Can dogs eat raisins?
No โ raisins are highly toxic to dogs and can cause sudden, fatal kidney failure. Because they're a concentrated form of grapes, even a few raisins are more dangerous than a few grapes.
Fruits ยท 299 kcal per 100 g
Benefits and risks
Benefits
- NONE โ raisins are toxic to dogs
Risks
- Acute kidney failure within 24-72 hours
- More dangerous than fresh grapes due to concentration
- Common in baked goods, cereal, trail mix, fruitcake
- Vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, decreased urination
- Death without prompt veterinary treatment
โ Toxic threshold
As few as 3-5 raisins have caused acute kidney failure in dogs weighing 22-44 lbs. Smaller dogs are at even higher risk. There is NO known safe dose. Treat ANY raisin ingestion as a veterinary emergency and contact your vet or ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435) IMMEDIATELY.
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) | NEVER |
| Medium dog | 20โ50 lbs (9โ23 kg) | NEVER |
| Large dog | Over 50 lbs (23 kg) | NEVER |
How to prepare and serve
Preparation
Never feed raisins in any form. Watch for hidden sources: raisin bread, oatmeal cookies, granola, fruitcake, hot cross buns, trail mix, raisin bran cereal, currants, sultanas, and many baked goods. Read every ingredient label carefully if you're sharing human food.
Frequency
NEVER.
Key nutrients
- Iron
- Potassium
- Fiber โ irrelevant due to toxicity
Frequently Asked Questions
- There is no safe amount. Documented cases show acute kidney failure in dogs after eating as few as 3-5 raisins (in dogs weighing 22-44 lbs). Smaller dogs are at even higher risk. Because raisins are dehydrated grapes, the toxic compounds are concentrated โ making them more dangerous than the same number of fresh grapes. If your dog ate even one raisin, contact your veterinarian or ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435) immediately. Don't wait for symptoms.
- Early symptoms appear within 6-24 hours and include vomiting, diarrhea, loss of appetite, lethargy, and abdominal pain. As kidney damage progresses (24-72 hours), you'll see decreased urination or no urination at all, increased thirst, foul breath, and weakness. By the time these later signs appear, kidney damage may be irreversible. The earlier treatment starts โ ideally within hours of ingestion โ the better the outcome. Even if your dog seems fine after eating raisins, get to the vet immediately.
- Treat any raisin-containing food as toxic. Raisin bread, oatmeal raisin cookies, fruitcake, granola bars, raisin bran, hot cross buns, scones, and trail mix all contain enough raisins to cause harm. The other ingredients (sugar, butter, sometimes chocolate or xylitol) make matters worse. If your dog steals a raisin-containing food, count it as a raisin ingestion and call your vet immediately. Read labels carefully when sharing any baked goods, and assume 'fruit-flavored' or 'mixed dried fruit' contains raisins or grapes unless proven otherwise.
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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