A grain-free diet for pets is a type of commercial pet food formulated without grains such as wheat, corn, rice, barley, and oats. These diets typically substitute grains with alternative carbohydrate sources like potatoes, peas, lentils, or sweet potatoes, and are marketed toward pets with food sensitivities or allergies.
What Is a Grain-Free Diet?
Grain-free pet foods exclude all cereal grains — wheat, corn, rice, barley, oats, and sorghum — from their ingredient list. Instead, they use legumes (peas, lentils, chickpeas), potatoes, sweet potatoes, or tapioca as primary carbohydrate sources.
The grain-free trend emerged from the idea that dogs’ ancestral diet didn’t include grains. However, domesticated dogs have evolved over thousands of years to digest grains efficiently. Genetic research shows dogs have significantly more copies of the AMY2B gene (for starch digestion) than wolves.
Grain-free diets account for roughly 44% of the U.S. pet food market, making them one of the fastest-growing segments despite ongoing veterinary debate about their necessity.
How Grain-Free Diets Work
| Grain-Inclusive | Grain-Free |
|---|---|
| Brown rice, oatmeal, barley | Peas, lentils, potatoes |
| Moderate carb, moderate fiber | Often higher carb from legumes |
| Well-studied, long track record | Newer formulations, less long-term data |
| Typically less expensive | Usually premium-priced |
It’s important to note that grain-free does not mean carbohydrate-free or low-carb. Many grain-free foods contain the same or higher carbohydrate levels as grain-inclusive options — they simply use different carb sources.
Potential Risks and FDA Concerns
In 2018, the FDA began investigating a potential link between grain-free diets and dilated cardiomyopathy (DCM) in dogs. Key findings include:
- DCM reports: The FDA received over 1,100 reports of DCM potentially linked to diet between 2014 and 2023
- Common ingredients: Most cases involved diets with peas, lentils, other legumes, or potatoes as main ingredients
- Breeds affected: While DCM traditionally affects large breeds, cases were seen in breeds not typically predisposed
- Taurine connection: Some affected dogs had low taurine levels, though not all, suggesting the relationship is complex
The FDA has not issued a recall or definitive conclusion, but veterinary cardiologists recommend caution. The investigation is ongoing.
What Pet Owners Should Do
- Consult your veterinarian. Before switching to any specialty diet, discuss your pet’s specific nutritional needs with your vet.
- Understand true food allergies are rare. Only about 10% of pet allergies are food-related, and grain allergies are even rarer — most food allergies in dogs are to proteins (beef, chicken, dairy).
- Look for AAFCO statements. Ensure any food (grain-free or not) meets AAFCO nutritional adequacy standards and has undergone feeding trials.
- Monitor for DCM symptoms. If your dog is on a grain-free diet, watch for lethargy, coughing, exercise intolerance, or fainting — and report them to your vet immediately.
- Consider the evidence. Unless your pet has a diagnosed grain allergy, mainstream veterinary nutrition experts generally recommend grain-inclusive diets from established brands.
Frequently Asked Questions
Is grain-free food bad for dogs?
Do dogs need grains in their diet?
How do I know if my dog has a grain allergy?
What is the FDA investigation about grain-free dog food?
Is grain-free cat food safe?
Questions about your pet’s diet? Find a veterinarian near you on HeiBob for personalized nutrition advice.
