Global Plant Based Pet Food Market Trends and Insights
Premiumized Human-Grade Positioning for Dogs
Human-grade positioning has moved from a niche message to a core premium cue in dog nutrition, and this shift is supporting the plant-based pet food market among higher-income buyer groups. Many pet owners now judge dog food by the same standards they use for their own meals, which means ingredient traceability, cleaner labels, and fewer animal by-products matter more than before. A 2024 review in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found that vegan diets for dogs were associated with health outcomes comparable to or better than those of non-vegan diets across the reviewed studies, providing brands with stronger scientific support when speaking to cautious buyers. The plant-based pet food market is not driven just by price, and brands that communicate credible nutrition and transparent sourcing can continue to command a premium. Petaluma, Inc. reinforced that pattern in 2025 when it launched Whole Food Mixer as a shelf-stable complete dog food with 67% certified organic ingredients, showing how specialist brands are using formulation quality and product story to support premium pricing.Rising Use for Meat-Allergy and Sensitive-Stomach Cases
The plant-based pet food market is also expanding as clinically motivated buyers enter the category, especially dog owners dealing with suspected protein allergies and digestive issues. This matters because veterinary-led switching tends to create a more durable demand base than lifestyle-led trial, and it can improve repeat purchase rates in the plant-based pet food market. A 2025 review titled “Nutritional analysis of commercially available, complete plant‑ and meat‑based dry dog foods in the UK” found that 31 commercially available dry dog foods in the United Kingdom showed plant‑based products to be broadly comparable to meat‑based equivalents across most macro‑ and micronutrients, although iodine and B vitamins were identified as gaps that can be supplemented. The Association of American Feed Control Officials (AAFCO) 2024 Model Regulations also continue to provide the framework for substantiating nutritional adequacy claims, which is important for brands seeking clinical credibility and veterinary acceptance . As more products meet both formulation standards and practical feeding expectations, the plant-based pet food market is likely to gain greater trust in allergy management and elimination-diet settings.Veterinary Skepticism on Nutritional Completeness
Veterinary caution still limits the plant-based pet food market more than any other single factor because owners often rely on professional guidance when choosing a daily feeding product. The British Veterinary Association stated that well-formulated diets can meet canine nutritional needs, but it also noted that long-term independent evidence and nutrient consistency data remain limited across commercial products, and that feline evidence is much thinner . A 2024 study in the Journal of Veterinary Internal Medicine found that 29% of English cocker spaniels in the study group had low blood taurine and that diet variables, including protein source type, were associated with taurine status. This keeps the plant-based pet food market under closer scrutiny than many adjacent premium pet nutrition categories, even when brands meet formal adequacy standards. It also means commercial progress depends not only on product launches but on stronger long-term data, post-launch monitoring, and continuing education for veterinarians.Other drivers and restraints analyzed in the detailed report include:
- Climate and animal-welfare purchasing pull
- Online and Specialty Shelf Expansion
- Premium Price Gap Versus Conventional Kibble
Segment Analysis
Dogs were the largest segment of the plant-based pet food market, and accounted for 63.5% of revenue in 2025. That position reflects the larger product range available for dogs and the stronger body of published evidence on canine nutritional adequacy with plant-based feeding. A 12-month PLOS One feeding trial published in 2024 found that healthy adult dogs maintained normal essential amino acid profiles, cardiac biomarkers, and vitamin D status on a commercial plant-based diet, which has become an important reference point in the plant-based pet food market. Cats were the second-largest segment, but growth has been slower because their nutrient requirements create greater formulation pressure and require greater precision in supplementation. Other pets, including small mammals and birds, still represent a niche in the plant-based pet food market, with limited current revenue contribution and fewer dedicated products.Dogs are also the fastest segment and are projected to advance at an 11.4% CAGR during 2026-2031. Much of that momentum comes from allergy-management use cases, wider owner acceptance of premium plant-based feeding, and a growing mix of dry, fresh, and topper products built around dogs first. The dog segment of the plant-based pet food market also benefits from easier communication about completeness, as more clinical data are available and veterinarians have greater confidence discussing canine diets than feline diets. The cat segment is still moving forward, though mainly through targeted research on digestibility and supplementation. If companies can close the taurine and arachidonic acid gap at scale, the plant-based pet food market would gain access to a meaningful underserved customer base in feline nutrition.
Dry food was the largest food type, and accounted for 51.2% of the plant-based pet food market size in 2025. Dry food holds that position because it is easier to store, ship, and distribute through large retail channels than fresh or wet formats. For many households, dry food also offers a lower cost per serving, which matters in a category where plant-based products often carry a price premium. Wet, fresh, and refrigerated formats are available in the plant-based pet food market, but they remain smaller because they require greater consumer commitment and often higher spending. Supplements and toppers play an important support role because they let owners test plant-based feeding with less risk than a full meal replacement.
Treats and chews are the fastest food type and are projected to grow at a 12.8% CAGR during 2026-2031. That growth is important because treats often serve as the first entry point into the plant-based pet food market, especially for buyers who are curious but not ready to switch to an entirely plant-based diet. A 2025 digestibility study published in Multidisciplinary Digital Publishing Institute Animals found that pumpkin-based plant protein diets delivered the highest organic matter digestibility (90.1%) among the tested oil mill by-product sources, supporting continued experimentation with plant-derived treat ingredients. Treats also give brands more frequent purchase occasions, which can build familiarity before owners move into complete feeding products. Soopa Pets Ltd. fits this pattern in the plant-based pet food market because its focus on natural chew positioning and clean ingredients supports premium pricing without relying on full-diet conversion at first purchase.
Complete Report Scope:
- By Pet Type
- Dogs
- Cats
- Other Pets
- By Food Type
- Dry Food
- Wet Food
- Treats and Chews
- Supplements and Toppers
- Fresh and Refrigerated Food
- By Distribution Channel
- Supermarkets and Hypermarkets
- Specialty Pet Stores
- Online Retail
- Veterinary Clinics
- Other Retail Channels
- By Ingredient Source
- Soy-Based Ingredients
- Pea and Pulse-Based Ingredients
- Grain, Seed, and Potato-Based Ingredients
- Yeast, Algae, and Fermentation-Derived Ingredients
- Other Plant-Derived Ingredients
- By Geography
- North America
- United States
- Canada
- Mexico
- Rest of North America
- Europe
- Germany
- France
- United Kingdom
- Spain
- Italy
- Netherlands
- Sweden
- Russia
- Rest of Europe
- Asia-Pacific
- China
- India
- Japan
- Australia
- South Korea
- Indonesia
- Thailand
- New Zealand
- Rest of Asia-Pacific
- South America
- Brazil
- Argentina
- Chile
- Colombia
- Rest of South America
- Middle East
- Saudi Arabia
- United Arab Emirates
- Israel
- Rest of Middle East
- Africa
- South Africa
- Nigeria
- Egypt
- Kenya
- Rest of Africa
- North America
Geography Analysis
Europe was the largest regional segment, which held 40.7% of the plant-based pet food market in 2025. The region leads because it has more specialist brands, a stronger specialty retail infrastructure, and earlier buyer acceptance of alternative proteins in pet care. Germany remains especially important, and the Bundesvereinigung der Deutschen Ernährungsindustrie reported that the country’s ready-made pet food market reached USD 4.86 billion (EUR 4.5 billion) in 2025, with premiumization acting as a key driver. Germany-based younikat GmbH also underscored Europe’s momentum, reporting USD 10.8 million (EUR 10 million) in revenue and securing USD 9.8 million (EUR 9 million) in Series A funding in June 2025 to support expansion in Germany, Austria, Switzerland, and the Netherlands. The region also benefits from a stronger consumer focus on sustainability and animal welfare, which fits the value proposition of the plant-based pet food market.North America remained the second-largest region in 2025 and continues to act as an important innovation center for the plant-based pet food market. The United States stands out for its active work in precision fermentation, premium direct-to-consumer models, and new regulatory pathways for novel ingredients. Growing consumer interest in sustainable and alternative proteins further reinforces the region’s role as an innovation hub. Canada adds demand through premium pet nutrition spending and expanding specialty retail, while Mexico is moving more gradually as urban pet ownership rises and organized pet retail improves.
Asia-Pacific was the fastest-growing regional segment and is projected to grow at a 12.2% CAGR during 2026-2031, driven by urbanization, pet ownership growth, and strong mobile commerce adoption, creating favorable conditions for online-led plant-based brands. Asia-Pacific growth is being supported by China, South Korea, Japan, and Australia, where digital buying behavior makes education-heavy products easier to sell. The plant-based pet food market is still less mature there than in Europe, but the speed of channel development is faster, creating room for quicker brand expansion. South America remains an emerging region, with Brazil and Chile showing the clearest early signs of organized distribution, while Argentina and Colombia remain more constrained by price sensitivity. The Middle East is developing through premium urban demand in the United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia, while Africa remains the smallest regional block and is led mainly by South Africa in the near-term opportunity. Across both the Middle East and Africa, the plant-based pet food market is likely to remain more dependent on imports until local manufacturing capability further develops.
List of Companies Covered in this Report:
- Purina PetCare (Nestlé S.A.)
- Mars, Incorporated
- Natural Balance Pet Foods, Inc. (Ethos Pet Brands)
- Halo, Purely for Pets, Inc.
- Vegeco Ltd.
- Omni Pet Ltd.
- younikat GmbH
- Evolution Diet Pet Food Co.
- Prefera Petfood SRL
- Petaluma, Inc.
- PawCo Foods, Inc.
- V-dog, Inc.
- Pets Choice Ltd.
- Amì Planet Srl
- Soopa Pets Ltd.
Additional Benefits:
- The market estimate (ME) sheet in Excel format
- 3 months of analyst support
Table of Contents
Companies Mentioned (Partial List)
A selection of companies mentioned in this report includes, but is not limited to:
- Purina PetCare (Nestlé S.A.)
- Mars, Incorporated
- Natural Balance Pet Foods, Inc. (Ethos Pet Brands)
- Halo, Purely for Pets, Inc.
- Vegeco Ltd.
- Omni Pet Ltd.
- younikat GmbH
- Evolution Diet Pet Food Co.
- Prefera Petfood SRL
- Petaluma, Inc.
- PawCo Foods, Inc.
- V-dog, Inc.
- Pets Choice Ltd.
- Amì Planet Srl
- Soopa Pets Ltd.

