Hill’s Science Diet Adult (Dry)

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Rating: ★★½☆☆

Hill’s Science Diet Adult dry dog food earns the Advisor’s second-lowest rating of 2.5 stars.

The Hill’s Science Diet Adult dry product line includes 23 kibbles.

Although we could not locate AAFCO nutritional adequacy statements for these products on the Hill’s website, each product appears to be designed for a specific life stage, lifestyle, breed size or activity level.

  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Active
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Oral Care
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Small Bites
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Large Breed
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult High Energy
  • Hill’s Science Diets Advanced Fitness
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Light (1.5 stars)
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Sensitive Skin
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Healthy Mobility
  • Hill’s Science Diet Mature Adult (1 star)
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Sensitive Stomach
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Lamb Meal and Rice
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Small and Toy Breed
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Healthy Mobility Small Bites
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Healthy Mobility Large Breed
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Lamb Meal and Rice Small Bites
  • Hill’s Science Diet Adult Lamb Meal and Rice Large Breed

Because of their lower ratings, the Adult Light and Mature Adult products are covered in their own special reports.

Hill’s Science Diet Adult Large Breed dry dog food was selected to represent the others in the line for this review.

Hill's Science Diet Adult Large Breed

Dry Dog Food

Estimated Dry Matter Nutrient Content

Protein = 25% | Fat = 16% | Carbs = 51%

Ingredients: Whole grain corn, chicken by-product meal, soybean meal, animal fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols and citric acid), soybean oil, chicken liver flavor, lactic acid, flaxseed, iodized salt, dried chicken cartilage, choline chloride, vitamins (l-ascorbyl-2-polyphosphate (source of vitamin C), vitamin E supplement, niacin, thiamine mononitrate, vitamin A supplement, calcium pantothenate, biotin, vitamin B12 supplement, pyridoxine hydrochloride, riboflavin, folic acid, vitamin D3 supplement), vitamin E supplement, taurine, potassium chloride, minerals (ferrous sulfate, zinc oxide, copper sulfate, manganous oxide, calcium iodate, sodium selenite), l-carnitine, preserved with mixed tocopherols and citric acid, phosphoric acid, beta-carotene, rosemary extract

Fiber (estimated dry matter content) = 1.8%

Red items when present indicate controversial ingredients

Estimated Nutrient Content
MethodProteinFatCarbs
Guaranteed Analysis25%16%NA
Dry Matter Basis25%16%51%
Calorie Weighted Basis22%34%44%

The first ingredient in this dog food is corn. Corn is an inexpensive and controversial cereal grain of only modest nutritional value to a dog.

For this reason, we do not consider corn a preferred component in any dog food.

The second item lists chicken by-product meal, a dry rendered product of slaughterhouse waste. It’s made from what’s left of a slaughtered chicken after all the prime cuts have been removed.

In a nutshell, chicken by-products are those unsavory leftovers usually considered “unfit for human consumption”.

In addition to organs (the nourishing part), this stuff can contain almost anything — feet, beaks, undeveloped eggs — anything except quality skeletal muscle (real meat).

On the brighter side, by-product meals are meat concentrates and contain nearly 300% more protein than fresh chicken.

The third ingredient is soybean meal. Soybean meal is actually a useful by-product. It’s what remains of soybeans after all the oil has been removed.

Soybean meal contains 48% protein. However, compared to meat, this item is considered an inferior plant-based protein providing a lower biological value.

The fourth item is animal fat. Animal fat is a generic by-product of rendering, the same high-temperature process used to make meat meals.

Since there’s no mention of a specific animal, this item could come from almost anywhere: restaurant grease, slaughterhouse waste, diseased cattle — even euthanized pets.

We do not consider generic animal fat a quality ingredient.

The fifth ingredient is soybean oil, red flagged here only due to its controversial (yet unlikely) link to canine food allergies.

After the chicken liver flavor, we find lactic acid, a nutrient found naturally in many living organisms.

It’s difficult to say with certainty why lactic acid is present here except to presume it’s added to balance the pH of the recipe.

The eighth ingredient is flaxseed, one of the best plant sources of healthy omega-3 fatty acids. Provided they’ve first been ground into a meal, flax seeds are also rich in soluble fiber.

From here, the list goes on to include a number of other items.

But to be realistic, ingredients located this far down the list (other than nutritional supplements) are not likely to have much of an effect on the overall rating of this product.

With two notable exceptions

First, we find no evidence of probiotics, friendly bacteria applied to the surface of the kibble after processing.

And finally, the minerals here do not appear to be chelated. And that can make them more difficult to absorb. Non-chelated minerals are usually associated with lower quality dog foods.

Hill’s Science Diet Adult Dry Dog Food
The Bottom Line

Judging by its ingredients alone, Hill’s Science Diet Adult appears to be a below-average dry dog food.

But ingredient quality by itself cannot tell the whole story. We still need to estimate the product’s meat content before determining a final rating.

The dashboard displays a dry matter protein reading of 25%, a fat level of 16% and an estimated carbohydrate content of 51%.

When we exclude the Adult Light and Mature Adult lines, the brand features an average protein content of 25% and a mean fat level of 17%. Together, these figures suggest a carbohydrate serving size of 50% for the overall product line.

Below-average protein. Near-average fat and above-average carbs when compared to a typical dry dog food.

Yet when you consider the protein-boosting effect of the soy meal or the corn gluten meal (in many of the other recipes), this looks like the profile of a kibble containing only a modest amount of meat.

Bottom line?

Hill’s Science Diet Adult is a grain-based dry dog food using only a modest amount of chicken by-product or lamb meals as its main sources of animal protein, thus earning the brand 2.5 stars.

Not recommended.

Those looking for a wet product from the same company may wish to visit our review of Hill’s Science Diet Adult canned dog food.

A Final Word

This review is designed to help you make a more informed decision when buying dog food. However, our rating system is not intended to suggest feeding a particular product will result in specific health benefits for your pet.

For a better understanding of how we analyzed this product, please be sure to read our article, “The Problem with Dog Food Reviews

Remember, no dog food can possibly be appropriate for every life stage, lifestyle or health condition. So, choose wisely. And when in doubt consult a veterinarian for help.

Have an opinion about this dog food… or maybe the review itself? Please know… we welcome your comments.

Notes and Updates

12/27/2009 Original review
08/01/2010 Review updated
11/21/2011 Review updated
11/21/2011 Last Update

Dog Food Advisor IconThe Dog Food Advisor publishes independent reviews to help pet owners make better choices when shopping for dog food.


  • Iphorses

    Oh this is wonderful…I have been feeding Science Diet because my veterinarian recommended it.  I have Brussel Griffons three of them….All three have eaten much less since I change to the science diet…..Thank you so much…  

  • Marie

    Dr. Mike,

    About time the FDA did that….

  • http://DogFoodAdvisor.com Mike Sagman

    The FDA has issued a Warning Letter to Hill’s Pet Nutrition regarding its marketing claims about Science Diet Healthy Mobility Adult dry dog food products.

    Based on claims made by Hill’s Pet Nutrition for this product, the Healthy Mobility Diet is a drug under section 201(g)(1)(B) of the Federal Food, Drug and Cosmetic Act (“FD&C Act”), [21 U.S.C. § 321 (g)(1)(B)], as it is intended for use in the mitigation and treatment of joint disease in dogs. As discussed below, this product is an unapproved new animal drug and your marketing of it violates the FD&C Act.

    An FDA Warning Letter is not a recall.

  • Michelle

    This dog food is terrible. Our vet told us that we should feed our dogs Science Diet, so we did. After a few months, our dog started breaking out all over the place, and his coat was looking horrible. :( I feel bad for listening to them. We talked to our breeder to see if she could tell us what could be causing it, and she asked us what kind of dog food we feed them. She told us to get them off Science diet immediately, and give them Diamond Naturals, which has a four star rating AND it’s cheaper. It’s been about four months now, and our dogs look amazing. They love diamond. :)

  • http://DogFoodAdvisor.com Mike Sagman

    Hi Tim… I just checked the example product and it is up to date and accurate. However, there are more than 20 adult formulas available and in your comment you did not mention which one. Although this example has been chosen as a “typical” example for all the products in the line, there will be some variation.

    Like all “examples”, some of the 20+ formulas should be expected to be slightly better (or slightly worse) than our chosen example. Unfortunately, most of the examples contain soybean meal as a meat protein substitute, animal fat (a poorly identified, generic ingredient), by-products and relatively inexpensive cereal grains.

    When I revisit Hill’s products in the very near future, this Adult product line may be upgraded (2.5 stars?). And some may get 3. But as a group, this line still gets no more than 2 to 2.5 stars. Hope this helps.

  • Marie

    @Richard, LOL, indeed! ;)

    It is a pretty terrible food. :-/

  • sandy

    I was looking up a Rx food for a coworker…it said 26% protien and 35% fat!! This was for an older dog with some kidney issues, but it sounds like it could cause other problems down the road??? Feed Rx food so your dog will remain sick is what it looks like to me…

  • http://brotherscomplete.com Richard Darlington

    Marie

    I was in a Vets office down here in Florida a little over a week ago and while waiting to talk to her I was reading the ingredient lists on the bags of Hills prescription diets and Science diet. I knew the Hill’s products were not very good but had never really focused on the ingredients because we don’t carry then in our store.

    My wife kept shushing me as I kept making involuntary incredulous noises while reading what is in this stuff. Finally, I could not contain myself and went over to the desk to ask the assistant what this “food” costs (the prices were not posted).

    She looked it up on the computer and when she gave me the price apparently my face reflected my shock before I could control it. I had her repeat the price and the size of the bag because I was certain I must have misunderstood. I even had her give me the price for another Hills formula and it was the same price – absolutely astronomical.

    I stood there in a state of shock and disbelief staring at her. Finally, to allay the look on my face, I imagine, she told me that this was very special food and it required a prescription to be able to buy it.

    Anything else I want to say at this point is probably best left unsaid. While this is one version of American capitalism, at the least, in my opinion it is an extremely sad commentary on all involved.

    Brings to mind your quote on the Purina thread, “this food will cause possession from an unfriendly poltergeist.” Shame that doesn’t apply to those involved in supplying it.

  • Marie

    Oh, and Large Breed Adult is here:

    http://www.hillspet.com/products/sd-canine-adult-large-breed-dry.html

    Says that the ingredients are:

    Whole Grain Corn, Chicken By-Product Meal, Soybean Meal, Animal Fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols and citric acid), Soybean Oil, Chicken Liver Flavor

    Confused I am….

  • Marie

    Tim,

    According to http://www.hillspet.com/products/sd-canine-adult-healthy-mobility-large-breed-dry.html :

    Whole Grain Corn, Whole Grain Wheat, Chicken By-Product Meal, Soybean Meal, Animal Fat (preserved with mixed tocopherols and citric acid)

    ??? seems to be worse, actually….

  • Tim

    This website really needs to update its info. about the food’s ingredients; I just bought a bag of Hill’s Science Diet Adult food and the first ingredient is “Chicken”–not corn and not chicken by-products. I would imagine that this would increase the rating to at least a 3.

  • Sapphire

    I’m not sure if it’s the same for the US formula, but as for the latin american version have changed a bit rencently.

    Now in some versions they added chicken as a first ingredient and the animal fat have switched to pork fat, that’s a tiny improvement for the food.

    Maybe the US formulas have switched as well?

  • Shawna

    That’s funny Count!! :)

    But, did they (or others) really “fight off the debilitating effects or such an unhealthy diet”? Vets can keep dogs, thanks to modern medicine, alive for quite a while after mother nature would have decided otherwise. I would imagine living to a ripe old age while doped up on steroids isn’t the best way to live out that life. In my opinion, quality of life far outweighs quantity.. And, in my opinion, better quality foods add to the quality of a life as well as longevity.. Win/win

  • The Count

    Love the specious reasoning there. Sixteen or seventeen years — already in the top percentile for longevity — “despite the food.” They certainly were profoundly sturdy dogs to have fought off the debilitating effects of such an unhealthy diet for SEVENTEEN YEARS.

  • Gordon

    Yes, but could your dogs have lived beyond 20? It is biologically and evidently possible!

  • Dave M

    My vet still recommends this food. Before the pet food recalls and deaths I use to feed my dogs Iams and Science Diet….They both lived 16- 17 years fortunately – but that was despite the food.

  • Gordon

    Stacy – Just keep persisting with the message of better nutritional options for your clinic’s clients’ pets. That’s all you can do. What does your boss, the vets support? Do they allow you to speak the truth to your clinic’s clients, about what Hills and its conglomerate cousins actually put in their foods?

  • Stacy

    I have been a vet tech for 13 years, and animal nutrition is one of my favorite things. I worked for years at a wildlife rehabilitation center… in baby bird, the metabolism is so much higher, you can see a near immediate impact from nutrition. For example, a baby bird eats every 30 minutes, sunrise to sunset. If that baby misses a few meals, or doesn’t get the right food, you will see a stress line across the growing feather reflecting that deficit. Now, this same thing happens with our mammals… only on a much slower time scale. We ARE damaging our cats and dogs with poor food, we may just not know it until much later.
    It is soooo interesting to me to see the VAST difference between the comparisons on here and what our food reps are telling us in the clinic!! For YEARS, Hill’s Science Diet has been promoted as the “gold standard”. We get nifty stuff for doing online “classes” about SD foods… stickers, notepads, pens, scrub tops, etc. I see that it is really the *marketing* that Hill’s excels at! In defense of SD, they do have some really nice community service programs. For example, they will give shelters free food for the animals… that’s ALOT of food. Were it not for that, the animals would get the absolute cheapest thing around. SD is atleast better than Ol’Roy!!!
    We have been telling clients for awhile now to look for quality meat and high protein foods, but the marketing beasts still seem to prevail… Will I ever be able to convince clients that Beneful does NOT mean Beneficial?!?!?

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  • Shawna

    Excellent point Melissa,

    I’m in rescue too and I see the very same thing. In addition to blowing the coat I often see tearing of the eyes (a major route of detoxification).

  • melissa

    Riley-

    Just keep in mind sometimes dogs blow coat when switching to a better, more nutrient dense food. We have seen this in rescue many times-the old dry brittle coat blows out, and in comes a nice shiny healthy coat. If this is going to happen, it seems to happen about 6-8 weeks into feeding the new. Good luck and keep us posted!

  • Jonathan

    Good luck, Riley. Keep us posted on how she does on the Wilderness!

  • Riley

    I had been feeding my Malamute/Collie mix this for ten years, only a few weeks ago did I find this site – Ouch! Her entire life she has had itchy skin and a dull coat, and now I know why. We’re in the process of switching her to Blue Wilderness. While dogs can definitely live on this kind of food, it would be comparable a human eating fast food daily and then switching to health food.

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  • Erick Sanchez

    Thanks mike johnathon i was wondering what Ingredients in dog food is good for coat growth or health beacuase i have a pom and i want to maintain his coat.

  • http://DogFoodAdvisor.com Mike Sagman

    Hi Erick… Why not simply browse the 4 and 5-star products? All things considered, these dog foods are mostly better recipes. Unfortunately, due to the biological uniqueness of each pet, I cannot provide customized product recommendations for each reader. For more help, please check out my reviews and visit our FAQ page. Look for the topic, “Help Me Choose a Dog Food”. Or check back for a possible response from one of our other readers.

  • Jonathan

    Erick, the very premise behind Dr. Sagman’s rating system prohibits a food containing by-products to be 4-star. For a food to be 4-star, the apparent quality must be high, and the meat content must be respectable. Just have a look through the 4- and 5-star rated foods… you can’t go wrong. :-)

  • ShamelessRawFoodie

    Erick – Mike has this explanation in red letters directly above where you left your comment:
    I cannot provide specific health advice or personalized product recommendations for each reader.

  • Erick Sanchez

    Hi Mike i posted a review under blue i have the pomeranian and shih tzu they are both four years old. Both are on science diet lamb and rice small bites. I don’t like that it has byproducts i was hoping you could recommend a 4 star dog food rich in antioxidants and omega 3s and 6 and without fillers or byproducts you know the bad stuff if you could help i would greatly appreciate it thanks.

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  • Scott

    Actually I prefer the dry rub, none of that wet crap. let the BBQ Wars begin!

    Anyway, I have been a lurker of this site for quite some time and have read all the reviews and comments and have learned a ton about dog foods and ingredients.
    I also do my own research off site about nutrition for animals and have come to the conclusion that this site is very informative, spot-on and unbiased.

    Mike and top commentators keep up the amazing work with keeping the public informed about what they feed their loved ones.

    Ok back to the shadows to lurk some more

  • Jonathan

    Is that the BBQ covered in the red sauce? If so, then no way! peppery vinegar based BBQ all the way! :-D

  • Scott

    Memphis BBQ wins hands down :p

  • Jonathan

    North Carolina. Not a lot of believers in the importance of people nutrition down here in Smithfeild country, let alone for dogs!. lol

    Easter NC BBQ is the best, btw. :-)

  • Johnson

    @jonathan

    Where do you live?

    Perhaps there is a vet school nearby where you live?

    I’m extremely lucky…. INCREDIBLY LUCKY… to have UC Davis 20 minutes away. I’m told it is California’s only public veterinary teaching school/hospital. The vet we use is one of their professors =D.

  • Jonathan

    Great story Johnson. I am looking for a non-Hill vet right not, too. :-)

  • Johnson

    Does Meagan know you can get dog food shipped…?

  • Johnson

    They were feeding this crap to my dog at the SPCA…. which I understand and tolerate…. It’s sad, but they have to save money so that dogs can live.

    I was still feeding her Science Diet they gave me from the SPCA (I was waiting for the good stuff, Blue Buffalo, to arrive to my apartment).The VCA vet I took my dog for her initial exam tried to push more of this crap on my dog…. which I understand but absolutely did not tolerate. My dog was scratching a lot, and shedding, and had a bunch of dandruff. Never did she mention maybe it was this garbage food.

    She had two shelves of it in the waiting room to sell. I have a feeling they sponsor her in some way. Huge conflict of interest.

    After switching to Blue Buffalo…. magically, her dandruff, scratching, coat, all improved. Imagine that.

    I stopped going to that vet.

  • Jenny

    I just wanted to share my experience. I got my puppy from a rescue, and immediately (slowly) switched her to the best food I could find. It was Blue Buffalo. She had such loose stools. It never got better. She also got frequent UTIs, due to her inverted vulva. I finally switched to SD large breed, and she has never had runny stools again, and not one UTI. I felt guilty giving her a lower quality food until I saw that she did much better on it. So, I for one, am a fan of SD.

  • Meagan

    Mike-
    It was a friend’s dog and has cleared up now after being to the vet like 5 times or more and being on meds. I was just curious, because the vet really could not figure out why it was happening to the dog. All her tests had come back negative. Just really strange and I know this food is not great. I have told her about this site, far as I know she has not looked at it. :( bummer