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VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat

CatWetMain FoodAdult

Complete & balanced diet

The label carries a nutritional adequacy statement saying this food is "complete and balanced" — meaning it is formulated to provide every essential nutrient your pet needs for the stated life stage, in the right proportions.

A food may only make this claim if it meets an established nutrient profile (AAFCO or FEDIAF) or passes a feeding trial. Because it is complete, it can be fed as the sole daily diet.

VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat scores 2/5 on Moesonson's label-based analysis. Its strongest factor is animal-protein content (strong — 100% of the weighted protein comes from animal sources); its weakest is protein clarity (low — 0% of the recipe's protein panel is clearly named).

Rating

Updated Jul 2026
★︎★︎☆︎☆︎☆︎ 2.0 / 5
Protein Clarity

Protein Clarity

This measures how clearly the protein sources are identified on the label. "High" means ingredients like "chicken" or "salmon" are listed by name, so you know exactly what your pet is eating. "Low" means vague terms like "meat meal" or "animal by-products" are used, making it harder to know what's really inside.

Why does clarity matter?

According to AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials), pet food labels must follow specific naming standards. When a product uses a named protein like "chicken" it must contain at least 25% of that ingredient. Vague terms like "meat by-products" have no such minimum and can include lower-quality parts from any animal source — making it impossible to know what your pet is actually eating or to identify allergens.

Low
Animal Protein

Animal Protein

This estimates how meat-forward the protein sources are from the ingredient label. Named animal proteins count strongly, plant protein concentrates count strongly against the score, and whole plant ingredients with some protein count more lightly. A "High" score means the recipe appears mainly animal-protein led. A "Low" score means the label shows a stronger reliance on plant protein signals.

This is an ingredient-label heuristic, not an exact lab measurement of protein grams.

Why does animal protein matter?

1. Contains irreplaceable essential nutrients Taurine and Arginine — which cats need to stay healthy — are only found in meat. Plants contain none at all.

2. Plant proteins are poorly utilized by the body Even though plant proteins (like corn gluten meal) may show 92.9–96% apparent digestibility, that does not mean high bioavailability. They lack adequate Lysine (only 1.7% vs. the ideal 6–7%) and contain phytic acid that blocks mineral absorption.

High
How we review →

How this score is made

This score isn’t a hand-wavy impression: it reads what the label actually prints — the ingredient list, guaranteed analysis and AAFCO adequacy statement — and runs it through the same algorithmic rubric as every other product. No brand pays for placement, and there are no affiliate links on reviewed products.

Read the full methodology

Is VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat wet cat food good?

VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat is a wet cat food rated 2 stars, with low ingredient transparency and strong animal protein content. Real muscle meat appears as a primary protein source, supported by whole-food ingredients. However, several animal ingredients are described in generic terms, which reduces sourcing transparency. This recipe is free from Gluten grains, Grains (gluten-free), Dairy, Egg, Legumes, Nuts, Shellfish, Unknown Meal but contains Poultry, Red meat, Fish.

Allergy Highlights

Contains:

PoultryRed meatFish

Free From:

Gluten grainsGrains (gluten-free)DairyEggLegumesNutsShellfishUnknown Meal

Cons

  • Contains several unnamed animal ingredients, which reduces ingredient transparency.
  • Relies heavily on animal by-products, which can vary in quality.
  • Some non-animal ingredients are not clearly identified, which reduces formula transparency.
  • Relies mostly on inorganic mineral supplements, which may be less bioavailable.

Nutrition Breakdown

Nutrition Breakdown — Dry Matter
Protein 59%
Fat 30%
Fiber 3%
Ash 23%

Moisture (85%) removed so you can compare foods fairly.

Dry matter basis = label value ÷ (100% − moisture%). Carbs estimated from remaining.

Nutrition Breakdown — As Fed
Protein 9%
Fat 5%
Fiber 1%
Moisture 85%
Ash 4%

As-fed values are the raw percentages printed on the product label.

Tips

Ingredients Analysis

27 of 27 matched

  • 1 Water
    Others

    Description

    It is added in the pet food as a blending / thinning agent.

  • 2 Oil
    Fat

    Description

    Unnamed oil source with no species or type identified.

    Why Notice?

    Unnamed oil with no transparency on source or type.

  • 3 Red Meat
    Animal Protein

    Description

    Unnamed red meat source with no species identified.

    Why Concerned?

    Unnamed protein — specific species not disclosed, reducing transparency.

  • 4 Chicken By-Products

    (Detected): Chicken By-Product

    Animal Protein

    Description

    Parts of slaughtered chicken including organs, necks, and feet. Variable nutritional quality.

    Why Concerned?

    By-products can vary in quality and nutritional value depending on what parts are included.

  • 5 Sunflower Seed Oil
    Fat

    Description

    Oil from sunflower seeds, rich in vitamin E and linoleic acid.

  • 6 Fish Oil
    Fat

    Description

    Oil derived from fish, rich in omega-3 fatty acids, DHA, and EPA.

    Why Concerned?

    Fish oil is beneficial but the unnamed source makes quality assessment difficult.

  • 7 Phosphate
    Supplement

    Description

    Phosphate compound used as a mineral supplement or processing aid.

  • 8 Thickeners

    (Detected): Thickener

    Food Additive

    Description

    Unspecified thickening agents used to improve food texture.

  • 9 Tricalcium Phosphate
    Supplement

    Description

    A supplement for calcium and phosphorus. It is mainly used to improve the texture of pet foods.

  • 10 Zinc Sulfate
    Supplement

    Description

    An inorganic form of zinc, which is vital in skin function and wound healing, cell replication, the structure and function of biological membranes. Compare to organic form, it has 5 - 15% less absorption rate to the body.

  • 11 Manganese Sulfate
    Supplement

    Description

    An inorganic form of manganese that has 5 - 15% less absorption rate than the organic form. It is essential for the transport and movement of oxygen around the body.

  • 12 Ferrous Sulfate
    Supplement

    Description

    An inorganic form of iron. It is essential for the transport and movement of oxygen around the body. Compare to organic form, it has 5 - 15% less absorption rate to the body.

  • 13 Copper Sulfate
    Supplement

    Description

    An inorganic form of copper, which is important for the production of blood cells, hair coat color pigmentation, and maintaining the nervous system. Compare to organic form, it has 5 - 15% less absorption rate to the body.

  • 14 Potassium Iodide
    Supplement

    Description

    An inorganic form of potassium, which offers 5 - 15% less absorption rate to the body. It is essential for important functions like nerve impulse transmission, muscle contraction, and carbon dioxide / oxygen transport.

  • 15 Choline Chloride
    Supplement

    Description

    Vital molecule for various functions in the body, lack of choline can result in weight loss, vomiting, and fatty liver.

  • 16 Vitamin E
    Supplement

    Description

    Supplement for vitamin E, which is an important antioxidant that protects oxidative damages on cellular membranes by free radicals. A deficiency will result in symptoms like anorexia, depression, and dermatitis.

  • 17 Niacin
    Supplement

    Description

    Known as vitamin B3, essential to maintain healthy GI tracts, skin/coat, and nervous system.

  • 18 Thiamine
    Supplement

    Description

    A supplement for vitamin B1, which is important for energy production and glucose metabolism.

  • 19 Pantothenic Acid
    Supplement

    Description

    A water-soluble dietary supplement for vitamin B5, which is essential for energy metabolism in the body.

  • 20 Vitamin B6
    Supplement

    Description

    Supplement for vitamin B6, which is vital for producing glucose, red blood cells, and synthesis of niacin, taurine, dopamine. A deficiency will result in symptoms like anemia, seizures, and heart-related issues.

  • 21 Vitamin B12
    Supplement

    Description

    Supplement for vitamin B12, which is vital for carbon transfer and propionate metabolism. A deficiency will result in symptoms similar to gastrointestinal disorders, such as diarrhea and weight loss.

  • 22 Vitamin A
    Supplement

    Description

    Supplement of vitamin A, it is essential for healthy skin, normal vision, and immune function.

  • 23 Folic Acid
    Supplement

    Description

    A synthetic form of folate, which is also known as vitamin B9. It plays an important role to support the body's functions, such as cell growth.

  • 24 Vitamin K3
    Supplement

    Description

    Menadione, a synthetic form of vitamin K essential for blood clotting.

    Why Concerned?

    A synthetic vitamin that has been controversial due to potential toxicity at high doses.

    Uncertain/Risky

    Synthetic form with potential toxicity concerns at high doses.

  • 25 Biotin
    Supplement

    Description

    A water-soluble vitamin B that is important for maintaining healthy skin, coat, and nails.

  • 26 Taurine
    Supplement

    Description

    An essential amino acid (building blocks of protein) to maintain a healthy brain and heart functions.

    Why Prefer?

    A safe supplement to improve the completeness of essential amino acids profile (the building block of protein).

  • 27 Colour
    Food Additive

    Description

    Unnamed colorant added for visual appeal, provides no nutritional value.

    Why Notice?

    Unnamed colorant with no nutritional benefit — added only for appearance.

Tips

  • Some protein sources are less clear: Red Meat, Chicken By-Products appear near the top without a clearly defined animal source.
  • Higher-priority ingredients to review: Oil, Colour.
  • Higher-caution ingredients: Vitamin K3 have caution notes in the ingredient database.

Protein Analysis

How this recipe earned its protein scores.

Protein Clarity

Low
Low
  • Unnamed 50%
  • By-products 50%

Low clarity: only 0% of VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat's animal-protein ingredients are clearly named. 50% use vague terms such as "meat meal" and 50% are by-products. Named protein ingredients let you verify the source and spot allergens; vague ones don't.

Contributing ingredients

Unnamed

Red Meat

By-products

Chicken By-Products

Animal Protein

High
High
  • Animal 100%

Meat-forward: 100% of the weighted protein in VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat comes from animal sources. Plant signals are modest (0% whole plants, 0% plant concentrates), so the protein profile leans on real meat.

Contributing ingredients

Animal

Red Meat Chicken By-Products

VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat wet cat food Review

VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat scores 2 stars on this analysis, with low ingredient transparency and strong animal protein content. There are several concerns in this label that may make it a poor fit.

Best for

  • Pets avoiding gluten grains
  • Pets that thrive on muscle-meat protein

Avoid if

  • Ingredient transparency is non-negotiable

Key takeaways

  • Animal by-products account for 50% of the protein, which can vary in quality.
  • Contains common allergens: Poultry, Red meat, Fish.
  • On a dry-matter basis: 59% protein, 30% fat, 0% estimated carbohydrates.
  • 100% of the weighted protein comes from animal sources.
  • Free from Gluten grains, Grains (gluten-free), Dairy, Egg, Legumes, Nuts, Shellfish, Unknown Meal.

Frequently asked questions

Is VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat good for cats?

Based on its label, VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat is hard to recommend — it scores 2 out of 5 stars on Moesonson’s analysis, with low ingredient transparency and strong animal protein content. Both factors come straight from the printed ingredient list, so review the full breakdown of concerns before choosing it for your cat.

Does VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat contain Dairy?

No — based on the printed ingredient list, VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat does not include Dairy or closely related ingredients, so pets sensitive to Dairy can typically avoid that trigger here. Recipes do get reformulated, though, so re-check the packaging before feeding — Moesonson’s reading reflects the label at analysis time.

Does VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat contain Egg?

No — based on the printed ingredient list, VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat does not include Egg or closely related ingredients, so pets sensitive to Egg can typically avoid that trigger here. Recipes do get reformulated, though, so re-check the packaging before feeding — Moesonson’s reading reflects the label at analysis time.

Does VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat contain Legumes?

No — based on the printed ingredient list, VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat does not include Legumes or closely related ingredients, so pets sensitive to Legumes can typically avoid that trigger here. Recipes do get reformulated, though, so re-check the packaging before feeding — Moesonson’s reading reflects the label at analysis time.

Does VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat contain Nuts?

No — based on the printed ingredient list, VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat does not include Nuts or closely related ingredients, so pets sensitive to Nuts can typically avoid that trigger here. Recipes do get reformulated, though, so re-check the packaging before feeding — Moesonson’s reading reflects the label at analysis time.

Is VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat grain-free?

Yes — VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat is grain-free according to its printed ingredient list: no gluten grains (like wheat) and no gluten-free grains (like rice or corn) appear in the recipe. That makes it a candidate for pets with diagnosed grain sensitivities, though grain-free offers no automatic benefit for pets without one.

What are the main protein sources in VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat?

The animal proteins in VitaPet Tuna Adult Cat include Red Meat, Chicken By-Products, but some appear under generic terms such as “meat” or “poultry” rather than by species. Generic labeling lowers the recipe’s protein-clarity score in Moesonson’s analysis, because it stops you verifying the exact protein source — a drawback for pets with specific protein allergies.

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