Pet Toxin Reference

Raisins

Severe
Dogs (highest risk), Cats possible
Often within hours; kidney injury may follow over 1-3 days
Unknown grape toxin
Act now: Remove access immediately. Save the package, label, or plant photo. Call your veterinarian or a poison service right away; do not wait for symptoms. Go to an emergency clinic immediately if any signs are present or if a large/known exposure occurred.

Quick Facts

Common Sources
Raisin bread, cookies, cereal, granola, trail mix, baked goods
Highest Risk
Raisins and dried grapes (more concentrated than fresh grapes)
Category
Food
Early Signs
Vomiting, diarrhea, poor appetite, lethargy
Emergency Signs
Kidney failure, dehydration, reduced urination, collapse
Call Your Vet
Call as soon as exposure is suspected, even if your pet seems normal.

Triage & Next Steps

Why this is dangerous
Raisins are concentrated dried grapes, so even a small amount can be high-risk.
Go to ER immediately if
Go now for collapse, repeated vomiting, tremors, seizures, trouble breathing, marked weakness, severe drooling, pale gums, trouble urinating, or any rapidly worsening signs.
What not to do
Do not induce vomiting, give milk/oil/bread, or try home remedies unless a veterinarian specifically tells you to.
Prevention
Keep human foods out of reach, use closed trash bins, warn guests and children, and check ingredient labels before sharing any treat.