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Pantry counter with food pantries with pet food

Food Pantries with Pet Food

Pet food distribution recognizes a hard truth: when a household chooses between feeding themselves and feeding a pet, pets often lose — and that drives surrenders to shelters, which cost the community far more than a bag of kibble.

Keeps pets out of shelters
A public-cost avoidance
510+ locations
Dog food more common than cat
Usually dry food
Wet food less frequent
Proof may be required
Vet records or photo of pet

What to bring

  • Proof of pet ownership (vet record, photo of pet, adoption paperwork).
  • Your pet's food type (dog/cat, dry/wet, any dietary constraints).
  • Storage plan — large kibble bags need airtight containers.

Find pantries with pet food near you

Enter a ZIP or city to see the nearest verified pantries stocking pet food, or tap a chip below to narrow this list.

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Common Questions

Will I have to prove I own a pet?
At many pantries, yes — a simple photo of the pet at home, a vet record, or adoption paperwork suffices. This prevents resale and ensures limited stock reaches actual pet owners. First-time visitors should bring something; repeat visitors usually have their file on record.
Is pet food available at every food pantry?
No — about 7% of confirmed pantries stock pet food regularly. Larger urban sites and those with a named Pet Food Bank partnership are the most reliable sources. Search specifically on our pet-food page or ask at intake; many pantries keep a "pet shelf" behind the counter rather than on open display.
Do pantries distribute prescription pet diets?
Rarely — those formulas are expensive and move through veterinary channels, not food-bank channels. For prescription diets, talk to your vet about AAFCO-compliant assistance programs or Greater Good Charities' veterinary-food-bank partnerships.