PURINA ONE Adult Cat Food with Salmon and Tuna

Purina

PURINA ONE Adult Cat Food with Salmon and Tuna

7
Good

Concerns Found (6)

Wheat#2 in list
AllergenFiller
4/10
Corn#3 in list
AllergenFiller
4/10
Animal Fat#4 in list
By-product
4/10
Corn#5 in list
AllergenFiller
4/10
Meat By-Products#10 in list
By-product
5/10
Wheat#12 in list
AllergenFiller
4/10

About This Product

PURINA ONE Adult Cat Food with Salmon and Tuna by Purina is a cat food product that scored 7/10 on our ingredient safety scale. This is a moderate score. While not concerning overall, some ingredients warrant attention. We analyzed 14 ingredients in this formula and flagged 6 for potential concerns.

Goal Compatibility

Sensitive Stomach

1/10

Weight Management

2/10

Grain-Free

1/10

Puppy/Kitten

1/10

Senior Pet

5/10

All Natural

10/10

Full Ingredient List

1/10
4/10
4/10
4/10
1/10
#7Vitamins
#8Minerals and Amino Acids
2/10
3/10
4/10
#13Sorghum
#14Natural antioxidants

How We Score Pet Food

Our safety score uses a position-weighted formula: ingredients listed first (higher concentration) receive more weight in the calculation. Each ingredient is scored 1-10 based on published veterinary research and regulatory data. The final product score reflects the overall ingredient quality, with penalties for known carcinogens, artificial preservatives, low-quality fillers, and artificial colors.

What to Look For in Cat Food

  • Named protein first — "Chicken" or "Salmon" is better than "Meat by-products"
  • Minimal fillers — Avoid corn gluten meal, wheat middlings, soy flour as top ingredients
  • No artificial preservatives — BHA, BHT, and ethoxyquin are linked to health concerns
  • No artificial colors — Red 40, Yellow 5, Blue 2 serve no nutritional purpose
  • Taurine listed — Essential amino acid cats cannot produce themselves

Disclaimer

PetFoodScored provides ingredient safety information for educational purposes only. We are not veterinarians. Always consult your vet before making dietary changes for your pet. Our scores are algorithmic assessments, not veterinary medical advice.