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How to Read Pet Food Recall Notices & Lot Numbers

How to Read Pet Food Recall Notices & Lot Numbers When you see a pet food recall in the news, the first question is always: “Does this affect my dog’s food?” The answer depends on the details in the recall notice — and those details can look confusing if you’re not used to reading them. Let’s break it down so you’ll always know what to look for. Key Parts of a Recall Notice Most official recall announcements include the same pieces of information. Here’s what matters: Brand and product name: Example: Blue Ridge Beef Puppy Mix. Package size or format: 2 lb chubs, 12 oz cans, 24 lb bags, etc. Lot number / batch code: A unique code printed on the packaging, usually near the expiration date. This is the most important detail because recalls rarely affect every product made by a company. Best by / expiration date: Tells you when the product should be used by — often paired with the lot number for identification. Reason for recall: Contamination (like Salmone...

Dog Food Recalls 2025: What Voluntary Recalls Mean

Dog Food Recalls in 2025: What Pet Parents Need to Know 2025 has already seen several dog food recalls , many tied to Salmonella and Listeria contamination. Brands like Blue Ridge Beef pulled certain lots of Puppy Mix and Kitten Mix from shelves, while Supercan Bulk recalled pig ear slivers and Savage Pet announced a cat food recall. For pet parents, these headlines can be alarming. But not all recalls mean the same thing — some are voluntary , while others are mandated. So what’s the difference? Why Recalls Happen Pet food recalls usually occur when a product may be unsafe due to contamination or labeling errors. Common triggers include: Bacterial contamination — Salmonella and Listeria can make pets (and humans handling food) sick. Nutritional imbalances — for example, vitamin D overdoses or taurine deficiencies. Foreign objects — plastic, metal, or other materials slipping into a batch. Mislabeling — wrong ingredients or undeclared allergens. Voluntary ...