This Kroger store brand lures in grocery shoppers with its low prices, serval-brown packaging, distressed typography, and the claim that it’s what cats “naturally crave”. It looks like it might be a pet store quality food at grocery prices, but is Abound cat food any good?
In this article, we’ll learn more about Abound cat food, finding out what it’s made of, where it’s manufactured, and whether or not it’s a healthy choice for your cat.
The Cats.com Standard—Rating Abound on What Matters
We’ve analyzed Abound and graded it according to the Cats.com standard, evaluating the brand on species-appropriateness, ingredient quality, product variety, price, customer experience, and recall history. Here’s how it rates in each of these six key areas.
Ratings
- Species-Appropriateness – 6/10
- Ingredient Quality – 5/10
- Product Variety – 7/10
- Price – 8/10
- Customer Experience – 8/10
- Recall History – 4/10
Overall Score: 6.3/10
We give Abound cat food a 38 out of 60 rating or a C+ grade.
About Abound
The Abound brand was launched in 2014 as Kroger’s newest store brand pet food. It’s marketed to the natural foods consumer and boasts recipes with no hot-button ingredients like corn, soy, and wheat. The foods are all-natural with no artificial colors, flavors, or preservatives.
Sourcing and Manufacturing
Though it’s unclear where all Abound foods are made, we know that Abound dog food is made by Sunshine Mills, a manufacturer with several facilities in the United States. Sunshine Mills makes food for Triumph, Evolve, Hi-Tor, Sportsman’s Pride, and other brands. Most Abound ingredients are sourced in the United States and some may come from other countries.
Has Abound Cat Food Been Recalled?
Abound was recalled in December 2018 due to elevated levels of vitamin D.
The incident was one in a series of recalls affecting several brands of dry pet food. Nine of the recalls were connected to Sunshine Mills, the manufacturing company that makes Abound food.
What Kinds of Cat Food Does Abound Offer?
Abound’s cat food lineup includes both dry and wet food in grain-free and grain-inclusive varieties.
Though the brand offers both grain-free and grain-inclusive products, all of them are free of corn, wheat, and soy. All Abound foods feature meat as the first ingredient with no animal by-product meal. Abound foods are made without any artificial, colors, flavors, and preservatives.
Abound Cat Food – Top 3 Recipes Reviewed
Product Name | Food Type | Price | Our Grade |
Abound Salmon & Brown Rice Recipe | Dry | $0.14 per lb | C |
Abound Grain Free Chicken & Chickpeas Recipe | Dry | $0.16 per lb | C |
Abound Grain Free Shredded Salmon & Chicken Recipe in Gravy | Wet | $0.18 per oz | B |
What Do Customers Think of Abound Cat Food?
Because Abound is sold in brick-and-mortar stores and isn’t available through major retailers like Chewy and Amazon, it doesn’t receive many customer reviews. The brand doesn’t have a presence on Consumer Affairs and people aren’t saying much about it on other consumer advocacy sites or forums.
The few online discussions and reviews of Abound are positive but brief. Customers like that it’s cheap and relatively species-appropriate, but there’s little discussion about the brand’s ingredients, manufacturing, or other meatier issues.
Here are two real customer reviews of abound cat food:
“My cat likes it, and it’s grain free! It’s also very affordable! Therefore, I like it too!” – Kelsey, reviewing Abound Shredded Salmon & Chicken Recipe in Gravy
“This cat food had good ingredients and good taste. My cat loves it.” – Michal, reviewing Abound Salmon & Brown Rice Recipe
How Much Does Abound Cat Food Cost?
It’s a few cents pricier than its colorful and corn-stuffed friends on the grocery store shelf, but Abound is one of the cheapest foods you can buy.
Abound dry food costs between $0.28 and $0.32 per day. Abound’s wet food is slightly more expensive, but not much—you could feed the average cat Abound canned food for about $1.53 per day.
Overall, Is Abound a Good Choice?
If you focus on their wet selection, Abound cat food is leaps and, yes, bounds ahead of similarly-priced cat food. Abound wet food provides high protein content with relatively low carbohydrates and no potentially harmful additives like carrageenan and artificial colors. This combination makes their wet foods some of the most nourishing products at this price point.
On the other hand, Abound dry food isn’t particularly impressive. Sure, it nixes corn, soy, and wheat, but it doesn’t have any lower carbohydrate content than the standard Purina fare.
Overall, this brand is a good one to consider next time you’re shopping at a Kroger family store.
Where To Buy Abound Cat Food?
Abound is only sold at Kroger grocery stores. Stores in the Kroger family include Smith’s Food and Drug, Fred Meyer, King Soopers, Mariano’s Fresh Market, Metro Market, Food 4 Less, Dillons, FoodsCo, City Markets, and more.
You can also buy it online through Kroger-owned Vitacost.com.
I feed my cats Abound cat food. It’s a good cat food the only issue is it doesn’t keep them full longer. And it causes their poop to smell loud. Otherwise, I like the Abound cat food.
I used to feed my senior cat Abound wet food packets when I would run out of the Wellness wet packets. One day I opened a packet of Abound wet and there was a silvery blue tinge to part of the food. I threw it out and never trusted Abound again. It could have been from some salmon skin left on, but I couldn’t take the chance. It is hard to find who is head of Abound, Sunshine Foods? Do their call center reps have actual knowledge about their product? Doubtful. I’m a low income senior who rescued a senior my nephew abandoned in 2016. I’m proud to say I’m a helicopter Mom who has struggled financially to feed my 19 yr old cat quality food and get him semi-annual vet visits. I watch your videos Mallory and have gone through countless types of litter. My new favorite: World’s Best large grain, orange bag. No scatter!!!!!! I also love Sustainably yours, but it’s too expensive. I have spent hours reading about cats. This is my first pet since 1976.
I bought Abound Grain Free Limited Ingredients – Tuna and Sweet Potato Recipe. Our cat refused to eat it. Don’t think she liked the taste or smell. Can’t say I blame her. It did have a rather loud smell in my opinion. Would not buy this again.
Appreciate you sharing your experience here.
I just happened to come acrossed this food. I bought the wet to try. My cat loves it he likes all the flavors so far. My cat is picky about foods so I was surprised. I only give him a spoon full as a treat.
I have been feeding Abound cat food to by three babies for about almost 6 months. They love the salmon and rice flavor but I have been noticing that my 2 year old cat has been having a bit of stomach issues with Abound. There is something about the food that just makes him constipated. I’ve partnering with his vet to find out if its the food or if he has other issues. You’d be surprised how cats systems will differ from each other. I’m searching to find a brand and flavor that all three of my cats can eat.
Hi Fred, that sounds frustrating! Yes, it’s hard to predict whether two cats will have the same reaction to any given product. Hope you find something that works soon!