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Feline Pill Pockets Salmon Flavor Cat Treats
Greenies

Feline Pill Pockets Salmon Flavor Cat Treats

Verified May 21, 2026

Cat · Treat All Breed Sizes

A soft, salmon-flavored pill-hiding treat designed to help you give tablets or capsules to your cat more easily. It uses chicken as the main base ingredient with wheat and corn syrup to create a soft, moldable texture that can wrap around medication. This is meant as a small, occasional aid for medicating, not as a regular food source.

Over-the-counter No recalls
Official product page
KibbleLab Score
7.0 out of 10

Nutritionally, this is a reasonable choice for a medicating aid: it’s palatable, soft, and lower in calories per piece, which helps if your cat needs daily pills. The ingredients are typical for a treat whose main job is to mold around tablets and taste appealing, rather than to provide complete nutrition. It’s best used sparingly and only as needed for giving medications, especially in cats with food allergies or very strict diets.

The KibbleLab Score (1–10) is assessed from publicly available product data. Our evaluation is science-based, not marketing-based.

Ingredient composition Quality, beneficial additions, absence of artificial colors/flavors
Nutritional profile Protein, fat, fiber evaluated for stated life stage and food type
AAFCO compliance Complete and balanced certification; feeding trials valued higher
Health considerations Sensitivity profile, DCM risk, processing method
9.0 – 10 Top Pick
8.0 – 8.9 Strong Choice
7.0 – 7.9 Solid Option
6.0 – 6.9 Worth a Conversation
Below 6 Not Recommended

KibbleLab may earn an affiliate commission when you buy through a link. No one can pay for a higher score, or to change what we recommend for your pet.


At a Glance

Suitable For
All Breed Sizes
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Nutritional Perspective

KibbleLab Review

Strengths

  • Soft, moldable texture makes it practical for hiding most tablet or capsule medications for cats.
  • Low calorie density per treat (about 3 kcal each), which helps limit extra calories for cats on long-term medicines.
  • Includes preserved ingredients with mixed tocopherols and citric acid, which are safe and commonly used in pet foods and treats.

Considerations

  • Contains chicken, wheat, and corn-derived ingredients, which can be problem ingredients for cats with known food allergies or sensitivities to those proteins or grains.
  • Includes dried corn syrup and caramel color, which add palatability and appearance but do not offer nutritional benefit and may be best limited in cats that are overweight or have diabetes.
  • This is a treat and not a complete or balanced diet, so it should only be used in small amounts alongside a nutritionally complete cat food.
Scored using the rubric of an NAVC Certified Pet Nutrition Coach (PNCC). This is informational, not veterinary advice.

Full Ingredient List

Chicken, Glycerin, Wheat Flour, Wheat Gluten, Vegetable Oil, Dried Corn Syrup, Natural Salmon Flavor, Natural Flavor, Caramel Color, Citric Acid (preservative), Mixed Tocopherols (preservative), Vinegar, Rosemary Extract

Ingredients and analysis reflect manufacturer data at the time of our last update and can change without notice. Always check the actual product packaging before feeding.

Ingredient filtering helps identify compatible options but is not a substitute for a veterinary elimination diet.

Top 5 Ingredients Explained

01
Chicken
Chicken is a common animal-based protein in dog and cat foods, supplying essential amino acids, B vitamins, and energy-dense fats that support muscle maintenance, growth, and overall health; for cats it also contributes toward dietary taurine but must be present in sufficient amounts or provided via supplementation. It is prized for its digestibility and palatability, though some pets develop sensitivities or allergies to chicken, and nutritional value and safety depend on ingredient quality and processing—raw chicken carries pathogen risks and whole bones can pose choking or GI hazards.
02
Glycerol
Glycerol (glycerin) is used in pet foods primarily as a humectant and sweetening agent to retain moisture, improve texture and palatability, and serve as a solvent or carrier in wet foods, treats, and liquid supplements. It provides a modest source of metabolizable energy for dogs and cats, but in large amounts can cause gastrointestinal upset and may affect blood glucose, so products intended for diabetic pets or sensitive animals should be used with caution.
03
Wheat Flour
Wheat flour is commonly used in pet foods as a carbohydrate source, binder and extender that provides digestible energy, some protein (including gluten), and small amounts of fiber and B‑vitamins when enriched. While generally safe and economical for many dogs, it is not a required ingredient for obligate carnivores like cats, can contribute to excess calories or a high glycemic load, and can trigger food allergies or gluten sensitivity in susceptible pets, so animals with known wheat sensitivities or weight concerns may benefit from wheat‑free formulations.
04
Wheat Gluten
Wheat gluten is a concentrated plant protein commonly used in dry pet foods as a protein booster, binder and texture improver to help form kibble and extend meat-based ingredients. It provides digestible protein for dogs and cats but is low in certain essential amino acids (notably lysine) and lacks animal-specific nutrients like taurine, so it should not be the sole protein source; pets with wheat or gluten sensitivities may also experience allergic or gastrointestinal reactions.
05
Vegetable Oil
Vegetable oil in pet food is used primarily as a concentrated fat source to boost calorie density, improve palatability and texture, and supply essential fatty acids (typically omega‑6 such as linoleic acid) while helping absorption of fat‑soluble vitamins. It can support skin and coat health for dogs and cats, but nutrient profiles vary by oil type and most vegetable oils lack long‑chain omega‑3s and the arachidonic acid cats require; excessive fat can promote weight gain or precipitate pancreatitis in susceptible pets, so source, quality and inclusion level should be considered.

Nutritional Breakdown

How to read As Fed versus Dry Matter As fed shows the numbers straight off the label, water included. Dry matter removes the water so you can compare a wet food and a dry food fairly.
As Fed
Crude Protein (min)
12.00%
Low High
Crude Fat (min)
9.00%
Low High
Crude Fiber (max)
1.00%
Low High
Moisture (max)
28.00%
Low High
3011
kcal / Kg
3
kcal / Treat
Low
Calorie density category
What is calorie density How many calories the food packs per unit. Denser foods mean smaller portions for the same calories.

Product Details & Brand

Product Specs

Breed size All Breed Sizes
Texture Soft Chew
Food type Treat

Brand

Greenies

Greenies is a dental treat brand for dogs and cats under Mars Petcare. It focuses on oral health, offering chews and treats designed to help reduce plaque and tartar buildup and freshen breath. Many Greenies products carry the Veterinary Oral Health Council (VOHC) Seal of Acceptance for plaque and/or tartar control, and the brand is frequently recommended by veterinarians for dental care support.

Visit Greenies
Price tier $$$$

Manufacturer

Company name Mars Petcare
Parent company Mars, Incorporated
Founded 1935
Headquarters Brussels, Belgium (global Petcare division); McLean, Virginia, USA (Mars, Incorporated global HQ)
Manufacturing type In House
Manufacturing country United States
Manufacturing region Missouri
Manufacturing oversight

Mars Petcare operates large-scale manufacturing facilities in North America, Europe, Asia-Pacific, and Latin America with formal quality and food safety systems modeled on human food standards. Facilities follow HACCP-based programs, Good Manufacturing Practices, and are routinely audited for compliance with local regulatory bodies (e.g., FDA and USDA in the U.S., FEDIAF-related standards in Europe). Mars maintains in‑house research and development centers, employs veterinarians and pet nutrition scientists, and conducts digestibility and palatability studies and AAFCO feeding trials for many of its complete-and-balanced diets.

Manufacturing details are compiled from public sources and not independently verified; they may not reflect contract manufacturing or co-packing.

Recall History

No recalls on record

Greenies Feline Pill Pockets Salmon Flavor Cat Treats has no recalls since 2014.

Source: FDA Pet Food Recall Database · Monitored daily

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SOLID PICK.
7.0 /10 Grade B
Feline Pill Pockets Salmon Flavor Cat Treats
Greenies · kibblelab.com

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Frequently Asked Questions

Has Greenies ever been recalled?

We have no recalls on record for Greenies. We monitor the FDA Pet Food Recall Database daily.

How does KibbleLab rate foods?

Our scores are based on ingredient composition, nutritional profile, AAFCO compliance, and health considerations. We don't penalize by-products, grains, or synthetic preservatives. Brands cannot pay for higher scores.

Is KibbleLab a substitute for veterinary advice?

No. KibbleLab provides data-driven food analysis, not medical advice. Always consult your veterinarian before making dietary changes, especially for pets with health conditions.

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KibbleLab provides informational content only. This is not veterinary advice. Always consult a qualified veterinarian before changing your pet's diet.

KibbleLab may earn affiliate commissions through product links. No one can pay for a higher score, or to change what we recommend for your pet.

Product data sourced from manufacturer websites, AAFCO statements, and FDA recall database. Last verified dates reflect our most recent data check.