Why made-in-the-USA pet products are gaining traction: full analysis
Pet Age highlights a familiar but still-growing reality in the pet market: “Made in the USA” has become a high-interest selling point for pet products as pet parents look for reassurance on safety, consistency, and supply-chain transparency. That consumer pull is showing up across food, treats, and other pet categories, but it’s unfolding in a regulatory environment where origin claims carry specific legal meaning, especially when marketers use an unqualified “Made in USA” label. (ftc.gov)
The backdrop is years of consumer sensitivity around sourcing and product safety in the pet sector, particularly in food and treats. Industry coverage has long framed U.S.-made claims as a response to purchaser concerns about where products are produced and how ingredients are sourced, while more recent market commentary suggests domestic manufacturing is also being discussed as a hedge against tariff volatility and supply disruption. APPA’s 2025 State of the Industry report underscores the broader point that pet spending remains resilient, giving manufacturers room to compete on trust and transparency, not just price. (petfoodindustry.com)
The key nuance for companies, retailers, and clinicians is that “Made in the USA” is not a loose marketing phrase. The FTC says an unqualified claim generally means a product is “all or virtually all” made in the United States, and companies must have substantiation before making that representation. The agency’s guidance also warns against implying an entire product line is U.S.-made when only some items qualify. In pet food specifically, AAFCO says it does not regulate, approve, certify, or endorse products, but its model regulations and labeling guidance are widely used by states, with FDA also overseeing animal food labeling and claims. (ftc.gov)
That distinction matters because pet parents may read “Made in the USA” as shorthand for broader assurances that the label does not necessarily provide. AAFCO’s consumer-facing materials make clear there is no such thing as an “AAFCO-approved” pet food, and its labeling resources show that marketing claims exist alongside, not instead of, required nutritional and identity information. In other words, domestic manufacture may be meaningful to buyers, but it does not replace scrutiny of adequacy statements, ingredient disclosures, or manufacturing controls. (aafco.org)
Recent enforcement activity adds another layer. The FTC has continued to spotlight deceptive U.S.-origin claims, and outside reporting in 2025 described renewed agency pressure on sellers and marketplaces over products advertised as American-made when they were allegedly imported in whole or in part. Even though those actions were not pet-specific, they reinforce the risk for any pet brand using origin claims too broadly or without enough documentation. (theweek.com)
Why it matters: For veterinary teams, this is a communication issue as much as a retail one. Pet parents often use country-of-origin claims as a proxy for safety, especially when choosing diets, treats, or chews. Clinics can add value by explaining that origin labeling should be considered one data point, not the deciding factor. A more useful framework is whether the product is complete and balanced when applicable, whether the manufacturer is transparent about sourcing and quality assurance, whether claims are specific and supportable, and whether the company has a credible record on recalls and formulation oversight. That kind of counseling can help clients make better decisions without overinterpreting a marketing claim. (aafco.org)
What to watch: Expect more pet brands to emphasize domestic manufacturing and more granular sourcing language, especially if supply-chain and trade pressures persist. At the same time, origin claims may face closer review from regulators, retailers, and increasingly skeptical consumers, which could push the market toward more precise wording rather than broad “Made in the USA” messaging. That would be a meaningful shift for veterinary professionals who help pet parents parse what product labels really do, and don’t, say. (petfoodindustry.com)