Cooked, dehydrated organs, feet, frames | 55 to 65% |
| Dehydrated chicken | Same as chicken meal under a different name | 60 to 70% |
| Poultry meal | Generic, could be any bird species | 55 to 65% |
Quality grade explained
We grade chicken meal at A-. The grade reflects two things: chicken meal is genuinely high-protein and well-utilized in many premium recipes, AND the sourcing variation is wider than fresh chicken. A premium brand using high-quality named chicken meal earns the implicit A. A budget brand using cheap rendered chicken meal is closer to B.
Common myths debunked
Frequently asked
Is chicken meal worse than fresh chicken?
No. Chicken meal is fresh chicken with the water removed. Per pound of weight on the bag, chicken meal contributes about 3 times the protein of fresh chicken. The strongest dog food recipes use both: fresh chicken in position one (for the marketing benefit) and chicken meal in position two or three (for the actual protein density).
What's the difference between chicken meal and chicken by-product meal?
Chicken meal is muscle meat and skin only. Chicken by-product meal is the rendered organs, necks, feet, and frames. Both are AAFCO-approved. Chicken meal is the more 'premium' option by marketing standards. By-product meal is denser in some nutrients (organs are very nutrient-rich). Neither is harmful.
Is chicken meal good for puppies?
Yes. Chicken meal is a common ingredient in puppy formulas because the high protein density helps hit AAFCO growth requirements. Look for AAFCO-compliant puppy formulas with chicken meal in the top three ingredients.
Can chicken meal trigger a chicken allergy?
Yes, if a dog is sensitive to chicken, both fresh chicken and chicken meal can trigger the reaction because they're the same protein source. Switching from one form to the other doesn't change the allergen profile.
Why don't all premium brands use chicken meal?
Some premium brands (especially fresh DTC brands like The Farmer's Dog) avoid the word 'meal' for marketing reasons even though the underlying nutrition would be similar. Other premium brands embrace chicken meal because they understand its role in concentrated protein delivery. Both approaches can produce quality recipes.