Can dogs eat plums?
No โ plums are not recommended for dogs. The pit, leaves, and stems contain cyanide, and the pit is a serious choking and obstruction hazard. Even pitted flesh is too sugary to be worthwhile.
Fruits ยท 46 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
- Plum flesh contains some vitamins A, C, and K
- Provides antioxidants and dietary fiber
Risks
- Pit contains cyanogenic glycosides (cyanide compounds)
- Cyanide poisoning causes panting, dilated pupils, shock
- Pit is a major choking and intestinal obstruction risk
- High sugar content can upset stomach
- Dried plums (prunes) cause severe diarrhea
โ Toxic threshold
Cyanide poisoning can occur from chewing as few as 1-2 plum pits, depending on dog size. Symptoms appear within 15-30 minutes: difficulty breathing, dilated pupils, bright red gums, shock. Veterinary emergency.
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) | Avoid entirely |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | Avoid entirely |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | Avoid entirely |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
Don't feed plums to dogs. If your dog steals a piece of pitted plum flesh, monitor for stomach upset but don't panic. The real danger is the pit, leaves, and stems โ keep all of these out of reach.
Frequency
Avoid โ there's no nutritional reason to feed plums.
Key nutrients
- Vitamin C
- Vitamin K
- Vitamin A
- Fiber
- Antioxidants
Frequently Asked Questions
- Contact your veterinarian or ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435) immediately. Plum pits pose two distinct dangers. First, cyanide poisoning โ symptoms include difficulty breathing, dilated pupils, bright red gums, weakness, and seizures, appearing within 15-30 minutes. Second, the pit can lodge in the throat, stomach, or intestines and cause an obstruction requiring emergency surgery. Don't wait for symptoms. Call your vet right away with the number of pits eaten, your dog's weight, and the time of ingestion.
- Yes โ prunes are notorious for causing severe diarrhea in dogs. The drying process concentrates the natural sugars and the laxative compounds (sorbitol, dietary fiber) that make prunes effective for human constipation. In dogs, this combination can cause acute, watery diarrhea and dehydration. A single prune accidentally eaten probably won't cause harm, but never offer prunes intentionally. If your dog needs help with constipation, ask your vet about safer options like a small amount of plain canned pumpkin.
- Technically yes, if the pit, stem, and leaves are completely removed, a small piece of fresh plum flesh isn't toxic. But the high sugar content offers no benefit you couldn't get more safely from blueberries, watermelon, or apple slices. Most veterinarians recommend skipping plums entirely because the risks of pit ingestion are real and the rewards are minimal. If you really want to share plum once, offer one small piece of carefully pitted flesh โ and never make it a habit.
Related fruits
Apples
SafeCrunchy, fibrous treat that helps clean teeth โ just remove the core and seeds first.
Apricots
UnsafePit, leaves, and stem contain cyanide compounds โ best avoided despite the safe flesh.
Bananas
SafeSweet, soft, easy-to-digest treat โ excellent natural source of potassium but high in sugar.
Blackberries
SafeLow-sugar antioxidant powerhouse โ like raspberries, contains trace xylitol but is safe in moderation.
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