Can dogs eat chocolate?
No โ chocolate is toxic to dogs. It contains theobromine and caffeine, both methylxanthines that dogs metabolize much more slowly than humans. Dark chocolate, baking chocolate, and cocoa powder are the most dangerous. Even small amounts can cause serious illness, and large doses can be fatal.
Other ยท 546 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
Risks
- Contains theobromine โ toxic to dogs at 20 mg/kg for mild symptoms, 60 mg/kg+ for severe
- Contains caffeine โ compounds the theobromine toxicity
- Dark chocolate and baking chocolate have the highest theobromine concentration
- Symptoms: vomiting, diarrhea, rapid breathing, increased heart rate, seizures
- Can cause cardiac arrest and death in severe cases
- Dogs metabolize theobromine much more slowly than humans (17.5 hour half-life)
โ Toxic threshold
Mild symptoms: 20 mg/kg theobromine. Severe toxicity: 40-60 mg/kg. Lethal dose: ~100-200 mg/kg. Baking chocolate: ~450 mg theobromine per oz. Dark chocolate: ~150 mg/oz. Milk chocolate: ~44 mg/oz. White chocolate: ~1 mg/oz (negligible theobromine).
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) | TOXIC โ do not feed |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | TOXIC โ do not feed |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | TOXIC โ do not feed |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
Never feed any form of chocolate to dogs. This includes milk chocolate, dark chocolate, baking chocolate, cocoa powder, chocolate chips, chocolate cake, brownies, chocolate ice cream, hot cocoa, and chocolate-covered anything. White chocolate contains negligible theobromine but is still unhealthy due to high sugar and fat. If your dog eats chocolate, note the type, amount, and your dog's weight, then call your veterinarian or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435) immediately.
Frequency
Never โ toxic to dogs.
Frequently Asked Questions
- Toxicity depends on the type of chocolate, the amount eaten, and your dog's weight. Baking chocolate is the most dangerous โ just 1 ounce can seriously sicken a 20-pound dog. Dark chocolate is nearly as dangerous โ 1-2 ounces can cause significant symptoms in a 20-pound dog. Milk chocolate is less concentrated โ roughly 1 ounce per pound of body weight is the concerning threshold. White chocolate contains almost no theobromine and is not a toxicity concern (though the fat and sugar are unhealthy). Use a chocolate toxicity calculator online or call your vet immediately โ don't wait for symptoms, as they can take 6-12 hours to appear.
- Symptoms typically appear within 6-12 hours of ingestion and progress in severity based on the amount consumed. Mild poisoning: vomiting, diarrhea, increased thirst and urination, restlessness. Moderate poisoning: rapid heart rate (tachycardia), hyperactivity, excessive panting, tremors, and muscle twitching. Severe poisoning: seizures, cardiac arrhythmias, internal bleeding, heart failure, and potentially death. Theobromine has a half-life of about 17.5 hours in dogs (vs. 6-10 hours in humans), meaning the effects are prolonged. Treatment is most effective when started before symptoms appear โ don't wait to see if your dog gets sick.
- Act immediately: (1) Note what type of chocolate, approximately how much, and when it was eaten. (2) Weigh your dog if you can. (3) Call your veterinarian or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435, fee applies) immediately. (4) Do NOT try to induce vomiting unless specifically instructed by a veterinarian โ improper vomiting induction can cause aspiration pneumonia. (5) If your vet instructs you to come in, bring the chocolate wrapper/packaging. Treatment may include induced vomiting (if within 1-2 hours), activated charcoal to prevent absorption, IV fluids, and monitoring of heart rhythm. Early treatment dramatically improves outcomes.
Related other
Caffeine
ToxicToxic to dogs โ found in coffee, tea, energy drinks, soda, and caffeine pills. Can cause seizures, cardiac arrest, and death.
Cinnamon
CautionSmall amounts won't harm dogs, but cinnamon powder can irritate the mouth, and cinnamon oil is toxic. No real benefit for dogs.
Honey
CautionSmall amounts are safe for healthy adult dogs and may soothe sore throats, but high sugar content means strict portion control. Not for puppies or diabetic dogs.
Olives
CautionPlain, unsalted olives are not toxic, but most commercial olives are brined with high sodium. Pits are a choking hazard.
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