Can dogs eat bones?
No โ the FDA explicitly advises against giving bones to dogs. Cooked bones of any kind splinter into sharp fragments that can cause choking, broken teeth, mouth lacerations, intestinal blockage, and internal perforation. Even raw bones carry significant risks. Despite the popular image of dogs with bones, they're one of the most common causes of emergency veterinary visits.
Meats ยท 0 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
- Dental cleaning effect from chewing (but far safer alternatives exist)
- Mental enrichment from gnawing (but safer chew toys accomplish the same)
Risks
- Cooked bones splinter into razor-sharp fragments that puncture the GI tract
- Broken teeth are common โ emergency dental work is expensive
- Bone fragments cause intestinal blockage requiring surgery
- Choking risk, especially with small or oddly shaped bones
- Raw bones carry bacterial contamination (salmonella, E. coli)
- Bone marrow is extremely high in fat โ pancreatitis trigger
Recommended serving size
Adjust portions based on your dog's weight, age, and activity level. Treats and snacks should make up no more than 10% of daily calories.
| Dog size | Weight range | Serving |
|---|---|---|
| Small dog | Under 20 lbs (9 kg) | Not recommended |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | Not recommended |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | Not recommended |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
The safest approach is to never give real bones to dogs โ cooked or raw. For dental health and chewing enrichment, use veterinarian-approved dental chews (like Greenies or Whimzees), durable rubber chew toys (like Kong), or frozen carrots. If you choose to offer raw recreational bones despite veterinary advice, supervise constantly, choose large raw beef knuckle bones too big to swallow, limit chewing sessions to 15 minutes, and discard the bone after use. Never give poultry, pork, fish, or cooked bones of any kind.
Frequency
Not recommended by the FDA or most veterinarians.
Key nutrients
- Calcium
- Phosphorus
- Marrow fat
- Collagen
- Minerals
Frequently Asked Questions
- The FDA issued a formal consumer update titled 'No Bones About It: Bones Are Unsafe for Your Dog' based on extensive reports of bone-related injuries and deaths. The documented hazards include broken teeth requiring extraction, mouth and tongue wounds from bone splinters, bones looped around the lower jaw requiring sedation to remove, bones stuck in the esophagus or windpipe, intestinal blockage requiring surgery, rectal bleeding from sharp bone fragments, and peritonitis (life-threatening infection from intestinal perforation). The FDA's position is that no bone โ cooked, raw, commercially processed, or homemade โ is completely safe for dogs.
- Raw bones are somewhat less likely to splinter than cooked bones, which is why some raw-feeding advocates argue they're safe. Cooking dries out bones, making them brittle and prone to breaking into sharp shards. Raw bones are softer and more pliable. However, raw bones still carry significant risks: bacterial contamination (salmonella, listeria), broken teeth from the hard surface, and choking or blockage if pieces break off. Even among raw feeding veterinarians who support raw bones, strict rules apply: only large recreational bones (beef knuckle or marrow bones), always supervised, limited chewing time, and immediate removal if pieces break off.
- Several products provide the dental cleaning and mental stimulation of bones without the dangers. Veterinarian-recommended dental chews (like Greenies, Whimzees, or OraVet) are designed to clean teeth safely while being fully digestible. Durable rubber toys like Kong Classic can be stuffed with treats for long-lasting enrichment. Frozen carrots provide a satisfying crunch and mild dental scraping. Bully sticks (single-ingredient, dried beef muscle) are fully digestible and safer than bones, though they should be supervised. Nylon chew toys provide durability for aggressive chewers. Always choose size-appropriate options for your dog.
Related meats
Bacon
UnsafeExtremely high in fat, salt, and preservatives โ a leading trigger for pancreatitis in dogs.
Beef
SafeNutrient-dense protein rich in iron and B12 โ the most common protein in commercial dog food.
Chicken
SafeLean, easily digestible protein source โ a staple in many commercial dog foods and bland diets.
Duck
SafeExcellent novel protein for dogs with common meat allergies โ richer in flavor and fat than chicken.
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