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What is AAFCO and Why It Matters for Your Dog's Food

McDuffy Team |

TL;DR

AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials) sets the nutritional standards that define "complete and balanced" pet food. An AAFCO-balanced dog food meets minimum nutritional requirements for all essential nutrients, meaning your dog does not need supplements. In the Philippines, McDuffy is the only fresh dog food brand that is verified AAFCO complete and balanced for all life stages, formulated by American board-certified veterinary nutritionists (DACVN). Most Philippine dog food brands — especially fresh food brands — are not AAFCO-balanced.

Last updated: February 2026

If you have spent any time researching dog food, whether kibble, canned, raw, or fresh, you have probably come across the acronym AAFCO. It appears on packaging labels, in marketing claims, and in online discussions about pet nutrition. But what does AAFCO actually mean? And more importantly, why should you as a Filipino pet parent care about it when choosing food for your dog?

Understanding AAFCO is one of the single most valuable things you can do as a dog owner. It is the difference between knowing your dog is getting everything they need nutritionally and simply hoping that their food is good enough. In a country where the pet food market is largely unregulated compared to places like the United States or European Union, knowing what AAFCO standards mean puts you miles ahead when evaluating dog food options.

Let us break it all down in plain language, no jargon, no confusion.

AAFCO Explained: The Basics

AAFCO stands for the Association of American Feed Control Officials. Founded in 1909, it is an organization made up of state and federal officials from the United States and Canada who are responsible for regulating the sale and distribution of animal feed, including pet food. Despite its American origin, AAFCO's nutritional standards have become the global benchmark for pet food formulation.

Here is the key thing to understand: AAFCO itself does not test, approve, or certify pet foods. It does not have a laboratory, and it does not hand out a seal of approval. What AAFCO does is establish the nutritional profiles that pet foods must meet in order to be labeled as "complete and balanced." These profiles specify the minimum (and in some cases maximum) amounts of essential nutrients that a dog food must contain.

Think of it this way. AAFCO sets the rules of the game. Individual pet food manufacturers are responsible for making sure their products follow those rules. And regulatory agencies in the United States enforce them. In the Philippines, there is no equivalent enforcement body specifically for pet food nutrition, which makes it even more important for you as a consumer to understand what AAFCO compliance means and to look for it actively.

Ano ang Mga AAFCO Nutrient Profiles?

AAFCO publishes two main nutrient profiles for dogs: one for growth and reproduction (puppies and pregnant or nursing dogs) and one for adult maintenance. Each profile lists dozens of nutrients with specific minimum requirements. Here are some of the most critical ones:

Macronutrients

  • Protein: Minimum 18% for adult dogs, 22.5% for puppies (on a dry matter basis). Protein provides the amino acids that dogs need for muscle maintenance, immune function, and virtually every biological process in their body.
  • Fat: Minimum 5.5% for adults, 8.5% for puppies. Fats are the most concentrated source of energy and are essential for skin and coat health, brain function, and absorption of fat-soluble vitamins.

Minerals

  • Calcium and Phosphorus: These two minerals must be present in specific amounts and in the correct ratio to each other (generally between 1:1 and 2:1 calcium to phosphorus). Improper ratios can lead to skeletal problems, especially in growing puppies.
  • Zinc: Essential for skin health, immune function, and wound healing. Zinc deficiency is one of the most common nutritional problems in dogs fed unbalanced homemade diets.
  • Iron, Copper, Manganese, Selenium, Iodine: All required in trace amounts for various metabolic functions.

Vitamins

  • Vitamin A: Critical for vision, immune function, and cell growth. Both deficiency and excess can cause serious problems.
  • Vitamin D: Necessary for calcium absorption and bone health. Dogs cannot synthesize Vitamin D from sunlight the way humans can, so it must come from their food.
  • Vitamin E: An antioxidant that protects cells from damage.
  • B Vitamins (Thiamine, Riboflavin, Niacin, B6, B12, Folic Acid, Pantothenic Acid): All play roles in energy metabolism and nervous system function.

The full AAFCO nutrient profile lists over 30 individual nutrients with specific requirements. Meeting every single one is not trivial. It requires careful formulation, high-quality ingredients, and in many cases, targeted supplementation to fill nutritional gaps.

Why AAFCO Matters: The Difference Between "Food" and "Complete Nutrition"

Here is where things get real. Any food can fill your dog's stomach. Rice and chicken will keep a dog alive. But "keeping alive" and "properly nourished" are very different things. A dog can eat the same home-cooked rice and boiled chicken every day for years and develop serious nutritional deficiencies that manifest slowly: dull coat, weak bones, poor immune function, organ damage.

AAFCO compliance means that a food has been formulated (or tested through feeding trials) to provide everything a dog needs to not just survive but thrive. It is the difference between a meal and a complete diet.

This is especially important in the Philippines, where many well-meaning pet parents feed their dogs a combination of table scraps and budget kibble. While there is nothing wrong with the intention, the execution often falls short nutritionally. Common deficiencies seen in Filipino dogs include:

  • Calcium and phosphorus imbalances from meat-heavy diets without bone or supplementation
  • Zinc deficiency leading to skin problems, hair loss, and weakened immunity
  • Omega-3 fatty acid deficiency contributing to chronic inflammation and poor coat quality
  • Vitamin D deficiency affecting bone density and muscle function
  • Taurine insufficiency which can contribute to heart disease in some breeds

An AAFCO-balanced food addresses every one of these concerns by design. You do not need to worry about whether your dog is missing something because the formulation already accounts for it.

30+ nutrients Essential nutrients covered by AAFCO dog food standards AAFCO nutrient profiles require over 30 specific vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and fatty acids — all of which are met by McDuffy's veterinary nutritionist-formulated recipes.

AAFCO Formulation vs. Feeding Trials: What is the Difference?

When a dog food claims to meet AAFCO standards, it can do so through one of two methods:

Method 1: Formulation

The food is designed by a qualified animal nutritionist to meet AAFCO nutrient profiles on paper. This means the recipe's ingredients and their known nutritional values are calculated to ensure every nutrient requirement is met. This is the more common method and is perfectly valid when done by experienced formulators using high-quality ingredients.

Method 2: Feeding Trials

The food is actually fed to a group of dogs over a specific period (usually 26 weeks for adult maintenance), and the dogs are monitored for health markers including weight, blood work, and overall condition. Feeding trials are considered the gold standard because they prove that the nutrition works in real life, not just on a spreadsheet. However, they are expensive and time-consuming, which is why many smaller brands rely on formulation instead.

Both methods are accepted by AAFCO, and both result in the "complete and balanced" claim on packaging. When choosing a dog food, what matters most is that the AAFCO compliance exists at all, since many products on the Philippine market, especially locally made fresh and raw foods, have never been evaluated against AAFCO standards.

The Philippine Pet Food Landscape: Saan Ka Dapat Mag-Ingat

The pet food market in the Philippines is a mix of international brands, local manufacturers, and cottage industry producers. Here is how AAFCO compliance breaks down across different categories:

International Kibble Brands

Many established international kibble brands are formulated to meet AAFCO standards and are generally reliable in terms of nutritional completeness. These brands invest heavily in research and quality control. The tradeoff is that kibble is heavily processed, which affects digestibility and nutrient bioavailability. For a deeper comparison, read our post on fresh dog food versus kibble.

Local Kibble Brands

Some Filipino-made kibble brands meet AAFCO standards, but not all. The Philippine market does not require AAFCO compliance for pet food sales, so it is entirely possible to buy locally produced kibble that has never been tested against any nutritional standard. Always check the packaging for a statement about AAFCO compliance, and be wary of brands that are vague about their nutritional claims.

Homemade and Cottage Fresh Dog Food

The fresh and raw dog food scene in the Philippines is growing rapidly, with numerous small producers selling through Instagram, Facebook, and Shopee. While many of these producers have good intentions and use quality ingredients, the vast majority have not had their recipes evaluated against AAFCO nutrient profiles. Some may even be nutritionally harmful over the long term because of uncorrected imbalances.

This is not to say that all small producers make bad food. Some are genuinely excellent. But without AAFCO formulation or testing, you are essentially trusting the producer's instincts rather than verified nutritional science. As a pet parent, you deserve more certainty than that.

McDuffy: AAFCO-Balanced Fresh Dog Food

McDuffy was built from the ground up to be the Philippines' first human-grade, AAFCO-balanced fresh dog food. Every recipe, Surf & Turf, Farmyard Feast, and Coastal Blend, is formulated with animal nutrition expertise to meet and exceed AAFCO nutrient profiles for adult dogs. This means your dog gets the benefits of real, whole-food ingredients with the nutritional assurance of a properly formulated diet.

But McDuffy goes beyond just meeting AAFCO minimums. Here is how:

  • Higher protein content. While AAFCO requires a minimum of 18% protein for adult dogs, McDuffy's recipes significantly exceed this threshold with premium animal protein sources.
  • Omega-3 rich formulation. Fish is included in all three recipes to provide EPA and DHA omega-3 fatty acids for anti-inflammatory benefits, coat health, and cognitive function. Many AAFCO-compliant foods meet the fat requirement without providing meaningful omega-3 levels.
  • Human-grade ingredients. AAFCO does not require human-grade ingredients. A food can be AAFCO-compliant using feed-grade meat meals, by-products, and rendered fats. McDuffy uses only ingredients that are fit for human consumption, which means higher quality protein sources and no mystery ingredients.
  • Minimal processing. Unlike kibble, which is extruded at extremely high temperatures, McDuffy's food is gently cooked to preserve nutrient bioavailability. You can see and identify the individual ingredients in every bag.
  • Full transparency. Every ingredient is listed clearly on our ingredients page, with no hiding behind vague terms like "animal derivatives" or "meat meal."
The only one AAFCO-balanced fresh dog food brand in the Philippines McDuffy is the only fresh dog food brand in the Philippines that is verified AAFCO complete and balanced for all life stages, formulated by American board-certified veterinary nutritionists.

How to Check if Your Dog's Food is AAFCO Compliant

Whether you are buying McDuffy or any other brand, here is how to verify AAFCO compliance:

  1. Look for the nutritional adequacy statement. On any AAFCO-compliant product, you should find a statement similar to: "[Product name] is formulated to meet the nutritional levels established by the AAFCO Dog Food Nutrient Profiles for [life stage]." This statement is legally required in the US and is a reliable indicator globally.
  2. Check the guaranteed analysis. This section lists minimum percentages of crude protein and fat, and maximum percentages of crude fiber and moisture. While it does not tell you everything, it gives you a baseline for comparison.
  3. Review the ingredient list. Ingredients are listed in order of weight (before cooking). The first several ingredients should be recognizable whole foods, especially named protein sources like "beef," "chicken," or "salmon." Be cautious of foods where the first ingredient is a grain or where protein sources are vague.
  4. Ask the manufacturer directly. If a brand does not clearly state AAFCO compliance on their packaging or website, email them and ask. A reputable company will be happy to share this information. If they dodge the question or cannot provide it, that tells you something.

Common Misconceptions About AAFCO

There is a lot of misinformation about AAFCO floating around the internet, especially in pet parent Facebook groups. Let us clear up the most common misconceptions:

"AAFCO standards are just minimum requirements, so they are not good enough."

This is partially true but misleading. Yes, AAFCO sets minimum thresholds. But those minimums are based on decades of nutritional research and are designed to prevent deficiency diseases. Meeting AAFCO minimums is not "bare minimum" in the way that phrase usually implies. It means your dog is getting every essential nutrient in amounts proven to support health. The best brands, like McDuffy, go beyond these minimums, but meeting them is already a significant achievement that most homemade and cottage-industry foods fail to do.

"AAFCO is just an American thing and does not apply to the Philippines."

AAFCO is indeed an American organization, but its nutrient profiles are based on universal canine nutritional science. Dogs in the Philippines have the same nutritional needs as dogs in the United States. The underlying science of what nutrients dogs need and in what amounts does not change based on geography. AAFCO profiles are recognized and referenced by pet nutrition professionals worldwide.

"If I feed my dog fresh meat, I do not need to worry about AAFCO."

This is perhaps the most dangerous misconception. Fresh meat is an excellent protein source, but meat alone is not a complete diet. It is deficient in calcium (meat has almost no calcium; bones do), often low in certain vitamins, and has a very imbalanced calcium-to-phosphorus ratio. Dogs fed primarily meat without proper supplementation frequently develop skeletal problems, especially growing puppies. AAFCO compliance ensures these gaps are filled.

"Expensive food is always AAFCO compliant."

Price and AAFCO compliance have no guaranteed correlation. Some affordable brands meet AAFCO standards, while some expensive boutique brands do not. Always check the label rather than assuming quality based on price.

"AAFCO only matters for kibble."

AAFCO standards apply to all forms of commercial dog food: kibble, canned, fresh, freeze-dried, and even raw. Any brand claiming their product is "complete and balanced" should be able to back that claim with AAFCO compliance, regardless of the food format.

What to Look for Beyond AAFCO

AAFCO compliance is the foundation, but it is not the only thing that matters. Once you have confirmed that a food meets AAFCO standards, consider these additional factors:

  • Ingredient quality. Human-grade versus feed-grade ingredients makes a real difference in digestibility and nutrient absorption. AAFCO does not differentiate between the two.
  • Processing method. Gently cooked food retains more nutrients than food that has been extruded at high temperatures. The way food is prepared affects how much of its nutritional value your dog actually absorbs.
  • Transparency. Can you see every ingredient listed clearly? Does the company explain where their ingredients come from? Transparency builds trust and accountability.
  • Company reputation and expertise. Who formulated the recipes? Do they have credentials in animal nutrition? Are they responsive to customer questions?
  • Your dog's individual response. Even the best-formulated food may not agree with every dog. Monitor your dog's coat, energy, stool quality, and overall condition after switching foods. These are the real-world indicators of whether a food is working.

For a comprehensive look at the best options available in the Philippines, check out our guide to the best fresh dog food brands in the Philippines.


Frequently Asked Questions About AAFCO and Dog Food

Does AAFCO test or approve dog food?

No. AAFCO establishes nutritional standards and labeling guidelines, but it does not test, certify, or approve individual products. Manufacturers are responsible for ensuring their products meet AAFCO profiles, and in the US, state feed control officials enforce compliance. In the Philippines, there is no equivalent enforcement, so pet parents need to verify AAFCO claims themselves.

Is AAFCO compliance required for dog food sold in the Philippines?

No. The Philippines does not currently require pet food to meet AAFCO or any equivalent nutritional standard. This means products can be sold as dog food without any proof of nutritional completeness. This makes it even more important for consumers to look for AAFCO compliance voluntarily provided by reputable brands.

Can homemade dog food be AAFCO compliant?

In theory, yes, but in practice it is extremely difficult without professional guidance. Studies have shown that the vast majority of homemade dog food recipes found online are nutritionally incomplete. If you want to cook for your dog, consult a board-certified veterinary nutritionist who can formulate a recipe specifically for your dog's needs, including appropriate supplementation.

What does "complete and balanced" mean on a dog food label?

"Complete" means the food contains all the nutrients a dog needs. "Balanced" means those nutrients are present in the correct proportions relative to each other. Together, "complete and balanced" indicates that the food can serve as your dog's sole diet without the need for additional supplementation. This claim should always be backed by AAFCO compliance.

Is AAFCO compliance the same for puppies and adult dogs?

No. AAFCO has separate nutrient profiles for growth and reproduction (puppies, pregnant and nursing dogs) and for adult maintenance. Puppy food has higher requirements for protein, fat, calcium, phosphorus, and several other nutrients to support rapid growth. A food labeled "for all life stages" meets the more stringent growth profile, which means it is suitable for both puppies and adults.

How often does AAFCO update its standards?

AAFCO reviews and updates its nutrient profiles periodically as new research becomes available. The most recent significant update to the dog food nutrient profiles occurred in 2016, with ongoing minor revisions. These updates ensure that the standards reflect the latest scientific understanding of canine nutrition.

Does McDuffy's food meet AAFCO standards?

Yes. All three McDuffy recipes, Surf & Turf (Beef & Fish), Farmyard Feast (Pork, Chicken & Fish), and Coastal Blend (Fish), are formulated to meet and exceed AAFCO Dog Food Nutrient Profiles for adult maintenance. McDuffy is the Philippines' first fresh dog food brand to combine human-grade ingredients with verified AAFCO-balanced formulations.

Why should I trust AAFCO standards over advice from pet influencers or Facebook groups?

AAFCO standards are based on decades of peer-reviewed nutritional research conducted by veterinary scientists. While pet influencers and community groups can provide helpful anecdotal advice, they are not a substitute for evidence-based nutritional science. Many popular beliefs about dog nutrition (such as the idea that grain-free is always better, or that raw meat alone is a complete diet) are not supported by scientific evidence. AAFCO provides an objective, science-backed framework for evaluating pet food.


The Bottom Line: AAFCO Is Your Best Friend When Choosing Dog Food

In a market full of marketing claims, aesthetic packaging, and influencer endorsements, AAFCO compliance is one of the few objective indicators of nutritional quality. It will not tell you everything about a dog food, but it tells you the most important thing: that your dog's food has been formulated to provide complete and balanced nutrition.

For Filipino pet parents who want the best for their dogs, looking for AAFCO compliance should be step one in evaluating any dog food, whether it is kibble, canned, or fresh. And if you want a food that goes beyond AAFCO minimums with human-grade ingredients, gentle cooking, and real transparency, McDuffy is here for you.

Feed Your Dog AAFCO-Balanced, Human-Grade Fresh Food

McDuffy's three recipes are formulated to exceed AAFCO standards using real, whole ingredients you can see and trust. Starting at just ₱239 per bag.

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Written by the McDuffy Team. Our recipes are formulated by animal nutrition experts to give your dog the complete, balanced nutrition they deserve, made with ingredients good enough for your own kitchen.

McDuffy Nutrition Team

Every McDuffy article is developed by our nutrition team in consultation with American board-certified veterinary nutritionists (DACVN). Our recipes are AAFCO-balanced and formulated for all life stages.

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