Key Takeaways: 10 Things Every Dog Owner Must Know ๐ก
Authority is PetSmart’s exclusive store brand. You cannot buy it at Petco, Walmart, or anywhere online other than PetSmart.com and Chewy (which PetSmart owns).
It’s classified as “sub-premium” by pet industry insiders. A step above grocery brands like Pedigree, but below Purina Pro Plan, Royal Canin, and Blue Buffalo in the traditional quality hierarchy.
Real meat is the first ingredient โ with a catch. Chicken or salmon leads the label, but cheap fillers like corn, corn gluten meal, and vegetable oil lurk further down.
Zero recalls since the 2007 melamine crisis. Nearly two decades of clean safety records is genuinely impressive and worth noting.
The sensitive stomach salmon formula is its strongest product. Salmon-first with fish meal and omega fatty acids โ though it still contains wheat and corn gluten meal.
Pea protein inflates the protein numbers. Plant-based protein boosters make the guaranteed analysis look meatier than the recipe actually is.
Canned options outperform the dry kibble on ingredient quality. Less processing and higher moisture content make the wet food meaningfully better.
There is no transparency on ingredient sourcing. Authority doesn’t disclose where it sources ingredients or which facilities manufacture the food.
It’s a solid choice for healthy dogs on a budget โ not for dogs with medical issues. If your dog has allergies, GI disease, or skin conditions, you’ll likely need to look elsewhere.
PetSmart’s Healthy Pet Advisory Council oversees formulation. Veterinarians and nutritionists guide recipe development, though the council’s independence from PetSmart corporate is unclear.
๐ญ Who Actually Makes Authority Dog Food? (The Corporate Story They Keep Vague)
Authority dog food is made by PetSmart, which was founded in 1986 and today operates over 1,300 retail locations across the United States. The Authority brand itself launched in 1995, developed in collaboration with veterinarians and nutritionists to give PetSmart a house-brand competitor against national chains.
Here’s where it gets interesting: the label states the food is produced in the US, but there is no information about the exact manufacturing location, and there is no information about ingredient sourcing. That’s a significant transparency gap for a brand that positions itself as vet-recommended.
| What We Know | What We Don’t Know | ๐ Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Made in the USA (per label) | Which facility/facilities produce it | Multi-facility production increases contamination risk ๐ญ |
| Developed with vet advisory council | Whether advisors are independent or PetSmart-employed | Conflicts of interest affect recommendations ๐ฉบ |
| Sold exclusively at PetSmart/Chewy | Where proteins, grains, and fats are sourced | China-sourced ingredients have historically caused pet food recalls ๐ |
| No artificial colors, flavors, or preservatives | Whether “natural flavor” includes rendered animal digest | “Natural flavor” is an opaque catch-all term โ ๏ธ |
Authority is positioned as a mid-tier brand offering better quality than budget dog foods while remaining more affordable than premium competitors like Blue Buffalo or Orijen. Translation: it’s store-brand food with above-average marketing. That’s not inherently bad โ but you should know what you’re paying for.
๐ก Pro Tip: If ingredient sourcing transparency matters to you, brands like Open Farm, The Honest Kitchen, and Orijen publicly disclose every supplier. Authority offers zero such information, which is the industry norm for store brands but a red flag for discerning buyers.
๐ฌ Authority Dog Food Ingredients: A Deep Dive Into What’s Really in the Bag
Let’s crack open the most popular formula โ Authority Everyday Health Chicken & Rice โ and examine what’s actually inside, ingredient by ingredient.
The first ingredient is chicken, a quality item, though raw chicken contains up to 73% water โ after cooking, most of that moisture is lost, reducing the meat content to just a fraction of its original weight. So that reassuring “chicken” at the top of the label? It plummets down the list once you account for processing.
The second ingredient is chicken meal, which is considered a meat concentrate containing nearly 300% more protein than fresh chicken. The third ingredient is pea protein, which contains over 80% protein but has a lower biological value than meat โ and less costly plant-based products like this can notably boost the total protein reported on the label.
This is the classic “protein padding” technique that budget and mid-tier brands rely on. The guaranteed analysis might say 26% protein, but a significant portion comes from peas, not animal sources.
| Ingredient | Position on Label | What It Does | โ ๏ธ Concern Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Chicken | #1 | Quality protein source โ but 73% water weight before cooking | Low (good ingredient, misleading placement) ๐ก |
| Chicken meal | #2 | Concentrated protein โ 300% more protein than fresh chicken | Low (actually better than whole chicken for protein density) ๐ข |
| Pea protein | #3 | Plant protein that inflates total protein numbers | Moderate (not biologically equivalent to meat protein) ๐ก |
| Brown rice | #4 | Digestible carb with B vitamins but calorie-dense | Low-moderate (acceptable filler, but dogs don’t need this much carb) ๐ก |
| Corn | #5 | Cheap filler grain with modest nutritional value | Moderate-high (common allergen, low-quality energy source) ๐ด |
| Natural flavors | #6 | Palatability enhancer โ no specifics disclosed | Moderate (total opacity about what this actually contains) ๐ก |
| Chicken fat | #7 | Excellent source of omega-6 fatty acids | Low (legitimately good ingredient) ๐ข |
Other potentially problematic ingredients include corn gluten meal, dried egg product, and vegetable oil โ all offering quite a few empty calories while also potentially upsetting sensitive stomachs.
And here’s a detail that shocked us: two of the Everyday Health canned recipes contain corn syrup and high fructose corn syrup โ extremely low-quality ingredients that have no business in dog food. Check every label carefully before buying.
๐ก Pro Tip: Flip the bag over and look past ingredient #3. If you see corn, corn gluten meal, vegetable oil, and “natural flavors” bunched together before any vegetables or supplements, the recipe is heavily dependent on cheap fillers to hit its nutritional targets.
๐ Is Authority Dog Food High Quality? The Honest Verdict Depends on Your Definition
This is the million-dollar question โ and the answer genuinely depends on what you’re comparing it to and what your dog needs.
Based on its ingredients alone, Authority looks like an above-average dry dog food, with a dry matter protein reading of 33%, a fat level of 22%, and estimated carbohydrates of about 36%. Those numbers are respectable for the price point.
But zoom out to the full product line and the picture shifts: as a group, the brand features an average protein content of 29% and a mean fat level of 15%, suggesting a carbohydrate content of 48% for the overall product line. Nearly half the food is carbohydrates โ a ratio that many veterinary nutritionists consider excessive for an obligate carnivore ancestor like the domestic dog.
| Quality Metric | Authority | Purina Pro Plan | Blue Buffalo | Orijen |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Price per lb (approx.) | $1.00-1.50 | $2.00-2.50 | $2.50-3.00 | $4.50-5.50 |
| Real meat first ingredient? | โ Yes | โ Yes | โ Yes | โ Yes (multiple) |
| Plant protein padding? | โ Yes (pea protein) | โ ๏ธ Some formulas | โ ๏ธ Some formulas | โ Minimal |
| Corn/corn gluten used? | โ Yes, in most formulas | โ Some formulas | โ No | โ No |
| Artificial preservatives? | โ No | โ No | โ No | โ No |
| Recalls since 2010? | โ None | โ ๏ธ Several | โ ๏ธ Several | โ None |
| Ingredient sourcing disclosed? | โ No | โ ๏ธ Partial | โ ๏ธ Partial | โ Yes |
| AAFCO feeding trials conducted? | Unclear | โ Yes | โ Yes | โ Yes |
| Independent quality rating | โญโญโญ (3/5 avg.) | โญโญโญโญ (4/5 avg.) | โญโญโญยฝ (3.5/5 avg.) | โญโญโญโญโญ (5/5 avg.) |
Both Authority and Purina One are affordable and mid-range โ Purina One has broader availability, but Authority avoids some of Purina’s controversial additives. Blue Buffalo is more premium with broader product lines.
Pet industry insiders classify Authority as “sub-premium” โ a tier that includes brands like Iams, Beneful, and Nutro Max, which offer better quality nutrition than grocery foods but still fall below premium options like Purina Pro Plan, Royal Canin, and Science Diet.
๐ก Pro Tip: If you’re currently feeding Pedigree, Ol’ Roy, or Kibbles ‘n Bits, switching to Authority is a meaningful upgrade. If you’re considering switching down from Purina Pro Plan, Blue Buffalo, or Wellness, Authority is a noticeable step backward in ingredient quality โ even if the protein percentages look similar on paper.
๐ Authority Salmon & Sensitive Stomach Formula: The Best Product They Make (With Caveats)
The Authority Solutions Sensitive Stomach & Skin Salmon & Rice formula is widely considered the brand’s standout product โ and for good reason. It’s formulated for all life stages with ingredients that are gentle on the stomach, omega fatty acids to nourish skin and coat, and dental support through the Ora-Shield System.
The ingredient list reads: deboned salmon, menhaden fish meal, brown rice, ground wheat, wheat germ meal, canola oil, corn protein concentrate, rice bran, brewers rice, oatmeal, natural flavor, flaxseeds.
Salmon and menhaden fish meal leading the formula is genuinely good โ fish-based proteins are among the most digestible and least allergenic for dogs. But then the third through ninth ingredients are all grains and plant-based fillers, which raises the question: just how much fish is actually in this food after processing?
| What’s Good | What’s Concerning | ๐ฏ Bottom Line |
|---|---|---|
| Real salmon is #1 ingredient | Contains wheat (common allergen) despite being “sensitive stomach” | A contradiction for true food-sensitive dogs ๐ฉ |
| Menhaden fish meal adds concentrated omega-3s | Corn protein concentrate is a cheap protein booster | Check if your dog can tolerate corn before committing ๐ฝ |
| Flaxseed provides plant-based omega-3 (ALA) | Contains “natural flavor” โ unspecified | Ask PetSmart customer service what “natural flavor” means here โ |
| No artificial colors or preservatives | Soybean meal in some formulations | Soy is one of the top 5 dog allergens ๐ซ |
| All-life-stages formula โ multi-dog households | 38% calculated carbohydrate content | High carb load for a “sensitive stomach” food ๐ |
Here’s the uncomfortable truth for dogs with genuine food sensitivities: the “sensitive stomach” salmon formula contains wheat, corn gluten meal, and soybean meal โ three of the most common triggers for food-reactive dogs. A truly limited-ingredient sensitive stomach formula shouldn’t include all three of those in a single bag.
๐ก Pro Tip: If your dog has confirmed food allergies or intolerances (not just occasional soft stool), skip this formula entirely. Look at Purina Pro Plan Sensitive Skin & Stomach (salmon-based, no corn or wheat), or for a budget-friendly OTC option, consider Diamond Care Sensitive Skin Formula.
๐ Is Authority Only Sold at PetSmart? (And Why That Matters More Than You Think)
Yes. Authority is a PetSmart exclusive brand, so it can only be purchased at PetSmart stores or online at PetSmart.com. Chewy also carries it โ but that’s because PetSmart acquired Chewy in 2017, so it’s effectively the same distribution channel.
Why does exclusivity matter to you as a consumer? Several reasons:
| Factor | Impact on You | โ ๏ธ Risk Level |
|---|---|---|
| Can’t price-shop across retailers | No Amazon, Walmart, or Petco competition driving prices down | Moderate โ you pay whatever PetSmart charges ๐ฐ |
| Store brand = house brand margins | PetSmart earns higher profit margins on Authority than on national brands | Low-moderate โ this incentivizes in-store staff to recommend it ๐ช |
| Formula changes happen quietly | Store brands can adjust recipes without the PR scrutiny national brands face | Moderate โ always re-read the ingredient label when you buy a new bag ๐ |
| Supply chain is single-source | If PetSmart faces distribution issues, you can’t get the food elsewhere | High for dogs with sensitive GI who can’t switch foods abruptly ๐ฆ |
Authority is manufactured in the USA, with some globally sourced ingredients. That phrase “globally sourced ingredients” deserves attention โ it’s corporate language for “we may import some components from countries with different safety standards.” This isn’t unique to Authority, but the lack of specificity is concerning.
๐ก Pro Tip: If you choose Authority, always keep a backup food option identified that your dog can tolerate. PetSmart store exclusives have occasionally gone out of stock for weeks at a time, and abruptly switching dog food can cause severe GI distress.
๐ฆ Authority’s Full Product Lineup: Every Formula Ranked
Here’s the complete breakdown of what Authority actually offers โ because most reviews only cover two or three formulas.
Dry Kibble Formulas
| Formula | Life Stage | Protein Source | Key Feature | ๐ Our Rating |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Everyday Health Chicken & Rice | Adult | Chicken + chicken meal | Best-seller, most widely reviewed | โญโญโญ |
| Everyday Health Lamb & Rice | Adult | Lamb + lamb meal | Best protein-to-fiber ratio in the lineup | โญโญโญยฝ |
| Sensitive Stomach Salmon & Rice | All life stages | Salmon + fish meal | Strongest formula for skin/coat health | โญโญโญยฝ |
| Grain-Free Chicken & Pea | Adult | Chicken + chicken meal | No grains, but high legume content | โญโญโญ |
| Large Breed Chicken & Rice | Adult | Chicken + chicken meal + cartilage | Added glucosamine/chondroitin for joints | โญโญโญยฝ |
| Small Breed Chicken & Rice | Adult | Chicken + chicken meal | Smaller kibble, higher calorie density | โญโญโญ |
| Puppy Chicken & Rice | Puppy | Chicken + chicken meal | DHA for brain development | โญโญโญ |
| Large Breed Puppy | Puppy | Chicken + chicken meal | Controlled calcium for growth plates | โญโญโญยฝ |
| High Performance Turkey/Duck/Salmon | All life stages | Turkey + duck + salmon + chicken fat | 30% protein, 20% fat โ best for active dogs | โญโญโญโญ |
Canned/Wet Formulas
| Formula | Key Difference from Dry | ๐ Our Rating |
|---|---|---|
| Digestive Support Chicken & Pumpkin | Higher moisture, pumpkin for fiber | โญโญโญยฝ |
| Beef & Chicken in Gravy | Meaty chunks in sauce, corn syrup concern | โญโญยฝ |
| Chicken & Vegetable | Standard wet formula | โญโญโญ |
The canned foods score much better on ingredient safety than the dry kibble due to slightly less processing, no high pesticide or GMO ingredients โ though they do have rice and natural flavor in some recipes.
The High-Performance Grain-Free Turkey, Pea, Duck & Salmon formula stands out as having the least harmful ingredients and no allergens in the entire lineup, with a 30% protein and 20% fat ratio suitable for active or working dogs.
๐ก Pro Tip: If you must buy Authority, the High Performance formula and the canned Digestive Support Chicken & Pumpkin are genuinely the two best products in their entire lineup. The standard Chicken & Rice adult kibble, while popular, is the most corn-and-filler-heavy option.
๐ฌ What Real Dog Owners Say: Reddit, Forums, and Verified Reviews (The Unfiltered Truth)
The pet parent community is pragmatic about Authority โ and the consensus is surprisingly consistent.
Multiple verified purchasers report their dogs eagerly eating Authority after refusing other brands, with one owner noting that after 10 years of thinking their dog simply had a poor appetite, switching to Authority resulted in the dog devouring both breakfast and dinner.
On the flip side, some owners report that the food caused diarrhea in their dogs, particularly fosters being switched from different brands.
In dog owner forums, pet industry insiders and PetSmart employees candidly describe Authority as PetSmart’s “store brand sub-premium food,” with one experienced associate noting they would rank it below Purina Pro Plan and recommending that budget-conscious owners consider it as a “good enough” option rather than the best available.
| What Owners Love | What Owners Criticize | ๐ฏ Pattern |
|---|---|---|
| Price point (around $1/lb for 34-lb bags) | Corn and fillers shouldn’t be this high on the ingredient list | Budget praise, ingredient skepticism ๐ต |
| Dogs consistently enjoy the taste | Sensitive dogs get loose stool on certain formulas | Palatability wins, GI tolerance varies ๐ |
| No recalls in nearly 20 years | Zero transparency on sourcing and manufacturing | Safety record strong, trust-building weak ๐ |
| PetSmart convenience and frequent sales | Can’t comparison-shop โ locked into one retailer | Convenience vs. consumer freedom โ๏ธ |
| Coat quality improvements over time | Grain-free options use heavy legume loads | Some formulas better than others ๐พ |
โ Frequently Asked Questions
Is Authority dog food high quality? It’s mid-tier. Authority positions itself as a provider of quality, affordable pet nutrition, but it does not escape criticism regarding its use of controversial ingredients like corn gluten meal and beet pulp. For the price, it’s above average. Compared to genuinely premium brands, it falls short on protein quality and ingredient transparency.
What is the #1 healthiest dog food? There’s no single answer โ it depends on your dog’s age, breed, health conditions, and activity level. However, brands consistently ranked highest by independent reviewers include Orijen, Acana, The Honest Kitchen, and Open Farm for overall ingredient quality. For vet-backed therapeutic diets, Royal Canin, Hill’s Science Diet, and Purina Pro Plan lead the field. Authority is none of these.
How does Authority compare to Blue Buffalo? Blue Buffalo is more premium with broader product lines, while Authority is both affordable and mid-range. Blue Buffalo generally avoids corn and corn gluten meal entirely, uses its proprietary “LifeSource Bits” for antioxidant delivery, and offers significantly more specialized formulas. Authority wins on price; Blue Buffalo wins on ingredient quality.
Is Authority good for small breeds? Authority does offer a small breed formula with smaller kibble size and adjusted calorie density. Any dog breed can eat Authority dog food without issues, although their large breed products tend to get the best results in reviews. Small breed owners should note that the small breed formula still contains corn and pea protein โ ingredients some toy breeds are particularly sensitive to.
What about the canned (wet) food options? Authority’s canned lineup is actually stronger than its dry kibble. The canned formulas feature chicken broth, chicken, pumpkin, and dried egg product among the top ingredients, with a dry matter protein reading of about 52.9%. However, some canned recipes contain corn syrup, which is an extremely low-quality ingredient. Read every can label โ don’t assume all Authority wet food is created equal.
Is the salmon formula good for dogs with allergies? Partially. Salmon is an excellent protein for allergy-prone dogs, and the omega fatty acids support skin barrier function. However, this formula also includes wheat, corn gluten meal, and soybean meal โ three common allergens. If your dog has confirmed food allergies, this is not a true hypoallergenic or limited-ingredient option despite its “sensitive stomach” branding.
Has Authority been recalled? The only known recall occurred in 2007 as part of the massive melamine contamination event that affected over 100 dog food brands. Since then โ nearly two decades โ there have been zero recalls. That’s an excellent safety track record that most national brands can’t match.
๐ The Bottom Line: Decent Budget Food, Not a Health Food
Authority dog food occupies a very specific niche: it’s the best option for dog owners who shop exclusively at PetSmart and need an affordable, reasonably safe food for a healthy adult dog with no special dietary needs. It uses real meat as a first ingredient, avoids artificial preservatives, and has an outstanding safety record.
But let’s be clear about what it isn’t. It isn’t a premium food. It isn’t a therapeutic diet. It isn’t appropriate for dogs with allergies, skin conditions, or GI disease โ despite having a “sensitive stomach” line that still packs in wheat, corn, and soy. And the complete lack of ingredient sourcing transparency is a legitimate concern in an era where pet parents increasingly (and rightfully) demand to know where their dog’s food comes from.
If your dog is thriving on Authority โ good stool, shiny coat, healthy weight, good energy โ there’s no urgent reason to switch. But if you’re dealing with chronic ear infections, persistent itching, soft stool, or lackluster energy, the answer probably isn’t a different Authority formula. It’s a different tier of food entirely.
Your dog’s gut doesn’t care about brand loyalty. It cares about ingredient quality.