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Can dogs eat pickles?

No, pickles are not recommended for dogs. While plain cucumbers are perfectly safe, the pickling process adds excessive salt, vinegar, and usually garlic, onion, dill, and other spices. The sodium content alone makes pickles unhealthy, and garlic/onion ingredients make them potentially toxic.

Other ยท 11 kcal per 100 g

Benefits and risks

Benefits

  • Contain the same base nutrients as cucumbers (but the brine negates this)

Risks

  • Very high in sodium โ€” 800-1,200 mg per 100 g from brine
  • Most pickle recipes include garlic โ€” toxic to dogs
  • Many contain onion or onion powder โ€” toxic to dogs
  • Vinegar can cause GI irritation and stomach upset
  • Spicy pickles contain chili peppers and spices that irritate the GI tract
  • Bread-and-butter pickles contain significant sugar

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.

Recommended serving size by dog weight
Dog sizeWeight rangeServing
Small dogUnder 20 lbs (9 kg)Not recommended
Medium dog20โ€“50 lbs (9โ€“23 kg)Not recommended
Large dogOver 50 lbs (23 kg)Not recommended

How to prepare and serve

Preparation

Pickles should not be fed to dogs. If your dog accidentally eats a single small pickle, a healthy medium or large dog will likely be fine โ€” monitor for excessive thirst and GI upset. For the same crunchy, hydrating treat with zero risk, feed plain fresh cucumber slices instead. If you make homemade pickles without garlic, onion, or excessive salt, a small piece might be acceptable โ€” but plain cucumber is always the better and simpler choice.

Frequency

Never โ€” feed plain cucumbers instead.

Key nutrients

  • Sodium
  • Vitamin K
  • Water
  • Vinegar
  • Fiber

Frequently Asked Questions

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