⚠️ Important Veterinary Disclaimer
CanDogEat is an informational reference tool only. It does not provide veterinary medical advice, diagnoses, or treatment recommendations.
Every dog is different. Information in our database reflects general guidelines from established veterinary and toxicology sources and may not apply to your dog's specific health status, age, weight, breed, or medical history. A food listed as "Safe" in general may still pose risks for dogs with specific health conditions.
Always consult your veterinarian before making significant changes to your dog's diet, especially if your dog has known allergies, health conditions, or is on medication.
In an emergency: If your dog has eaten something potentially toxic, contact your veterinarian or ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center at (888) 426-4435 immediately. Do not wait for symptoms — early treatment is critical for many toxins.
🚨 Poison Emergency Hotlines: ASPCA Animal Poison Control: (888) 426-4435 | Pet Poison Helpline: (855) 764-7661 | Or go directly to your nearest emergency vet.
Our Mission
Every year, thousands of dogs are accidentally poisoned by common human foods — grapes that cause kidney failure, xylitol in peanut butter that can be lethal, onions that cause anemia with repeated exposure. In many cases, the owner had no idea the food was dangerous.
CanDogEat exists to close that knowledge gap. We provide a fast, free, searchable reference built on established veterinary toxicology data — so you can check before you share. No signup, no paywalls, no data stored about your pet.
What We Cover
Our Editorial Process
How We Verify Every Food
Every food entry in our database is cross-referenced against at least one established veterinary or toxicology source before publication. Our verification process for each entry includes:
- Review of ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center toxin data and species-specific findings
- Cross-reference with American Kennel Club (AKC) nutritional and safety guidance
- Review of Pet Poison Helpline published toxin database
- Cross-reference with peer-reviewed veterinary toxicology literature where applicable
- Review of American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) guidance on pet nutrition and food safety
We do not publish safety ratings based on pet blogs, social media, or anecdotal reports. If a food's safety status cannot be confirmed through established veterinary sources, it is classified as "Consult your vet" rather than guessed.
How We Assign Safety Ratings
Every food receives one of three ratings:
- 🟢 Safe — Generally safe for healthy adult dogs in appropriate amounts. We include preparation notes (remove pits, seeds, rinds) and portion guidance where relevant.
- 🟡 Caution — Safe only in small amounts, under specific conditions, or with specific preparation. The risk and threshold are explained.
- 🔴 Dangerous — Toxic to dogs. These foods should never be given, even in trace amounts. Emergency guidance and poison control contact information are provided.
Review and Update Standards
We update our database when new toxicology research is published, when official guidance from ASPCA or AVMA changes, when a reader or veterinary professional identifies an error, or during our annual review cycle. Each page displays a "Last Reviewed" date. If you believe any information is incorrect, please contact us — we investigate and correct promptly.
Note on xylitol: Xylitol is found in hundreds of products beyond gum — including some peanut butter brands, baked goods, candy, vitamins, and medications. Always check ingredient labels before giving your dog any packaged human food. Even small amounts can cause rapid hypoglycemia and liver failure in dogs.
Our Sources
What We Are Not
- We are not a veterinarian or veterinary practice. No veterinarian-client-patient relationship is formed by using this site. Nothing here constitutes veterinary medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
- We are not a substitute for your dog's veterinarian. Our database provides general reference information based on an average healthy adult dog. Your vet knows your dog's individual health history.
- We are not an emergency service. If your dog is in distress or has consumed a known toxin, call a poison control hotline or go to an emergency vet immediately. Do not rely on this site in a medical emergency.
- We are not affiliated with any pet food company, pet retailer, or veterinary brand. We have no financial relationship with any animal product manufacturer.
- We do not store personal data about your pet. All lookups happen in your browser. Nothing you enter is transmitted to or stored on our servers.
- We cannot guarantee completeness. Toxicology research continues to evolve. New findings may change safety classifications over time.
Privacy and Data
Our Privacy Policy explains in full how we handle visitor data. We use Google Analytics (anonymized) to understand how people use the site. We collect no personal information about you or your dog and use no advertising trackers.
Contact and Corrections
Found an error in our database? Have a food to suggest or a toxicology update to report? Visit our Contact page. We cannot provide individualized veterinary advice. For medical guidance about your dog, consult a licensed veterinarian. For poison emergencies, call ASPCA Animal Poison Control at (888) 426-4435.