By Priya Nair (RVN) · Last updated 17 May 2026
Table of Contents
ToggleMost “my dog ate X, is that OK?” emergencies fall into the same dozen categories. This page is the version of that list I wish was stuck on every fridge. If you’re staring at it right now because your dog has just eaten something — scroll to the food, check the action column, and ring an after-hours vet if it says “vet now”.
Vet-now toxic list (call immediately)
- Chocolate — especially dark/baking chocolate. Toxicity scales with cocoa content + dog weight. Even small amounts in a small dog need a vet call.
- Xylitol (sweetener in sugar-free gum, peanut butter, some baked goods, some medicines) — causes catastrophic hypoglycemia. As little as 50mg per kg of body weight is dangerous. This is the most dangerous common household item for dogs.
- Grapes and raisins — kidney failure. Susceptibility varies wildly; some dogs eat a grape with no effect, others die from one. Always treat as a poison.
- Macadamia nuts — weakness, vomiting, tremors
- Onion, garlic, leek, chives — damages red blood cells. Cooked is as dangerous as raw. Single big dose or small chronic exposure both matter.
- Alcohol — even small amounts
- Caffeine — coffee grounds especially
- Sugar-free gum / mints — xylitol
- Avocado (large amounts of flesh, all of stone/skin) — persin + choking risk on stone
- Raw bread dough — rises in the gut, expands, releases alcohol
- Cooked bones — splinter, perforate
- Marijuana, hashish, edibles — increasingly common emergency in legal-cannabis areas
- Most human medications — ibuprofen, paracetamol/acetaminophen, antidepressants, etc.
Master safe-and-treat list
| Food | Safe? | How much | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|
| Apple (flesh) | ✅ | Slices, occasional | No seeds, no core |
| Banana | ⚠️ | Small piece, occasional | High sugar |
| Beef (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Daily portion | Lean cuts |
| Bell pepper | ✅ | Small piece | Most dogs like crunch |
| Blueberries | ✅ | Small handful | Antioxidants |
| Bread (plain, no raisins) | ⚠️ | Small piece | Filler — no real value |
| Broccoli | ⚠️ | Small floret | Gas in big amounts |
| Carrot | ✅ | Whole or chunks | Frozen carrots = great teething toy |
| Cheese (low-fat, plain) | ⚠️ | Small piece | Watch lactose intolerance, fat content |
| Chicken (cooked, plain, no bones) | ✅ | Daily | No skin, no seasoning |
| Coconut (fresh, unsweetened) | ✅ | Small amount | |
| Cooked bones | ❌ | Never | Splinter risk |
| Corn (off the cob, cooked) | ✅ | Small amount | NEVER cob — choking + obstruction |
| Cucumber | ✅ | Slices | Hydrating, low-cal |
| Egg (cooked) | ✅ | Couple per week | Excellent protein |
| Fish (cooked, deboned) | ✅ | Weekly | Salmon, sardines, white fish |
| Green beans | ✅ | Plain, cooked | Great low-cal treat |
| Honey | ⚠️ | Tiny amount | Allergy support, high sugar |
| Lamb (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Daily portion | |
| Mango (no skin or pit) | ✅ | Small piece | Sugar — treat only |
| Oatmeal (plain, cooked) | ✅ | Small amount | Great for sensitive stomachs |
| Peanut butter (xylitol-FREE) | ✅ | Small amount | CHECK THE LABEL — xylitol is often added now |
| Pear (no seeds) | ✅ | Small slices | Seeds contain cyanide compounds |
| Peas | ✅ | Small amount | |
| Pineapple (no skin or core) | ✅ | Small piece | Treat only |
| Plain yogurt | ✅ | Spoonful | No sweetener, no flavour |
| Pork (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Lean cuts | No sausage, ham, or bacon |
| Potato (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Small amount | NEVER raw — solanine |
| Pumpkin (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Spoonful | Helps digestion |
| Rice (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Daily portion | Bland-diet staple |
| Salmon (cooked) | ✅ | Weekly | Omega-3 source |
| Strawberries | ✅ | Few per day | |
| Sweet potato (cooked) | ✅ | Small amount | Bland-diet alt |
| Turkey (cooked, plain) | ✅ | Daily portion | No skin |
| Watermelon (no seeds, no rind) | ✅ | Small piece | Hydrating |
| Zucchini | ✅ | Slices |
What a healthy dog diet actually looks like
Most dogs do well on a quality complete dog food (kibble, wet, or fresh) with occasional fresh-food toppers. The fundamentals:
- Complete food — meets AAFCO / FEDIAF standards. Match life stage: puppy, adult, senior.
- Two meals a day for adults, three for puppies under 6 months
- Portion to weight, not the bag’s chart — manufacturer portions are usually 10-15% too high
- Fresh water always
- 10% rule for treats — no more than 10% of daily calories from treats / extras combined
- Routine — same times, same place, no scraps from the table (it teaches begging)
Bland diet recipe (for upset stomachs)
Standard temporary feeding when your dog has had a couple of vomits or loose stools but isn’t otherwise distressed:
- 1 part boiled, skinless, plain chicken breast (or boiled lean ground beef)
- 2-3 parts cooked plain white rice
- Feed small portions every 4 hours for 24-48 hours
- Transition back to normal food over the following 2-3 days
If symptoms last more than 24 hours, get worse, or include lethargy, blood, or repeated vomiting — vet now.
Common myth corrections
- “Dogs are carnivores” — they’re omnivores. They digest plant material fine when it’s prepared well.
- “Grain-free is healthier” — for most dogs, no. Grain-free diets have been linked to DCM (heart disease) in some breeds. Unless your dog has a specific grain allergy, grain isn’t the enemy.
- “Raw is best” — controversial. Done well, fine. Done badly, salmonella, parasites, nutritional imbalance. Don’t DIY raw without veterinary nutritionist guidance.
- “Garlic in small amounts is healthy” — no. Onion family is toxic. There’s no “healthy dose”.
- “Dogs can eat anything humans eat” — chocolate, grapes, xylitol, onion, and macadamia all from the human pantry. They cannot.
Emergency contact info
- Australia: Animal Poisons Helpline 1300 869 738 (24/7, fee for service)
- UK: Animal PoisonLine 01202 509000 (24/7)
- USA: ASPCA Animal Poison Control 1-888-426-4435 (24/7, fee)
Sources
- ASPCA — Pet poison control resources
- RSPCA Australia — Dog feeding guidance
- VCA Hospitals — clinical client info on dog nutrition
- Our Pitbull breeds guide
We get asked — dog FAQ
What human foods are toxic to dogs?
The non-negotiable list: chocolate, xylitol (a sweetener in sugar-free gum and some peanut butters), grapes and raisins, macadamia nuts, onion and garlic family, alcohol, caffeine, and raw bread dough. Xylitol is the single most dangerous common household item — it causes catastrophic hypoglycaemia in tiny doses. Full safe-and-toxic list in our food master list.
When should I take my dog to a vet for “something they ate”?
Any of the toxic list above, in any amount. Or any food in larger-than-treat amounts paired with vomiting, lethargy, weakness, tremors, or seizures. The Animal Poisons Helpline (1300 869 738 in Australia, 01202 509000 in the UK, 1-888-426-4435 in the US) can triage. Have the packet of whatever they ate handy.
Related reading
Page last updated 17 May 2026. We re-check our pet-care content regularly and update when something changes.

