Pet food recall tracker.
Pet-related recalls from the FDA's official recall and safety-alert feed. This page is a dated snapshot, not a live wire: we re-check the feed automatically every time the site updates - last checked July 9, 2026 - and for anything happening this minute, the FDA's animal recall page ↗ is the source of truth.
🚨 Pet items in the FDA's current recall feed
FRANKLIN, Tenn., (July 2, 2026): Mars Petcare US, Inc. is issuing a voluntary recall for two lots of PEDIGREE® Can High Protein Chopped Chicken & Duck Flavor 13.2oz for dogs.
Revival Animal Health, LLC Voluntarily Recalls Canine and GM Milk Replacers Due to Low or Elevated Levels of Vitamin D ↗ Jun 26, 2026Revival Animal Health of Orange City, IA is recalling Breeder’s Edge® Foster Care® Canine, Shelter’s Choice® Canine Milk Replacers, and is expanding the current recall to include the Breeder’s Edge® Foster Care® GM (goat milk) products due to variable levels of Vitamin D resulting in either low or e
Filtered from the 20 most recent alerts in the FDA recall feed ↗ (all product types). Recalls older than the feed window will not appear above.
📋 Your food got recalled - do this, in order
- Stop feeding it immediately - even if your pet seems fine and the bag is nearly done.
- Check the lot code and date on the bag or can against the recall notice - recalls are usually specific lots, not the whole brand. The notice lists exactly which codes are affected.
- Don't bin it yet: seal it in a bag, photograph the lot code, and keep the receipt if you have one. Stores and manufacturers refund recalled product, and you may need the code if your pet gets sick.
- Wash everything it touched - bowls, scoops, storage bins, your hands. Salmonella recalls are as much about the humans in the house as the pets.
- Watch your pet for vomiting, diarrhoea, lethargy or loss of appetite, and call your vet if anything seems off - mention the recall and bring the lot code.
- Report problems through the FDA's pet food complaint process ↗ - consumer reports are how many recalls start.
📣 Hear about recalls before this page does
We refresh on our update rhythm; these are faster. Subscribe to the FDA's animal recall page ↗ (it offers email alerts), and your vet clinic often posts local notices. When you switch foods after a recall, do it over several days - see the feeding advice in any of our dog and cat profiles, and the can-they-eat-it checker for safe stopgaps.
❓ Common questions
How do I find out if my pet's food is recalled?
Check the pet items in the FDA recall feed on this page, and for anything current go straight to the FDA's animal recalls page (it offers email alerts). Recalls usually name specific lot codes and dates rather than a whole brand, so match the code on your bag or can against the notice.
What should I do if my pet food is recalled?
Stop feeding it immediately, even if your pet seems fine. Check the lot code against the notice, seal and keep the product (photograph the code) for a refund and in case your pet gets sick, wash everything it touched, and watch your pet for vomiting, diarrhoea or lethargy - call your vet if anything seems off.
Is this recall list live and complete?
No, and we say so plainly: this page is a dated snapshot of the FDA recall feed, refreshed each time our site updates, covering the feed's most recent alerts. For real-time and older recalls, the FDA's official animal recalls page is the source of truth - we link to it throughout.
My pet ate recalled food but seems fine - should I worry?
Stop feeding it and watch closely, but do not panic. Many recalls are precautionary (a lot that might be contaminated, not one known to be). Note the lot code, watch for vomiting, diarrhoea, lethargy or loss of appetite, and call your vet with the recall details if symptoms appear. When in doubt, your vet is the right call.
How this tracker works, honestly
On every site build we fetch the FDA's public recall feed, keep the items that mention pets or animal food (and drop the "PET bottle" plastic false-positives), and stamp the date. No scraping of third-party blogs, no press-release paraphrasing - every card above links to the FDA notice itself. The trade-off: between our updates and outside the feed's window, this page can lag. That is why the FDA links are everywhere.