Quick answer: The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA) applies to dietary supplements intended for human use only — explicitly not pet products (FDA Federal Register, April 22, 1996). Pet supplements are regulated as animal foods or animal drugs depending on the claims made. In the US, compliant copy focuses on nutritional content and support for healthy animals. In the UK, "may help" is zero protection under VMD rules. In Australia, APVMA prohibits "may help" and any implied therapeutic claims. Every market requires stricter language than the human supplement equivalent.

Why DSHEA Does Not Apply to Pet Supplements

The Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act (DSHEA, 1994) defines "dietary supplement" as a product intended for ingestion by a human being. The FDA clarified in an April 22, 1996 Federal Register notice that DSHEA explicitly does not apply to products intended for animals. This is one of the most consequential and least-understood compliance facts in the pet supplement industry.

When pet supplement brands use human supplement copy frameworks — structure/function claims with FDA disclaimers, "may help" qualifiers, or DSHEA-style benefit language — they are applying a legal framework that does not govern their products. This creates compliance exposure in two directions: the copy may not be protecting the brand in the way the brand believes, and the copy may be triggering veterinary drug regulations the brand doesn't know apply.

What the FDA Said in 1996

In April 1996, the FDA published a Federal Register notice responding to industry questions about whether DSHEA applied to supplements for pets. The FDA's answer was unambiguous: no. The DSHEA definition of "dietary supplement" specifies a product "intended for ingestion by a human being." Products intended for animals fall outside the statutory definition and are therefore outside DSHEA's regulatory framework.

This means:

  • The FDA disclaimer — "These statements have not been evaluated by the FDA. This product is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure, or prevent any disease" — does not provide DSHEA protection for pet products
  • DSHEA's structure/function claim framework does not apply to pet supplements
  • Pet supplement brands cannot use DSHEA as a legal basis for any claim in their advertising

What Framework Actually Applies

Pet products in the US are regulated under a different framework, depending on what claims are made:

Animal food regulation (AAFCO): Pet supplements marketed without therapeutic claims are regulated as animal food products under FDA oversight and guided by AAFCO (Association of American Feed Control Officials) standards. They can make nutritional content claims — ingredient amounts, guaranteed analysis — but not therapeutic claims.

Veterinary drug regulation: If a pet supplement makes a claim that it diagnoses, treats, cures, or prevents a disease or health condition in animals, the FDA classifies it as a new animal drug under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act. New animal drugs require FDA approval through the Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) — a process equivalent in rigor to pharmaceutical drug approval for humans. No pet supplement brand has undergone this process.

The practical consequence: any therapeutic claim for a pet supplement in the US markets the product as an unapproved new animal drug — regardless of whether the brand believed DSHEA protected it.

The US Regulatory Framework for Pet Supplements

In the US, pet supplements must navigate both FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine (CVM) oversight and AAFCO guidelines. The CVM has issued guidance distinguishing acceptable "nutritional support" language from prohibited therapeutic claims. NASC (National Animal Supplement Council) membership provides a voluntary quality and compliance framework that is increasingly recognized by retailers including Amazon.

The NASC (National Animal Supplement Council) is the primary voluntary compliance organization for pet supplement brands in the US. While not a regulatory body, NASC membership requires brands to follow a Quality Seal program that includes adherence to specific advertising guidelines — guidelines that align with FDA CVM's own guidance on pet supplement claims.

FDA CVM Guidance on Pet Supplement Claims

The FDA CVM has not issued a comprehensive guidance document equivalent to the FTC's Health Products Compliance Guidance for human supplements. However, it has issued warning letters and enforcement guidance that establishes the following principles for pet supplement advertising:

  • Nutritional content claims are acceptable: Claims about what the product contains — ingredient names and amounts — are factual statements that do not trigger drug classification
  • Claims tied to specific health conditions in animals are drug claims: Any claim that implies a product treats, prevents, or alleviates a specific health condition in animals classifies the product as a new animal drug
  • "Nutritional support for healthy [function] in healthy [animals]" — this framing is the most defensible for pet supplement benefit claims in the US market: anchoring to healthy animals and normal function rather than disease states

The NASC Claim Framework

NASC has developed specific guidance for member brands on permitted and prohibited claim language. NASC-compliant language focuses on: "nutritional support for" rather than "treats" or "helps"; specifying that claims apply to healthy animals; avoiding disease names; and including a NASC disclaimer: "This product is intended for intermittent or supplemental feeding only."

Permitted vs. Prohibited Claims: US Market

The dividing line for pet supplement claims in the US is whether the claim implies the product treats a health condition in animals. "Nutritional support for healthy joints in dogs" describes nutrition for a healthy animal's joints. "Supports dogs with arthritis" describes treatment of a disease condition. The first is a nutritional support claim; the second is a veterinary drug claim.
CategoryPermitted (US — Nutritional Support)Prohibited (US — Drug Claim)
Joint Health"Nutritional support for healthy joints in active dogs"
"Contains glucosamine and chondroitin for joint nutrition"
"Helps dogs with arthritis"
"Reduces joint pain"
"Supports dogs with hip dysplasia"
Skin & Coat"Supports healthy coat and skin in dogs and cats"
"Rich in EPA and DHA for coat nutrition"
"Treats dry, itchy skin"
"Relieves skin allergies"
"Reduces hotspots"
Immunity"Supports healthy immune function in dogs"
"Contains antioxidants for cellular health"
"Prevents infection"
"Boosts the immune system"
"Fights disease"
Gut Health"Supports healthy digestion in dogs and cats"
"Probiotic support for normal digestive function"
"Treats IBS in dogs"
"Relieves digestive disorders"
"Cures diarrhea"
Anxiety / Calm"Supports a calm, relaxed temperament in dogs"
"Nutritional support for situational stress in pets"
"Treats separation anxiety"
"Calms anxious dogs" (implied condition)
"Works like medication for anxious pets"
Liver Support"Milk thistle — nutritional support for healthy liver function"
"Supports normal liver function in cats"
"Treats liver disease"
"For dogs with hepatitis"
"Liver disease formula"
Dental Health"Supports healthy teeth and gums"
"Promotes normal oral hygiene in dogs"
"Treats gum disease"
"Removes plaque" (implied functional/drug claim)
"Dental disease formula"
Omega-3 / Fish Oil"Salmon oil — naturally rich in EPA and DHA"
"Supports healthy skin, coat, and joint nutrition"
"Reduces inflammation"
"Treats inflammatory conditions"
"Anti-inflammatory fish oil"

The key rule for US pet supplement copy: Claims must describe nutritional support for normal function in healthy animals. The moment copy implies the product helps an animal with a disease or health condition, it crosses into veterinary drug territory. "Nutritional support for healthy joints in active dogs" — permitted. "Helps dogs with joint problems" — drug claim.

UK VMD Rules: The Strictest English-Language Market

The UK Veterinary Medicines Directorate (VMD) regulates any product marketed with claims that it affects the health, condition, or function of animals. In the UK, "may help," "boost," "promote," and "supports" when connected to a health condition are treated as veterinary medicinal product claims — and veterinary medicinal products require VMD authorization. The list of words the VMD treats as therapeutic triggers is more extensive than most brands realize.

The UK VMD's approach to pet supplement advertising is the strictest in any English-language market. The VMD's position is that any product marketed using language that implies it has a therapeutic effect on animals is a veterinary medicinal product (VMP) and requires VMD authorization.

The VMD's Trigger Words

The VMD has published guidance on words and phrases that it treats as indicating therapeutic intent. This list includes words that many brands use routinely in their advertising without realizing the VMD considers them veterinary medicinal product claims:

CategoryVMD-Designated Therapeutic LanguageVMD-Acceptable Alternative
Enhancement"Boost," "enhance," "improve" (when tied to a body function)"Contains [specific nutrients]"
Support with condition implied"Supports arthritis," "supports anxious dogs," "joint support formula""Nutritional supplement for dogs"
Qualification"May help," "helps," "can reduce," "may prevent"Nutritional content language only
Condition referencesAny disease or condition name as a modifier ("anxiety," "arthritis," "skin conditions," "allergies")Ingredient names without condition association
Outcome language"Promotes healthy joints," "promotes coat health" when disease is impliedGuaranteed analysis / ingredient content statements
Before/after referencesAny testimonial describing improvement in a diagnosed or symptomatic conditionFactual ingredient statements

What Is Permitted in UK Pet Supplement Copy

In the UK, pet supplements (those that are not authorized veterinary medicinal products) should limit their claims to:

  • Ingredient names and amounts: "Contains 500mg glucosamine per chew"
  • Guaranteed analysis: protein, fat, fiber, moisture percentages
  • Nutritional composition statements without condition or function claims
  • Species and format information: "For dogs," "For cats," "Soft chew supplement"
  • Quality and sourcing statements: "Wild-caught salmon oil," "Cold-pressed," "Free from artificial additives"

Any language beyond these categories risks the VMD classifying the product as a veterinary medicinal product — which would require VMD authorization that the brand does not have, making the product illegal to sell in the UK without that authorization.

Australia APVMA: "May Help" Has Zero Protection

The Australian Pesticides and Veterinary Medicines Authority (APVMA) regulates veterinary chemical products in Australia, including pet supplements that make health claims. The APVMA has made explicit that "may help" language provides zero protection — it is treated identically to a direct therapeutic claim. Products making APVMA-regulated claims without authorization are prohibited from sale in Australia.

Australia's approach to pet supplement regulation is particularly demanding because the APVMA's trigger for classifying a product as a veterinary chemical product is broad — it includes any claim that the product affects the structure or function of an animal, or that it prevents, treats, or alleviates any condition in animals.

The "May Help" Prohibition

The APVMA has specifically addressed the "may help" qualifier that many pet supplement brands use as a perceived compliance buffer. The APVMA's position is that "may help relieve joint stiffness in dogs" and "relieves joint stiffness in dogs" are equivalent from a regulatory classification standpoint. The qualifier does not change the nature of the claim — it merely adds linguistic uncertainty to a claim that implies therapeutic benefit.

This is the sharpest regulatory position on qualifiers in any market WriteLift serves. While the FTC in the US acknowledges that qualifiers don't automatically fix prohibited claims (the "net impression" standard), the APVMA's position is even more direct: specific qualifier words including "may help," "can help," "helps to," and "may assist" are on their list of phrases that indicate therapeutic intent and trigger APVMA regulation.

What Australian Pet Supplement Brands Can Say

For pet supplement brands selling in Australia without APVMA authorization, advertising must be limited to:

  • Nutritional content claims tied to recognized nutrient requirements for the species
  • Ingredient sourcing and quality information
  • Palatability and convenience information
  • General statements about the product being a "nutritional supplement for pets" without specific functional or health claims

Australian pet supplement brands selling products with therapeutic claims should seek APVMA advice on whether their products require authorization — the threshold for what constitutes a regulated claim is lower in Australia than in the US or UK, and many brands selling in Australia are technically selling unregistered veterinary chemical products without realizing it.

Canada Pet Supplement Rules

Canada regulates pet supplements under the Feeds Act (CFIA oversight) for products making nutritional claims, and under the Food and Drugs Act for products making drug-level claims. Vanessa's Law (2023) introduced fines up to $5 million for certain regulatory violations. The CFIA has specific guidance on permitted claims for livestock and companion animal supplements. Health Canada's Natural Health Products regulations do not apply to animals.

Canada's pet supplement regulatory framework sits between the US and UK/Australian approaches in terms of strictness. The Canadian Food Inspection Agency (CFIA) regulates feeds and supplements for animals, while Health Canada regulates human natural health products — notably, the Natural Health Products regulations that govern human supplements explicitly do not extend to products for animals.

For Canadian pet supplement brands, compliant copy focuses on nutritional content claims (ingredient amounts, guaranteed analysis) that align with recognized nutrient requirements for the target species, combined with factual sourcing and quality statements. Disease or health condition references trigger drug classification under the Food and Drugs Act, requiring federal approval that pet supplement brands do not hold.

The Highest-Risk Pet Supplement Claim Categories

Certain pet supplement categories have the highest rate of compliance violations because the marketing language used in those categories has become so normalized that it's used without brands recognizing the regulatory risk. Joint health, anxiety/calm, immune health, and skin condition supplements are the four highest-risk categories for cross-market pet supplement compliance violations.

Joint Health Supplements (Highest Risk)

Joint health is the most marketed and most-violated pet supplement category. The issue: buyers purchase joint supplements for dogs and cats with existing joint problems — arthritis, hip dysplasia, mobility issues — and brands respond by writing copy that speaks to those buyers' actual situations. The result is copy that makes therapeutic claims by referencing the conditions buyers have in mind.

The compliance challenge: you can acknowledge why buyers look for joint supplements without making condition-specific therapeutic claims. "Many pet owners choose joint supplements for dogs in their senior years" acknowledges the use case without claiming the product treats arthritis. "Nutritional support for healthy joints in active, aging dogs" acknowledges the life stage without naming a disease.

Anxiety and Calm Supplements

Calm and anxiety supplements represent a growing category with a distinct compliance problem: buyers are often managing diagnosed anxiety in their pets. Copy that uses "anxious dogs," "separation anxiety," "noise phobia," or "stress-related behavior" names conditions — some of which are veterinary diagnoses — making the product a veterinary drug claim in most markets.

Compliant calm supplement copy describes behavior contexts and nutritional components without naming conditions: "For dogs that benefit from calming nutrition before travel or fireworks" describes a situation without naming an anxiety disorder. "Contains L-theanine, known for its calming properties in humans, now formulated for dogs" stays in ingredient territory.

Immune Health Supplements

Immune health claims for pet supplements are prohibited in similar ways to human supplement immune claims — with the additional complication that in the UK, "boosts the immune system" is explicitly prohibited for human supplements and its equivalent for pets ("supports immune function," "immune booster for dogs") carries the same prohibition under VMD rules.

Skin Condition Supplements

"Helps itchy dogs," "for dogs with skin allergies," "relieves hotspots" — all of these describe health conditions (allergic dermatitis, contact dermatitis, pyoderma) and trigger veterinary drug classification. Compliant alternatives focus on ingredient content and healthy animal nutritional support: "Salmon oil — naturally rich in EPA and DHA for skin and coat nutrition."

What Actually Converts: Compliance-Safe Pet Copy

Compliant pet supplement copy converts well when it uses three elements that ingredient-literate pet owners respond to: specific nutrient amounts (EPA/DHA in mg, glucosamine in mg, probiotic CFU counts), sourcing and quality signals (wild-caught, cold-pressed, third-party tested, made in USA), and species-specific formulation detail (breed size, life stage, palatability). These elements build purchase confidence without any therapeutic claims.

The misconception that compliance-safe pet supplement copy must be vague or unconvincing is directly contradicted by the evidence. The pet supplement buyer who researches products before purchasing — and they represent a significant and growing share of the premium pet supplement market — responds to specifics: ingredient amounts, sourcing transparency, manufacturing standards, and third-party testing. None of these require health claims.

The Four Pillars of High-Converting Compliant Pet Copy

1. Specific nutrient amounts: "Each soft chew contains: Glucosamine HCl 500mg | Chondroitin Sulfate 400mg | MSM 200mg." This is a Guaranteed Analysis-style presentation that is factual, compliant across all markets, and gives the ingredient-literate buyer exactly the comparison data they need.

2. Sourcing transparency: "Wild-caught Alaskan salmon — naturally rich in EPA and DHA omega-3s." "Single-source protein." "Human-grade ingredients." These are factual quality signals that do not require any health claims and resonate strongly with premium pet supplement buyers.

3. Third-party validation: "NASC Quality Seal." "Third-party tested for purity and potency." "Made in a GMP-certified facility." "COA available upon request." These signals address the purchase hesitation that stops first-time pet supplement buyers — the fear of low-quality or contaminated products.

4. Species and life stage specificity: "Formulated for large-breed dogs over 7 years." "For senior cats from age 8." "Soft chews — sized for medium breeds." This information is factual, compliance-safe, and helps buyers confirm they're purchasing the right product for their animal — which increases purchase confidence and reduces returns.

Amazon Pet Supplement Listing Rules

Amazon applies FTC and FDA (CVM) standards to pet supplement listings and has added its own layer of enforcement that mirrors the March 2026 supplement deadline: ingredient claims must be accurate and consistent with product labels. Amazon also prohibits drug-level health claims for pet supplements. Pet supplement brands that migrated their "may help" human supplement copy frameworks to pet listings face the same suppression risk as non-compliant human supplement listings.

Amazon's pet supplement policy aligns with FDA CVM guidance: listings may not make claims that classify the product as an unapproved new animal drug. In practice, this means:

  • Disease names in listing copy ("for dogs with arthritis") trigger compliance flags
  • Therapeutic outcome language ("reduces joint pain," "eliminates anxiety") is prohibited
  • Ingredient claims must accurately reflect the product's actual composition
  • Testimonials describing improvement in diagnosed conditions should not appear in listing copy

Amazon's AI scanning system — the same system that enforces the March 2026 human supplement requirements — applies equivalent logic to pet supplement listings. The cross-platform scanning (Amazon listing plus external website) applies here as well. If a pet supplement brand's Shopify site says "helps dogs with hip dysplasia" and the Amazon listing is more conservative, Amazon's system may flag the external site claim and suppress the Amazon listing.

For more on Amazon's ingredient claim enforcement, see our guide to the Amazon March 2026 supplement deadline. For the complete picture of how FTC liability extends across the advertising supply chain, see our article on FTC copywriter liability.

Frequently Asked Questions

No. DSHEA (the Dietary Supplement Health and Education Act of 1994) applies only to dietary supplements intended for ingestion by human beings. The FDA confirmed this explicitly in an April 22, 1996 Federal Register notice. Pet supplements are regulated as either animal food products under AAFCO guidelines (for nutritional content claims) or as new animal drugs under the Federal Food, Drug, and Cosmetic Act (for therapeutic claims). Using the DSHEA framework — including the FDA disclaimer — for pet supplement advertising is a compliance error that provides no regulatory protection.
Not safely in any market WriteLift serves. In the US, "may help" in pet supplement copy provides limited protection and should be avoided for any implied therapeutic benefit. In the UK, "may help" provides zero legal protection under VMD rules — it is explicitly listed as a phrase that indicates therapeutic intent, triggering veterinary medicinal product regulation. In Australia, the APVMA has stated that "may help," "can help," and "may assist" are therapeutic indicator phrases that classify products as requiring APVMA authorization. WriteLift avoids "may help" in all pet supplement copy for all markets.
For pet supplements in the US, compliant claims include: specific nutritional content ("contains 500mg glucosamine HCl per chew"), guaranteed analysis information (protein, fat, fiber, moisture), sourcing and quality statements ("wild-caught salmon oil"), NASC membership and third-party testing references, and nutritional support for healthy animals ("nutritional support for healthy joints in active dogs"). Any claim that implies the product helps animals with a specific disease, condition, or symptom crosses into veterinary drug territory and requires FDA CVM approval the brand does not hold.
The UK Veterinary Medicines Directorate (VMD) prohibits any language that implies a pet supplement treats, prevents, or affects a health condition in animals. This includes: "may help," "boosts immunity," "promotes joint health" (when a condition is implied), "supports dogs with arthritis," "for anxious dogs," and any testimonial describing improvement in a diagnosed or symptomatic condition. Only general nutritional content claims, ingredient statements, and information about healthy animals are permitted. Products marketed with VMD-regulated claims without authorization are classified as unlicensed veterinary medicinal products — illegal to sell in the UK.
Yes. Salmon oil and other omega-3 pet products are subject to the same compliance framework as any other pet supplement across all four markets. "Reduces joint inflammation" is a drug claim — prohibited in all markets. "Reduces inflammation" — prohibited for the same reason. "Supports healthy skin and coat in dogs and cats" is a permitted nutritional support claim in the US. In the UK and Australia, even this framing should be reviewed carefully. Specific omega-3 content claims — "each ml contains 300mg EPA + 200mg DHA" — are factual, compliance-safe across all markets, and are the most effective conversion tool for omega-3 pet products.

WriteLift — Karen Nielsen Palconit

WriteLift is a specialist eCommerce content service providing compliance-aware copy for premium pet product brands in the US, UK, Australia, and Canada. WriteLift applies the strictest-common-denominator principle across all four markets — UK VMD-level language for every pet supplement deliverable. writelift.ph

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External references: FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine · UK VMD Veterinary Medicines Guidance · Australian APVMA · Canada CFIA Feeds

This article is for informational purposes only and does not constitute legal advice. Consult a qualified veterinary regulatory attorney for advice specific to your products and target markets.