Recently added safety guides

New and updated dog food safety answers from the database.

Common foods dogs should avoid

Start with risky foods, sweeteners, drinks, and ingredients that often worry dog owners.

Safe foods in small amounts

Plain, simple options that may be okay for many dogs when served sensibly.

Foods that need caution

These may depend on the amount, preparation, added ingredients, or your dog’s reaction.

Did your dog eat something risky?

If your dog ate grapes, chocolate, xylitol, onion, medication, alcohol, coffee, or another risky item, contact a veterinarian or pet poison control immediately. Do not wait for symptoms if the item may be toxic.

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Explore published guides by food type and risk level.

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How to read our safety levels

DogFoodSafe is a general safety guide, not a replacement for veterinary care.

✅ Safe

Generally okay for many dogs when served plain and in sensible amounts.

⚠️ Caution

May depend on portion size, preparation, added ingredients, or your dog’s sensitivity.

❌ Toxic

Should be avoided. Contact a veterinarian or pet poison control if your dog ate it.

Important: Dogs can react individually. Size, age, health, medication, amount eaten, and added ingredients can change the risk. DogFoodSafe may contain errors or outdated information despite careful review. If you are unsure, your dog has symptoms, or your dog may have eaten something toxic, always contact your veterinarian or a pet poison control service.