Can dogs eat honey?
Maybe โ small amounts of raw honey are safe for healthy adult dogs and may offer minor benefits like soothing a sore throat and providing antioxidants. However, honey is pure sugar (about 82 g per 100 g) and should be used sparingly. Never give honey to puppies, diabetic dogs, or immunocompromised dogs.
Other ยท 304 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
- Contains trace enzymes, antioxidants, and antimicrobial compounds
- Can soothe a mild sore throat or cough
- Local raw honey may help with seasonal allergies (anecdotal, not proven)
- Small amounts are safe as an occasional treat or food topper
- Manuka honey has stronger antibacterial properties for topical wound use
Risks
- Very high in sugar โ about 82 g sugar per 100 g โ causes weight gain and dental decay
- Unsafe for diabetic dogs โ causes blood sugar spikes
- Raw honey can contain Clostridium botulinum spores โ dangerous for puppies and immunocompromised dogs
- Excessive consumption contributes to obesity
- Honey-flavored products often contain additional harmful ingredients
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) | 1/4 teaspoon |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | 1/2 teaspoon |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | 1 teaspoon |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
Use raw, unprocessed honey in very small amounts โ a tiny drizzle over food or a small dab on a lick mat. Do not heat or cook honey for dogs. Never give honey to puppies under 1 year (risk of botulism from Clostridium spores), diabetic dogs, or obese dogs. Avoid honey-glazed foods, honey-roasted nuts, and products sweetened with honey that contain other harmful ingredients. Manuka honey can be used topically on minor wounds under veterinary guidance.
Frequency
Occasionally โ once or twice a week in tiny amounts.
Key nutrients
- Sugars
- Antioxidants
- Enzymes
- Vitamin C
- Iron
- Manganese
Frequently Asked Questions
- The theory behind giving local raw honey for allergies is that it contains trace amounts of local pollen, which might help desensitize the immune system โ similar to the principle behind allergy immunotherapy. However, there's no scientific evidence supporting this claim for dogs (or humans, for that matter). The pollen in honey is primarily from flowers, while most environmental allergies in dogs are triggered by grasses, trees, and weeds. If your dog has allergies, work with your veterinarian on proven treatments โ antihistamines, immunotherapy, or prescription medications โ rather than relying on honey.
- Raw honey can contain dormant spores of Clostridium botulinum โ the bacterium that causes botulism. In adult dogs and humans, the mature digestive system prevents these spores from germinating and producing toxin. Puppies under 12 months have an immature gut flora that may not be able to prevent Clostridium growth, potentially allowing the spores to germinate, produce botulinum toxin, and cause infant botulism. Symptoms include progressive weakness, difficulty swallowing, paralysis, and respiratory failure. This is the same reason human infants under one year should not eat honey. Adult dogs with healthy immune systems are not at risk.
- Medical-grade honey, particularly Manuka honey, has well-documented antimicrobial properties and is used in veterinary wound care. The high sugar content draws moisture from bacteria (osmotic effect), the low pH creates an acidic environment, and hydrogen peroxide is slowly produced by an enzyme in honey. Veterinarians sometimes recommend applying a thin layer of medical-grade Manuka honey to minor wounds, hot spots, or superficial burns. However, this should be done under veterinary guidance โ not all wounds benefit from honey, and deep or infected wounds need proper veterinary treatment. Regular grocery store honey is not sterile enough for wound application.
Related other
Caffeine
ToxicToxic to dogs โ found in coffee, tea, energy drinks, soda, and caffeine pills. Can cause seizures, cardiac arrest, and death.
Chocolate
ToxicContains theobromine and caffeine โ both toxic to dogs. Dark and baker's chocolate are the most dangerous. Can be fatal.
Cinnamon
CautionSmall amounts won't harm dogs, but cinnamon powder can irritate the mouth, and cinnamon oil is toxic. No real benefit for 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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