Safe, vet-approved recipes your cat will love โ plus the complete guide to which ingredients are safe, which are toxic, how to store treats, and the most important rules for making treats at home.
Making treats at home means you control every ingredient โ no artificial flavors, no mystery fillers, no preservatives. But cats are obligate carnivores with very specific nutritional needs, and some perfectly normal human foods are highly toxic to them. The 10 questions below cover everything you need to make safe, delicious homemade cat treats with confidence. The 12 recipes that follow were developed using vet-approved ingredients and backed by FDA, ASPCA, and AVMA guidance.
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Are homemade cat treats safe? Yes โ when made with the right ingredients, cooked thoroughly, and given in appropriate portions.Homemade treats made with single, identifiable ingredients โ cooked chicken, canned tuna in water, cooked eggs โ are among the safest treats you can give your cat. The key rules: always cook meat and eggs fully (the FDA warns that raw meat and eggs can carry Salmonella and E. coli harmful to both pets and humans); never use onions, garlic, chocolate, grapes, raisins, xylitol, or caffeine (all toxic to cats per ASPCA Animal Poison Control); and keep treats to no more than 10% of your cat’s daily calorie intake โ about 20โ30 calories for a typical 10-lb adult cat. Homemade treats are not nutritionally complete meals โ they are supplements to a balanced commercial or vet-formulated diet.
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What are the best ingredients for homemade cat treats? Cooked chicken, cooked turkey, canned tuna in water, cooked salmon, fully cooked eggs, plain pumpkin, and oat flour.Cats are obligate carnivores โ animal-based protein is the foundation of every safe treat recipe. AAFCO guidelines recommend a minimum of 26% protein (dry matter basis) for adult cat maintenance. The best treat bases: lean cooked chicken breast or turkey (most digestible proteins), canned tuna in water โ not oil, not salt-added (limit frequency due to mercury), cooked salmon (excellent omega-3 source), and fully cooked whole eggs (complete protein plus B vitamins). Safe binders include plain oat flour, coconut flour, and a small amount of plain canned pumpkin โ pumpkin adds fiber that supports digestion and hairball control. Always skip salt, sugar, spices, and any seasoning. Cats’ taste buds are highly sensitive to bitterness โ they do not need or benefit from seasonings.
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What ingredients are toxic to cats in treats? Onions, garlic, all allium vegetables, chocolate, grapes, raisins, xylitol, caffeine, and alcohol โ even in small amounts.Per the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center and FDA: onions and garlic (and all allium family vegetables โ chives, leeks, shallots, scallions) cause oxidative damage to red blood cells leading to hemolytic anemia in cats โ cats are more susceptible than dogs. Garlic is considered more toxic per unit than onions. Chocolate and caffeine contain methylxanthines that cats metabolize very slowly โ even small amounts can cause vomiting, irregular heart rhythm, seizures, and death. Xylitol (artificial sweetener in sugar-free gum, candy, and some peanut butters) can cause dangerous drops in blood sugar. Grapes and raisins can cause kidney failure. The FDA also lists alcohol, avocado, yeast dough, macadamia nuts, and excess salt as dangerous. If you suspect ingestion of any of these: call ASPCA Animal Poison Control at 888-426-4435 immediately (available 24/7; fee may apply).
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Can cats eat tuna treats? Is tuna safe? Yes in moderation โ canned tuna in water (no salt added) is safe as an occasional treat, not a daily staple.Tuna is one of cats’ most irresistible flavors and provides excellent protein and omega-3 fatty acids that support brain, skin, and coat health. The limitations: tuna contains mercury, and feeding it too frequently can lead to mercury accumulation over time. Vet guidelines suggest tuna-based treats no more than 2โ3 times per week. Always use canned tuna packed in water โ not in oil (too high in fat) and never with added salt. Skipjack tuna (typically used in “light” canned tuna) has lower mercury levels than albacore. Sardines in water are also an excellent alternative โ smaller fish accumulate less mercury and are rich in calcium and omega-3s. The 12 recipes in this guide include multiple tuna-based options that use appropriate amounts.
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Can I use peanut butter in cat treats? Only plain, xylitol-free peanut butter in very small amounts โ check the label every time, as formulations change.Peanut butter is not toxic to cats per se, but it is not ideal either โ cats are obligate carnivores and gain no real nutritional benefit from it, and most cats are indifferent or mildly interested at best. The danger: many peanut butter brands now include xylitol as a sweetener, which is highly toxic to cats. Per FDA guidance, xylitol can cause dangerous drops in blood sugar in cats. If you do use peanut butter, choose only natural varieties with ingredients listed as “peanuts only” and check the full label every purchase โ manufacturer formulations change without notice. Use no more than 1/4 teaspoon per treat batch of 20+ treats. Most of the recipes in this guide skip peanut butter in favor of tuna, chicken, or egg โ safer and more nutritionally relevant bases for cats.
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How long do homemade cat treats last? How do I store them? Refrigerate for 5โ7 days in an airtight container. Freeze for up to 3 months.Homemade treats contain no preservatives โ unlike commercial products. Baked treats (made with oat flour, egg, and protein): store in an airtight glass jar or zip bag in the refrigerator for 5โ7 days. Dehydrated treats (dried chicken strips, dried fish): store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 1 month โ lower moisture content extends shelf life. Freeze-ahead strategy: make a large batch, portion into single-week servings in small zip bags, freeze for up to 3 months, and thaw in the refrigerator overnight. Label each bag with the recipe name and date made. Signs a treat has gone bad: visible mold, off smell, slimy texture. When in doubt, discard. Never leave treats out at room temperature for more than 2 hours (same food safety rule as human food per FDA guidelines).
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How many treats should I give my cat per day? Treats should be no more than 10% of daily calories โ about 20โ30 calories total for a typical 10-lb adult cat.A typical healthy adult cat needs approximately 200โ250 calories per day depending on size, age, and activity level. The 10% treat rule means no more than 20โ30 calories from treats daily. Most homemade treats made with lean protein and oat flour contain approximately 2โ5 calories each โ meaning 4โ8 small treats per day is a reasonable upper limit. Overfeeding treats โ even healthy ones โ displaces the balanced nutrients in your cat’s main diet. Cats that receive too many treats may begin refusing their regular food, leading to nutritional deficiencies. Treats are most valuable as training rewards, bonding tools, or medication aids โ not as a primary food source. Kittens, senior cats, and cats with health conditions (diabetes, kidney disease, obesity) may have different caloric needs โ ask your veterinarian for specific guidance.
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Can I use raw chicken or raw fish in homemade cat treats? No โ always cook meat and fish fully. The FDA and ASPCA both warn against raw animal products in pet food.The FDA’s guidance on pet food safety is explicit: raw meat and raw eggs can contain Salmonella and E. coli that are harmful to both pets and humans. The FDA updated its H5N1 (avian flu) advisory in September 2025, reminding pet food preparers that uncooked poultry poses a pathogen risk. Raw eggs also contain avidin, an enzyme that blocks absorption of biotin (vitamin B7), potentially leading to skin and coat problems with regular feeding. There is no benefit to using raw proteins in treats that fully cooked proteins do not provide โ the amino acids, protein content, and palatability are equivalent after proper cooking. Cook chicken and turkey to an internal temperature of 165ยฐF. Cook fish until it flakes easily and is no longer translucent throughout. Let everything cool completely before forming treats or serving.
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Do cats need taurine in their treats? Taurine is essential for cats โ but treats from real meat (chicken, fish, turkey) naturally contain it and do not need supplementation.Taurine is an amino acid that cats cannot synthesize in sufficient amounts on their own and must obtain from diet โ making it an “essential” amino acid for cats specifically. Taurine deficiency causes dilated cardiomyopathy (heart disease), blindness, and reproductive problems, according to AAFCO nutrition guidelines. The good news: real animal muscle meat โ chicken, turkey, fish, beef โ all contain meaningful amounts of taurine naturally. Treats made from these ingredients provide taurine without any supplementation. Taurine is primarily found in skeletal muscle, heart muscle, and organ meats. The only scenario where taurine supplementation matters is if you are formulating a complete homemade diet โ not occasional treats. For treats supplementing a commercial AAFCO-compliant diet, no additional taurine is needed.
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What is the baking temperature and time for homemade cat treats? 350ยฐF (175ยฐC) for 10โ20 minutes depending on thickness โ until firm and lightly golden. Always cool completely before serving.The standard baking protocol for homemade cat treats: preheat oven to 350ยฐF (175ยฐC), line a baking sheet with parchment paper, keep treat sizes small (no larger than a thumbnail โ cats have tiny mouths and stomachs), and bake for 10โ20 minutes depending on thickness and desired texture. Thinner treats become crunchy; thicker ones stay chewy. For soft treats (preferred by senior cats, kittens, or cats with dental issues): bake 10โ12 minutes and refrigerate immediately. For crunchy treats: bake 15โ20 minutes and allow to air-cool on the pan for 10 minutes. Dehydrated treats (dried chicken strips): use the oven’s lowest setting (150โ170ยฐF) for 3โ4 hours, or a food dehydrator at 150ยฐF for 6โ8 hours. Always let treats reach room temperature before serving โ hot treats can burn your cat’s mouth and are more likely to crumble unpredictably.
Sources: FDA (fda.gov โ raw meat/egg pathogen risk; H5N1 advisory Sept 2025; dangerous items list); ASPCA Animal Poison Control (aspca.org/pet-care/aspca-poison-control โ toxic foods; onion/garlic/chocolate/xylitol/grapes); AVMA household hazards PDF (avma.org); AAFCO cat nutrient profiles (minimum 26% protein adult maintenance; taurine essential); Pettsie.com vet-reviewed recipes Oct 2025 (safe ingredients; storage 5 days; 10% calorie rule); Catster vet-reviewed recipes Mar 2026 (obligate carnivore; taurine deficiency; commercial diet needed; cook to 165ยฐF); CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (10% daily calories 20โ30 kcal; 200โ250 kcal adult cat; baking protocols; freeze 3 months); Hepper.com vet-approved tuna recipes Oct 2025; LoveMyCat.com Sept 2025 (taurine heart/vision; AAFCO protein minimums; omega sources)
Sources: AAFCO cat nutrient profiles; CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (calorie rule, storage); ASPCA Poison Control aspca.org 888-426-4435; FDA fda.gov dangerous items; Pettsie.com Oct 2025 (storage 5 days fridge); LoveMyCat.com Sept 2025 (baking temperatures)
Every protein must be fully cooked (FDA raw food safety guidelines, updated 2025). No salt. No pepper. No spices. No garlic powder. No onion powder. Cats have highly sensitive taste receptors and do not need or benefit from any seasoning โ plain, single-ingredient cooked proteins are the most palatable and safest base for any treat.
Sources: ASPCA aspca.org (safe proteins; cooked eggs; pumpkin); FDA fda.gov (raw food pathogen risk; H5N1 advisory Sept 2025); Pettsie.com Oct 2025 (safe ingredient list; oat/coconut flour); CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (protein-first approach; catnip); LoveMyCat.com Sept 2025 (taurine in muscle meat; omega-3 sources)
Call ASPCA Animal Poison Control: 888-426-4435 (24/7 โ a consultation fee may apply) or Pet Poison Helpline: 855-764-7661. Do not wait for symptoms โ with cats, many toxins show delayed effects while internal damage progresses. The smaller your cat, the smaller the toxic dose.
Sources: ASPCA Animal Poison Control aspca.org/pet-care/aspca-poison-control (full toxic foods list; allium/chocolate/xylitol/grape mechanisms); FDA fda.gov/animal-veterinary/animal-health-literacy/potentially-dangerous-items-your-pet (avocado, salt, raw meat, alcohol, xylitol); AVMA household hazards PDF (grapes, dairy, macadamia, garlic); Merck Veterinary Manual (allium toxicity โ cats more susceptible than dogs); MyCatJournal.com Dec 2025 (lactose intolerance 70โ90% adult cats; chocolate theobromine slow metabolism)
(1) Cook all proteins fully โ no raw meat, no raw egg. (2) No salt, no spices, no garlic, no onion powder โ not even a pinch. (3) Cool completely before serving โ hot treats can burn your cat’s mouth and are harder to portion correctly.
1 can (5 oz) tuna in water, drained • 1 large egg, fully beaten • ยฝ cup oat flour (grind plain oats in blender)
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Mix tuna, egg, and oat flour until a firm dough forms.
- Roll into small balls (thumbnail size) or flatten with a fork.
- Bake 12โ15 minutes until golden and firm. Cool completely.
- Store in airtight container in refrigerator up to 7 days, or freeze up to 3 months.
ยฝ cup cooked chicken breast, finely shredded • 2 tbsp plain canned pumpkin (not pie filling) • 1 egg, fully cooked and mashed • 3 tbsp oat flour
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Combine shredded chicken, pumpkin, mashed egg, and oat flour. Mix until cohesive.
- Roll into small balls. Do not flatten โ keep them soft and round.
- Bake 10โ12 minutes. They should feel soft when pressed, not hard. Cool fully.
- Refrigerate up to 5 days. Freeze extras for up to 3 months.
2 boneless, skinless chicken breasts โ fully cooked, sliced thin (โ inch strips)
- Cook chicken breast fully โ boil or bake at 375ยฐF until internal temp reaches 165ยฐF.
- Let cool, then slice into very thin strips (โ inch thick, 1โ2 inches long).
- Oven method: place strips on parchment-lined baking sheet. Bake at lowest setting (150โ170ยฐF) for 3โ4 hours, flipping once, until fully dried.
- Dehydrator method: 150ยฐF for 6โ8 hours.
- Store in airtight jar at room temperature up to 1 month, or freeze up to 3 months.
1 can (5 oz) tuna in water, drained • 1 egg • โ cup oat flour • 1 tbsp dried catnip
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Blend tuna and egg in food processor until smooth paste forms.
- Add oat flour and catnip. Pulse until a firm dough forms.
- Roll into small balls. Use a skewer to press a small X on top for texture.
- Bake 10โ12 minutes. Cool fully on pan before serving.
1 can (6 oz) salmon in water, drained • 2 eggs, beaten • ยผ cup oat flour • 1 tbsp plain canned pumpkin (optional)
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Mash salmon thoroughly, removing any large bones (small soft bones are fine).
- Mix in beaten eggs, oat flour, and pumpkin if using. Stir until combined.
- Spoon small tablespoon-sized patties onto the baking sheet. Flatten slightly.
- Bake 12โ15 minutes until set and lightly golden. Cool completely. Refrigerate up to 5 days.
ยฝ cup cooked ground turkey (plain โ no seasoning, no onion) • 1 egg • ยฝ cup oat flour • 2 tbsp low-sodium chicken broth (no onion/garlic ingredients)
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Cook ground turkey through completely, drain fat, and cool.
- Combine turkey, egg, oat flour, and broth in a bowl. Mix until a cohesive dough forms.
- Roll out to ยผ-inch thickness on a floured surface. Cut into small shapes with a small cookie cutter or knife.
- Bake 15โ18 minutes until golden and firm. Cool fully before serving.
- Refrigerate in airtight container up to 7 days.
1 can (5 oz) tuna in water, drained โ reserve 1 tbsp tuna water • 1 egg white
- Preheat oven to 325ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment paper.
- Whisk egg white to stiff peaks (about 3 minutes by hand or 90 seconds electric).
- Blend tuna and tuna water to a smooth paste in blender or food processor.
- Add 2 tablespoons of egg white to blender and blend. Then gently fold tuna mixture into remaining egg white โ do not deflate.
- Pipe or spoon small rounds onto baking sheet. Bake 20โ25 minutes until dry and firm. Cool fully.
ยฝ cup cooked chicken breast, pureed • 1 egg yolk • ยผ cup oat flour • 1 tsp dried catnip
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Puree cooked chicken until smooth. Add egg yolk, oat flour, and catnip. Mix into a stiff dough.
- Roll into very small balls โ the size of a pea or smaller. Training rewards must be tiny.
- Bake 10 minutes until just firm. They should remain slightly soft. Cool fully.
- Store in refrigerator. Use within 5 days, or freeze in small portions.
1 can (3.75 oz) sardines in water, no salt added โ drained • 1 egg • 3 tbsp coconut flour • 1 tbsp plain pumpkin (optional)
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Mash sardines thoroughly (small soft bones are fine โ good calcium source).
- Mix in egg, coconut flour, and pumpkin. Coconut flour is very absorbent โ the dough will thicken quickly. Add a teaspoon of water if too dry.
- Scoop small portions with a teaspoon. Flatten slightly on baking sheet.
- Bake 12โ15 minutes. Cool completely. Refrigerate up to 5 days.
1 can (5 oz) tuna in water, drained • 1 egg • ยฝ cup oat flour • 1 tsp fresh plain parsley, finely minced (not parsley seed)
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Blend tuna and egg until smooth. Stir in oat flour and parsley until dough forms.
- Form small balls. Place on baking sheet and press flat with a fork.
- Bake 10โ12 minutes until set and slightly crisp on edges. Cool fully.
- Refrigerate up to 5 days.
1 cup cooked chicken breast, pureed smooth • ยผ cup plain canned pumpkin • 2โ3 tbsp low-sodium chicken broth (no garlic/onion ingredients) • 1 tsp olive oil (optional)
- Blend cooked chicken, pumpkin, and broth in food processor until smooth pรขtรฉ consistency.
- Add olive oil if using โ stir in.
- Spoon into a standard ice cube tray or silicone mini mold. Fill ยพ full.
- Freeze 3โ4 hours until solid.
- Pop out and store in a zip bag in the freezer up to 3 months. Serve 1 cube at a time โ thaw 10 minutes at room temperature before serving.
ยฝ cup lean ground beef (90%+ lean), fully cooked and drained • 1 egg • ยผ cup oat flour • 1 tbsp plain canned pumpkin
- Brown ground beef over medium heat until fully cooked through. Drain all fat. Rinse under hot water to remove excess fat. Cool completely.
- Preheat oven to 350ยฐF. Line baking sheet with parchment.
- Combine cooled beef, egg, oat flour, and pumpkin. Mix until a cohesive mixture forms.
- Roll into small marble-sized balls. Place on baking sheet.
- Bake 12โ15 minutes until firm throughout. Cool fully. Refrigerate up to 5 days.
Sources: Hepper.com vet-approved tuna treat recipes Oct 2025 (tuna+egg+oat flour base; puffs technique); Pettsie.com Oct 2025 (chicken+pumpkin; salmon patties; all-purpose baking 350ยฐF 10โ20 min); CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (training nibbles 2โ6 kcal; dehydrated strips 150ยฐF 6โ8 hrs; freeze 3 months); LoveMyCat.com Sept 2025 (brewer’s yeast biscuits; 4-ingredient recipes); WellnessMama.com Aug 2025 (sardines calcium source; coconut flour; gelatin; sweet potato); FDA fda.gov (cook to 165ยฐF; no raw animal products); ASPCA aspca.org (catnip safe; plain parsley safe; pumpkin safe); Catster vet review Mar 2026 (beef drain fat; ice cube tray frozen treats); CatHelper.com Aug 2025 (chicken most digestible; turkey for sensitive stomachs)
Cats can technically eat small amounts of plain, xylitol-free peanut butter without harm โ but it is not a recommended ingredient for cat treats. Cats are obligate carnivores and gain no nutritional benefit from peanut butter. The real danger: many peanut butter brands now add xylitol, which is highly toxic to cats and can cause a dangerous blood sugar drop (per FDA dangerous items list). If you want to use peanut butter, read the full label every single time you buy a jar โ formulations change without notice, and the only safe choice is natural peanut butter listing only “peanuts” as the ingredient. Use no more than ยผ teaspoon per full batch of 20+ treats. Most cat treat recipes that suggest peanut butter can substitute canned pumpkin, which is safer and more nutritionally relevant for cats. All 12 recipes in this guide skip peanut butter for this reason.
Cats are notoriously selective, and a treat that works for one cat may be rejected by another. Strategies when your cat refuses homemade treats: (1) Temperature: serve slightly warm, not cold from the refrigerator โ cats prefer food near body temperature. (2) Texture preference: some cats prefer crunchy (bake longer, thinner), others prefer soft (bake shorter, keep thick). (3) Flavor: try tuna over chicken, or add a tiny amount of catnip or a drop of the tuna water to the dough. (4) Size: make treats smaller โ thumbnail-size maximum. (5) Introduction: introduce one new treat alongside something your cat already enjoys, rather than replacing their usual treat abruptly. (6) Texture on top: a tiny dab of plain canned tuna pressed onto the surface of a chicken treat can entice even picky cats. Per the ASPCA, some cats simply prefer specific flavors they have eaten since kittenhood โ a strong early flavor preference is normal feline behavior, not a sign anything is wrong with your recipe.
Yes โ but always get specific guidance from your veterinarian first, as treat ingredients for cats with health conditions matter significantly more than for healthy cats. General principles per veterinary nutritionists: Kidney disease: reduce phosphorus โ avoid high-phosphorus fish (sardines, salmon) and use lean chicken or turkey instead; limit total protein portions but do not eliminate protein; use a very small treat size. Diabetes: keep treats extremely low-carbohydrate โ avoid oat flour and use coconut flour sparingly; pure meat treats (dehydrated chicken strips, Recipe 3) are the best choice. Hyperthyroidism: avoid excessive iodine โ minimize seafood-based treats and favor chicken or turkey. For any cat on a prescription diet: confirm with your vet that the treat ingredients do not interfere with the therapeutic diet’s purpose. A board-certified veterinary nutritionist (find one at dacvn.org) can formulate a treat recipe tailored to your cat’s specific lab values and condition.
Homemade treats have real advantages and real limitations. The advantages: you know exactly what is in them, you can avoid artificial preservatives and dyes, you can tailor ingredients to your cat’s health needs and preferences, and they are typically fresher than shelf-stable commercial products. The limitations: homemade treats have no preservatives, so they spoil quickly without proper refrigeration; they are not nutritionally complete and must supplement โ not replace โ a balanced diet; and the quality of ingredients is only as good as what you purchase. In 2025, thirteen pet food and treat recalls affected 166,071 pounds of commercial products (salmonella, avian flu contamination, foreign objects) per an industry review โ a reminder that commercial products carry their own risks. The most important factor is not whether treats are homemade or commercial โ it is whether they are made with safe, appropriate ingredients for cats, given in appropriate amounts, stored correctly, and offered as a supplement to a nutritionally complete main diet. For treats specifically, homemade using the recipes in this guide is a safe, healthy, and economical choice.
Sources: FDA fda.gov (xylitol dangerous items; peanut butter labeling risk; commercial pet food recalls); ASPCA aspca.org (cat flavor preferences normal; pumpkin safe; catnip safe); TruthAboutPetFood.com Dec 2025 (13 recalls 2025; 166,071 lbs affected; salmonella, H5N1, foreign objects); Catster Mar 2026 (kidney disease low phosphorus; diabetes low-carb treats; board-certified nutritionist dacvn.org); CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (temperature preference; introduction strategy; tuna water technique); AAFCO cat nutrient profiles (phosphorus; protein minimums; life stage requirements)
- Cook all proteins fully, every time. No exceptions โ no raw chicken, no raw fish, no raw eggs. Cook to 165ยฐF internal temperature per FDA food safety guidelines. Raw animal products can carry Salmonella, E. coli, and H5N1 (avian flu โ FDA advisory updated September 2025).
- Never add onion, garlic, salt, or any seasoning. Onions and garlic are more toxic to cats than dogs โ they cause red blood cell destruction at any amount, including powdered form. No salt, no pepper, no spice blends that could contain allium ingredients.
- Keep treats to 10% of daily calories. For a typical 10-lb adult cat, that is approximately 20โ30 calories per day from treats โ about 4โ8 small homemade bites. Treats are a supplement to a balanced commercial diet, not a replacement for it.
- Store and refrigerate properly โ no preservatives means faster spoilage. Baked treats: airtight container in refrigerator, 5โ7 days. Dehydrated treats: airtight jar at room temperature, up to 1 month. Frozen batches: up to 3 months. Label everything with the date made. Discard if you notice any off smell, mold, or slimy texture.
- Introduce new ingredients one at a time. Cats can have individual food sensitivities. Start with one new recipe at a time, offer a small amount, and wait 24 hours before giving more. Watch for vomiting, diarrhea, or reduced appetite โ signs that an ingredient may not agree with your specific cat. Ask your vet before making treats for cats with kidney disease, diabetes, hyperthyroidism, or any chronic condition.
This guide is for informational purposes only. It is not veterinary, nutritional, or medical advice. Always consult your veterinarian before making dietary changes for a cat with any health condition. Homemade treats are intended as a supplement to โ not a replacement for โ a nutritionally complete and balanced commercial diet that meets AAFCO or FEDIAF nutrient standards. Never pay a fee to access the free public resources listed on this page. Program details, ingredient safety guidance, and recall information change frequently โ always verify with official sources.
Primary sources: FDA fda.gov (raw food safety; H5N1 advisory Sept 30 2025; dangerous items list; pet food regulation FD&C Act; xylitol; onion/garlic/chocolate); ASPCA aspca.org/pet-care/aspca-poison-control (toxic foods: alliums, chocolate, xylitol, grapes; Poison Control 888-426-4435; catnip/parsley safe; pumpkin safe); AVMA avma.org household hazards PDF (grapes, dairy, salt, macadamia, alliums); AAFCO cat nutrient profiles (minimum 26% protein adult; taurine essential; life stages); Pettsie.com vet-reviewed Oct 2025 (safe ingredient list; baking 350ยฐF; storage 5 days fridge; 10% calorie rule; catnip; oat/coconut flour); CatIsMYPet.com Nov 2025 (200โ250 kcal adult 10-lb cat; 20โ30 kcal treat limit; dehydration 150ยฐF 6โ8 hrs; training treats 2โ6 kcal; freeze 3 months; batch labeling); Hepper.com vet-approved tuna recipes Oct 2025 (tuna+egg+oat flour techniques; catnip biscuits; X skewer method); LoveMyCat.com Sept 2025 (taurine deficiency heart/vision; AAFCO protein minimum; omega-3 sources; brewer’s yeast); WellnessMama.com Aug 2025 (sardines lower mercury; coconut flour absorbency; frozen treats); Catster.com vet-reviewed Mar 2026 (obligate carnivore; kidney low phosphorus; diabetes low-carb; cook to 165ยฐF; bone meal calcium); CatHelper.com Aug 2025 (chicken most digestible; turkey sensitive stomachs; board-certified nutritionist); TruthAboutPetFood.com Dec 2025 (13 recalls 2025; 166,071 lbs; salmonella/H5N1/foreign objects); Merck Veterinary Manual (allium toxicity cats > dogs); MyCatJournal.com Dec 2025 (lactose intolerance 70โ90% adult cats; chocolate theobromine slow feline metabolism; garlic powder concentrated toxicity)