Dog food recalls happen more often than most owners realize β and the dangers aren’t limited to your dog. Bacterial contamination in pet food can spread to the humans who handle it, touch the bowls, or simply let a dog lick their hands. This guide covers every active recall you need to know about, the brands most commonly recalled, how to check any lot number, and what to watch for if your dog has already eaten affected food.
Pet food is handled in kitchens, refrigerators, and on countertops that also touch human food. According to the FDA, Salmonella from recalled pet food can spread to people through three routes: directly handling the contaminated product, contact with pets that ate it (through saliva, feces, or fur), and touching contaminated surfaces like bowls, utensils, or scoops. Dogs infected with Salmonella or Listeria can shed bacteria in their feces and saliva even when they show no symptoms at all β meaning a dog that seems perfectly healthy can still be a transmission source for weeks after eating contaminated food. The people most at risk from secondary exposure are the same groups most at risk from any foodborne illness: adults over 65, children under 5, pregnant women, and anyone with a compromised immune system.
Always verify current status at fda.gov/animal-veterinary before acting β this table reflects what was confirmed at time of writing. Recalls can be added, expanded, or terminated without notice. If your product appears here, stop feeding it immediately and see the “What To Do” section below.
| Brand / Product | Reason | Lot / Date to Check | States |
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| Albright’s Raw Pet Food Chicken Recipe for Dogs Complete & Balanced, 1 lb frozen bricksSALMONELLA |
Routine FDA sampling detected Salmonella in one composite sample. Third-party confirmatory testing ongoing. | Lot C001730 Β· Best By Apr. 28, 2027 Β· UPC 20855404008367 | Nationwide (direct sales + online) Β· MA, CA, SC, NC, WI, NY retailers |
| AllProvide Holistic Pet Food Gently Cooked Chicken Recipe for Dogs, 1 lb, frozen vacuum-sealedPLASTIC |
Customer complaint identified potential plastic fragments. Company halted all production May 21, 2026. | Lots 048-01 through 048-14 Β· Best By Aug. 1, 2027 Β· UPC 859125005809 | Nationwide (allprovide.com + select retailers) |
| Raaw Energy Dog Food Multiple frozen raw recipesLISTERIASALMONELLA |
Multiple pathogens detected: Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella, and Campylobacter jejuni across eight lots. | Products manufactured July 17, 2025βDec. 23, 2025 + one Beef & Turkey Medley lot Mar. 31, 2026 | CT, DE, MA, MD, NH, NJ, NY, PA, VA |
| Elite Treats Chicken Chips for Dogs, 6 oz bagsSALMONELLA | Single lot recalled after Salmonella detected. Boca Raton, FL manufacturer. | Check product for recall lot information Β· Posted Feb. 24, 2026 | Check FDA for distribution details |
| Fromm / Bonnihill Farms BeefiBowls Beef Recipe, 16 oz chubsPLASTIC | Customer complaints about plastic fragments found inside the chubs. Recall now closed per FDA. | Best By 12/25/2026 B01 Β· UPC 072705135004 Β· 300 cases affected | IL, WI, TX, AR, MS, OK, LA, CA, NV, AZ, CO, OR, WA, AK + Ontario, Canada |
The lot number is stamped or printed on the package β often on the bottom or back seam β and is different from the best-by date. Both matter. A product with a future best-by date is not automatically safe: all three current recalls above carry best-by dates in 2026 or 2027. A bag that looks months away from expiring may still be recalled. When checking a recall, match the brand, the product name, AND the lot code. If you can’t read the lot number (smudged packaging, small print), the FDA’s Safety Reporting Portal allows you to call and describe your product.
These are the most searched questions about dog food recalls β answered directly, without hedging that requires a veterinary degree to parse.
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What brands of dog food are being recalled right now? Albright’s Raw Pet Food (Salmonella), AllProvide Holistic (plastic), Raaw Energy (Listeria/Salmonella), Elite Treats (Salmonella) Β· All involve raw or frozen fresh formats Β· Check FDA.gov/animal-veterinary for the live listThe dog food recalls active in the most recent months all share one pattern: they involve raw, frozen, or minimally processed formats β not shelf-stable kibble in sealed bags. Albright’s Raw Pet Food issued a voluntary recall of one specific lot of its Chicken Recipe after routine FDA sampling found Salmonella in a composite sample. AllProvide Holistic recalled approximately 1,500 pounds of its gently cooked chicken recipe after a customer complaint identified potential plastic contamination. Raaw Energy’s recall is the most serious of the group β involving multiple pathogens including Listeria, Salmonella, and Campylobacter across multiple product lots sold in nine northeastern states. If you feed any type of raw, fresh-frozen, or refrigerated dog food, now is the time to check the exact lot number and product name against the FDA’s current list. The full, updated recall database lives at fda.gov/animal-veterinary.
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Is Purina dog food being recalled? No active FDA recall for Purina dog food as of the most recent database check Β· Purina Pro Plan does not appear in FDA recall entries for the past five years Β· Always verify at FDA.gov before assuming a brand is clearPurina β which makes Pro Plan, Beneful, ONE, and other lines β does not appear on the FDA Animal Veterinary recall list for dog food in the recent five-year window reviewed by veterinary sources. Several other mainstream manufacturers including Hill’s Science Diet adult maintenance lines, Just Food for Dogs, and Royal Canin similarly have no current FDA recall entries. However: recall histories can change at any time, and a brand’s clean record is only meaningful up to the moment you check it. The FDA publishes recall notices sometimes within 24 to 48 hours of a company filing; the lag between a manufacturer discovering a problem and the FDA posting the notice can be weeks. The only reliable way to verify your specific brand and product is to search it directly at fda.gov/animal-veterinary, not to rely on any third party (including this page) for real-time status.
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Which dog food brands have the most recalls? Raw and fresh/frozen brands carry the highest recall rate due to pathogen risk Β· Midwestern Pet Foods had one of the largest recalls in history (Sportmix, Pro Pac, multiple brands, aflatoxin + Salmonella) Β· Dry kibble from major shelf-stable brands has a significantly lower recall frequencyBetween mid-2020 and mid-2025, roughly 45 total pet food recalls were issued in the United States. Raw and fresh-frozen brands are disproportionately represented because minimally processed animal protein β the kind that goes into raw and gently cooked recipes β carries an inherently higher pathogen risk than food that has been cooked to safe internal temperatures. The FDA tests pet food for Salmonella under its Compliance Policy Guide, and raw products fail these tests far more frequently than shelf-stable products. The largest single recall event in recent history involved Midwestern Pet Foods, which was forced to recall dozens of SKUs across brands including Sportmix, Pro Pac, Nunn, and Splash β first for deadly aflatoxin mold contamination, then for Salmonella discovered during the investigation. That event confirmed what veterinary public health experts had argued for years: manufacturing facility problems can cascade across many product lines simultaneously, regardless of the brand name on the bag.
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My dog ate recalled food β what symptoms should I watch for? Salmonella: vomiting, diarrhea (possibly bloody), lethargy, fever, loss of appetite Β· Listeria: severe diarrhea, fever, neurological signs in rare severe cases Β· Plastic: vomiting, loss of appetite, stomach discomfort, possible intestinal obstruction Β· Some infected dogs show NO symptoms but can still spread bacteriaThe timeline matters here. Salmonella symptoms in dogs typically appear within 12 to 72 hours of consuming contaminated food, though the range can stretch longer. Listeria illness in dogs is less common β the FDA notes that dogs rarely become severely ill from Listeria β but when it does occur, symptoms can include diarrhea, anorexia, fever, and in serious cases, neurological signs. A dog that ate plastic-contaminated food may vomit immediately or may show delayed signs of gastrointestinal discomfort or obstruction. The hardest part: dogs infected with Salmonella frequently show no outward symptoms at all, yet they continue to shed bacteria in their feces and saliva for weeks. If your dog ate any product from a current recall and you have small children, an elderly family member, or anyone immunocompromised in your household, contact your veterinarian even if the dog appears healthy β the risk to people in the household is the same regardless of how the dog feels.
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Can I get sick from my dog’s recalled food? Yes β Salmonella and Listeria in pet food can infect humans through direct contact, surface contamination, and contact with pets that ate it Β· Asymptomatic pets can still transmit bacteria Β· Wash hands thoroughly after handling any pet food, recalled or notThis is the most underappreciated danger in pet food recalls, and the FDA calls it out explicitly. You don’t have to eat the food yourself to get sick. Simply scooping recalled food into a bowl, then touching your face before washing your hands, is a viable route of transmission. Surfaces that touched the recalled food β countertops, bowls, scoops, storage containers β can harbor bacteria for hours or days. A dog that ate contaminated food and then licks a person’s hands or face can transmit the pathogen directly. People with Salmonella infections typically experience watery diarrhea, stomach cramps, nausea, vomiting, and fever lasting several days. Listeria is more dangerous for specific groups: pregnant women, adults over 65, and immunocompromised individuals can develop listeriosis β a serious infection that, in rare cases, can affect the nervous system and cause meningitis, sepsis, or pregnancy complications. The FDA’s guidance after any pet food recall is clear: wash hands before and after handling pet food every single time, clean bowls daily, and sanitize any surfaces that pet food touches.
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Is raw dog food safe β or should I switch? Raw dog food carries a significantly higher pathogen risk than cooked food β the CDC and FDA consistently find higher Salmonella rates in raw and freeze-dried diets Β· The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) does not recommend raw pet food diets Β· The choice is yours, but the risk is realThe pattern in the current recall landscape is not coincidental. Every dog food recall active right now involves a raw, fresh-frozen, or gently cooked product β not a shelf-stable kibble. The CDC notes that raw and freeze-dried diets carry the highest Salmonella risk in the pet food category, and the FDA’s routine sampling disproportionately catches pathogens in these formats. The AVMA’s official policy discourages feeding raw animal products to pets due to the risk to both animals and the humans living with them. If you feed a raw diet because you believe it benefits your dog’s health, that is a decision between you and your veterinarian. The relevant practical steps regardless of what you decide: check the FDA database monthly, handle raw pet food with the same hygiene you apply to raw chicken in your kitchen, wash all pet food contact surfaces after every feeding, and keep raw pet food away from surfaces where human food is prepared. The single best practice is to subscribe to FDA animal recall email alerts so you don’t have to check manually.
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What is the difference between a voluntary recall and an FDA-mandated recall? Voluntary: the company pulls the product on its own initiative Β· FDA-mandated: the FDA orders the recall under statutory authority Β· Most recalls are voluntary Β· A voluntary recall is not necessarily less serious β some are Class I (highest risk level)The distinction between voluntary and mandatory recalls is widely misunderstood. All four of the current dog food recalls were initiated voluntarily by the companies involved β but “voluntary” doesn’t mean the risk is minor. The FDA classifies recalls by injury potential: Class I means there is a reasonable probability that consuming the product will cause serious adverse consequences or death; Class II means it could cause temporary, reversible health effects; Class III means it is unlikely to cause harm. A voluntary recall can carry a Class I designation. The more meaningful distinction is whether a company initiated its own recall (often through internal testing or responding to customer complaints) versus whether the FDA’s own sampling program caught the problem first. Albright’s and AllProvide, for example, were both voluntary but triggered by FDA and customer detection, respectively. In either case, the response is the same: stop feeding the product immediately, check the lot numbers, and follow the manufacturer’s refund instructions.
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How do I get a refund for recalled dog food? Return to place of purchase with receipt and product for most recalls Β· Some brands require a photo of the product and lot number before issuing a refund Β· Do not throw recalled food away before documenting lot number, UPC, and taking a photoBefore disposing of any recalled product, photograph the packaging β specifically the lot number, UPC, best-by date, and product name. Most companies process refunds through the original retailer. For direct-to-consumer brands like AllProvide and Albright’s Raw, the refund process typically involves contacting the company directly (phone or email) with a receipt, photos, and the specific lot information. Albright’s asks customers to provide a receipt, pictures of the product, and place of purchase information before processing a refund. AllProvide’s contact for refunds is [email protected] or 678-585-1606. When disposing of recalled food, the FDA’s guidance is specific: seal it in a bag that children, pets, and wildlife cannot open before placing it in an outdoor trash bin. Do not compost it. Do not dump it where another animal could access it. Salmonella and Listeria survive in soil and remain viable long after the food has been discarded.
Use the buttons below to find emergency vet clinics, pet stores where you can return recalled product, or regular veterinary offices near you.
- Step 1: Find the lot number and UPC on your current dog food packaging β it’s usually stamped on the bottom or back seam of the bag, box, or tube. Photograph it so you have it on file.
- Step 2: Search fda.gov/animal-veterinary and avma.org/news/recalls-alerts using your brand and product name. If your lot number matches an active recall, stop feeding immediately β even if the best-by date is months away.
- Step 3: If your dog ate any recalled product: call your veterinarian, sanitize all bowls and surfaces, wash your hands after all contact with the dog, and restrict the dog from licking young children or elderly family members for several weeks.
- Step 4: Photograph the recalled product before disposing of it β you need the lot number and UPC to request a refund. Dispose of recalled food in a sealed bag in an outdoor trash bin where other animals cannot access it.
- Step 5: Sign up for free FDA recall email alerts so you never have to check manually again. Keep pet food in its original packaging so the lot number stays with the food from purchase to disposal.
Recall information in this guide reflects publicly available FDA and AVMA notices at the time of writing and may not reflect the current status of any product. Recalls can be expanded, updated, or closed at any time. Always verify the status of any recalled product directly at fda.gov/animal-veterinary before acting. Nothing in this guide constitutes veterinary advice. If your pet is ill, contact a licensed veterinarian immediately. This page has no affiliation with the FDA, AVMA, or any pet food manufacturer.