Can dogs eat popcorn?
Maybe โ plain, air-popped popcorn without any butter, salt, oil, or flavoring is safe for dogs as an occasional treat. However, most popcorn people eat is heavily buttered and salted, making it unhealthy. Unpopped kernels are a choking hazard and can crack teeth.
Grains ยท 387 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
- Whole grain with small amounts of fiber and minerals
- Low calorie when air-popped without toppings โ about 31 kcal per cup
- Contains trace amounts of iron, magnesium, and zinc
- Provides a fun, crunchy texture dogs enjoy
- Can be a guilt-free occasional treat when plain
Risks
- Buttered and salted popcorn is too high in fat and sodium
- Unpopped kernels are a choking hazard and can crack teeth
- Caramel, cheese, kettle, and flavored popcorn contain harmful ingredients
- Movie theater popcorn is drenched in artificial butter flavoring and salt
- Hulls can get stuck in teeth and gums, causing irritation
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) | A few pieces of plain popcorn |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | A small handful |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | A moderate handful |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
Air-pop plain popcorn kernels with no oil, butter, salt, or seasoning. Pick out and discard all unpopped or partially popped kernels before offering to your dog โ these are hard enough to crack teeth. Share only a small amount as an occasional treat. Never feed microwave popcorn (contains artificial butter, diacetyl, and excessive salt), movie theater popcorn, caramel corn, cheese popcorn, or kettle corn.
Frequency
Occasionally โ once or twice a week as a small treat.
Key nutrients
- Fiber
- Iron
- Magnesium
- Zinc
- Manganese
- Carbohydrates
Frequently Asked Questions
- Yes โ unpopped or partially popped kernels pose two significant risks. First, they're extremely hard, and biting down on one can crack or fracture a tooth, potentially requiring veterinary dental work including extraction under anesthesia. Second, they're small, hard, and round โ an ideal shape for choking. If your dog inhales food quickly without chewing (as many dogs do), an unpopped kernel could lodge in the throat. Always pick through popcorn carefully and remove all unpopped and half-popped kernels before sharing with your dog. This extra step is essential for safety.
- Movie theater popcorn is essentially a delivery vehicle for fat and salt. It's typically popped in coconut oil or canola oil, then coated in artificial butter flavoring (containing diacetyl, which has its own health concerns) and generous amounts of salt. A medium movie theater popcorn can contain 1,000+ calories and over 1,500 mg of sodium. For dogs, this combination risks pancreatitis from the fat, sodium ion issues from the salt, and GI upset from the artificial flavoring. Even a handful is a significant sodium and fat load for a small dog. Stick to plain air-popped at home.
- Microwave popcorn is not recommended for dogs. Even 'lightly salted' or 'natural' microwave popcorn varieties contain significantly more fat, salt, and additives than plain air-popped corn. The bags are lined with PFAS chemicals, and the flavoring packets often include artificial butter, diacetyl, and various seasonings. Some 'sweet' varieties contain artificial sweeteners that could potentially include xylitol. If you want to share popcorn with your dog, spend the two minutes to air-pop plain kernels โ it's cheaper, healthier for both of you, and eliminates all the unnecessary additives.
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