
Taurine is classified as a conditionally essential amino acid in humans, which means our bodies can usually make enough. For cats, there is no such flexibility. Cats cannot synthesise adequate taurine internally and must obtain it entirely through their diet. Without sufficient intake, the consequences are serious: retinal degeneration leading to blindness, and dilated cardiomyopathy, a potentially fatal weakening of the heart muscle.
This makes taurine one of the most consequential ingredients in pet food formulation. And it creates a very specific set of requirements for any manufacturer supplying into this market.
Regulatory bodies including AAFCO in the US and FEDIAF in Europe mandate minimum taurine levels in complete cat food products. This is not a brand claim or a premium positioning choice. It is a legal and nutritional baseline.
The minimum levels vary by product type. Dry diets require higher taurine inclusion because the cooking process degrades it. Wet foods retain taurine better but still require controlled supplementation. Any shortfall across production, storage, or formulation is a product quality failure with direct health consequences for the animal.
Marine fish species, particularly those farmed in saltwater environments, require taurine for osmoregulation, which is the ability to manage the balance of water and salts in their bodies. In intensive aquaculture systems, where fish are fed formulated diets rather than natural prey, taurine supplementation is often necessary to maintain growth performance and health outcomes.
Research in species including seabream, turbot, and salmon has demonstrated that taurine inclusion in feed supports growth rates, reduces mortality, and improves feed conversion efficiency. As aquaculture continues to expand as a source of global protein, taurine is becoming a more prominent ingredient in formulated fish feeds.
In broiler and laying hen production, taurine research has shown benefits for meat quality, antioxidant status, and immune function. While poultry can synthesise some taurine, supplementation in fast-growth production systems has shown measurable production improvements in several studies.
For feed manufacturers working across species, having a single taurine supplier that can serve multiple application requirements simplifies both procurement and quality management.
In animal nutrition, the word 'quality' is not abstract. Here is what it means in practice for a taurine procurement decision.
Purity: Food and feed grade taurine should meet 98.5% minimum purity; pharmaceutical grade 99% minimum
Heavy metal profile: Cats are particularly sensitive to heavy metal accumulation; a full heavy metal CoA is not optional
Certifications: HALAL, KOSHER, ISO 9001, and FSSC 22000 depending on your market and customer requirements
Country of origin documentation: Required for EU import compliance and for many retailer specifications
Consistent batch quality: Taurine content variation between batches creates formulation risk in mandatory-level applications
AviTau™ is Avid Organics' taurine series, produced at the ISO-certified Vadodara facility for food, feed, and pharmaceutical applications. With 19 years of manufacturing experience and a full documentation infrastructure including CoA, specification sheets, and regulatory filings, AviTau™ is designed for buyers where supply reliability and quality consistency are non-negotiable.
Avid Organics supplies to customers in more than 30 countries. The technical team is available to discuss grade selection, documentation requirements, and application-specific questions.
Cats cannot produce enough taurine naturally, so they must obtain it from their diet. A taurine deficiency can lead to serious health problems, including retinal degeneration (which can cause blindness) and dilated cardiomyopathy, a life-threatening heart condition. This is why taurine is a mandatory ingredient in complete cat food formulations.
High-quality food and feed-grade taurine should have a minimum purity of 98.5%, while pharmaceutical-grade taurine should be at least 99% pure. Manufacturers should also verify heavy metal levels and review the Certificate of Analysis (CoA) for every batch.
No. In addition to cat nutrition, taurine is widely used in aquaculture to support fish growth, feed efficiency, and overall health, and in poultry nutrition to improve antioxidant status, immune function, and meat quality in certain production systems.
A reliable taurine supplier should provide consistent product purity, batch-to-batch quality, Certificates of Analysis (CoA), heavy metal testing, regulatory documentation, country of origin information, and certifications such as ISO 9001, FSSC 22000, HALAL, and KOSHER, depending on market requirements.
AviTau™ is Avid Organics' range of taurine products manufactured for food, feed, and pharmaceutical applications. Produced at the company's ISO-certified facility in Vadodara, India, AviTau™ is supported by comprehensive technical documentation, including CoAs, specification sheets, and regulatory documents, helping customers meet quality and compliance requirements across global markets.