Analysis

The human pet trends driving pet food purchases

Analysis

The human pet trends driving pet food purchases


The pet industry is changing fast, with pet ownership reaching an all-time high in the U.S. over the course of the pandemic. COVID-19 accelerated pet adoption and a trend towards more health-conscious purchases. As a result, a growing number of pet parents, new and old, apply their human wellness standards when shopping for their furry friends. They read labels closely and seek out products that match their pets’ specific dietary needs and their own values. 

This more conscious approach to pet care represents a major opportunity for the pet industry to personalize their offerings and win with new and existing pet parents alike.


What conscious pet-parents want

According to the 2021-2022 APPA National Pet Owners Survey, 70% of households currently own pets. A growing segment of this population treat their pets like (human) family members, selecting food and treats based on their pets’ dietary restrictions or their own values and diet regimens, like veganism. 

We can see exactly which health-focused trends or characteristics are on consumers’ minds when they’re shopping for pet food by examining their online searches across key online retailers, like Amazon. 

At Amazon.com alone, the months between July 2020 and July 2021, yielded millions of searches for pet food products that meet specialty diet keywords such as raw, vegan, and protein, and those with functional ingredients like pumpkin. 

In the second quarter of 2021, searches for pet food characteristics including organic, low-calorie, diabetic support, seafood-based pet food saw as much as triple-digit growth compared to the previous quarter. 

While consumers have a clear idea of what they want (or don’t want) in their pets’ food, actually purchasing it is another story. For example, less than 1% of products that possess the growing attributes above actually claim those characteristics on their packaging.


Opportunities arising from conscious pet-parenting 

While not all in-demand pet food attributes are under accounted for to the same degree, there are major gaps. For example, only 28% of pet products make a “free from artificial flavors” claim, but 94% of products within the space actually qualify for that claim. With more robust product attribute data that could guide on-package claims, qualifying products can avoid being eclipsed in online searches and overlooked in-store, and missing out on millions of dollars within the $5.5 billion “free from artificial flavors” space.

Manufacturers and retailers have a golden opportunity to translate consumers’ increasingly specific health and wellness standards for their pets into more personalized offerings, simply by claiming characteristics for which shoppers are already searching.