8-Count 5-oz Bumble Bee Solid White Albacore Tuna in Water
Expired
$9.10
$12.98
w/ Subscribe & Save
+23Deal Score
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Amazon has 8-Count 5-oz Bumble Bee Solid White Albacore Tuna in Water on sale for $9.09 when you checkout via Subscribe and Save. Shipping is free w/ Prime or on $35+ orders.
Note: You may cancel Subscribe & Save any time after your order ships.
Thanks to Community Member phoinix for finding this deal.
Amazon[amazon.com] has Bumble Bee Albacore Tuna in Water (8 x 5 oz) for $9.57 - 5% when you check out via Subscribe & Save = $9.09. Shipping is free with Prime or on $35+ orders.
Price: $3.89 lower (30% savings) than the list price of $12.98
Subscribe & Save:
Tier
5%
15%*
Price
$9.09
$8.13
Unit
$1.14
$1.02
*Save 15% when you receive 5 or more products in one auto-delivery to one address Note: You may cancel Subscribe & Save any time after your order ships.
Customer reviews:
★★★★★ / 11,072 global ratings 4K+ bought in past month
About this Item:
WILD CAUGHT TUNA IN WATER: Premium, high-quality wild caught, canned solid white albacore tuna in water
GOOD SOURCE OF PROTEIN: Pack of 8, 5 ounce cans of Bumble Bee Solid White Albacore Tuna in Water; Each can contains 29 grams of lean protein per serving (1 serving per can)
CONVENIENT & SATISFYING SNACK: Enjoy a can of Bumble Bee Solid White Albacore Tuna in Water as a great-tasting, protein-packed seafood or tuna snack, for a healthy lunch or as part of any other meal
PERFECT FOR TUNA RECIPES: Bumble Bee canned tuna fish in water is the perfect choice for all your favorite tuna creations—especially tuna salad and sandwiches!—and is a great food for those on a ketogenic (keto) diet
ALBACORE TUNA: High-quality Bumble Bee canned tuna is keto friendly, gluten free, Kosher Certified and Non-GMO Project Verified
SUSTAINABLE BUMBLE BEE TUNA: Bumble Bee canned tuna fish products are dolphin safe and feature a code you can enter on our Trace My Catch website to learn where and how your seafood was caught, processed and more
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Best price I could find was on the vegetable oil variety, with S&S a 24 pack was $0.17 an ounce. I much prefer the oil to water anyway so it's a win for me.
I find it pointless to eat less than 2.5oz per day because why would you have them if you aren't using them as part of a high protein diet? But the mercury content of even the best tuna is too high to eat even half that per day 5 days a week without potential health issues over time.
So I have had to swear off all deals like this. Really kind of sucks, but have to think of the long term.
Misinformation on the internet is dangerous. You shouldn't spread rumors without researching beyond headlines.
That said, "The FDA looks at upper limits of weekly seafood consumption and notes that you would need to eat 164 ounces (10 pounds) of light canned tuna and 56 ounces (3.5 pounds) of albacore white tuna per week before being at risk for mercury," Miller says. "Therefore, having 3 ounces of canned tuna daily (21 ounces per week) isn't going to put you at risk for overconsuming mercury."
The FDA classifies fish into three categories based on their level of mercury: best choices, good choices and choices to avoid.
People who are pregnant or breastfeeding can enjoy two to three servings of fish each week from the "best choices" list, which includes canned light tuna.
My vet said don't feed cats Tuna, to much mercury. Will cost you in vet bills down the road.
As noted, if we're talking about once a week or even less, both of our vets said it's no issue. Replacing their whole diet would be a bad idea — mercury, lack of fat, etc
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In for one. Even when the humans don't want it, the cats love it.
So I have had to swear off all deals like this. Really kind of sucks, but have to think of the long term.
That said, "The FDA looks at upper limits of weekly seafood consumption and notes that you would need to eat 164 ounces (10 pounds) of light canned tuna and 56 ounces (3.5 pounds) of albacore white tuna per week before being at risk for mercury," Miller says. "Therefore, having 3 ounces of canned tuna daily (21 ounces per week) isn't going to put you at risk for overconsuming mercury."
The FDA classifies fish into three categories based on their level of mercury: best choices, good choices and choices to avoid.
People who are pregnant or breastfeeding can enjoy two to three servings of fish each week from the "best choices" list, which includes canned light tuna.
Bumble Bee Chunk White Albacore Tuna in Water, 5 Ounce (Pack of 8)
$9.21 with S&S
As noted, if we're talking about once a week or even less, both of our vets said it's no issue. Replacing their whole diet would be a bad idea — mercury, lack of fat, etc