Education
Cannabis and Pets: Is It Safe? What Every Pet Owner Should Know
A plain-English guide to cannabis safe for pets: what adults 21+ should know, how to think about it, and where to go for the next level of detail.
·3 min read

## The Short Answer
Cannabis is toxic to dogs and cats at meaningful doses, and accidental ingestion by pets is one of the fastest-growing reasons for emergency-veterinary visits in cannabis-legal states. For adults 21 and older with pets, the primary concern is not whether to give cannabis to pets intentionally (don't) but preventing accidental ingestion.
## Why Cannabis Is Toxic to Pets
Dogs and cats have cannabinoid receptors just like humans, but their physiology is different:
- **Dogs have more CB1 receptors in the brainstem** than humans, making them more susceptible to neurological effects.
- **Cats are generally more drug-sensitive** across most substances.
- **Body weight is lower**, so human doses are proportionally much larger for pets.
## Signs of Cannabis Toxicity in Pets
Common signs (typically 30-90 minutes after ingestion):
- Lethargy, unsteady gait, difficulty standing.
- Dilated pupils.
- Low heart rate.
- Urinary incontinence.
- Vomiting.
- Drooling.
- In severe cases: seizures, coma.
**Call a veterinarian** if your pet shows these signs after suspected cannabis exposure. Most cases resolve with supportive care; severe cases require emergency intervention.
## The Most Common Exposure Routes
- **Edibles** (gummies, chocolates, cookies). Pets eat them like regular food; a package of dog-sized pet can contain a dangerous amount.
- **Flower or concentrate** left accessible.
- **Butts of joints or roaches** on the ground during walks.
- **Secondhand smoke** in small enclosed spaces.
Chocolate-based edibles are doubly dangerous because chocolate is separately toxic to pets.
## Prevention
- **Store all cannabis products in locked containers** out of pet reach.
- **Clean up after yourself.** Ashtrays, roaches, spills.
- **Don't consume around pets in small spaces** without ventilation.
- **On walks, stay vigilant.** Discarded joint butts in cities and parks are a hazard.
## If Your Pet Ingests Cannabis
1. **Call your veterinarian or emergency vet** immediately.
2. **Be honest about what was ingested.** Vets won't report you; they need the information to treat.
3. **Bring the product packaging** if you can identify it, knowing THC content informs treatment.
4. **Don't wait** to see if it passes. Early intervention produces better outcomes.
The ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (888-426-4435) is a 24/7 resource for suspected toxic ingestion.
## What About CBD for Pets?
CBD products marketed for pets are a distinct category. Some research suggests possible benefit for some conditions (anxiety, seizures, pain) in dogs, with limited research on cats. The safety profile is generally better than THC. Key considerations:
- **Use pet-specific formulations**, not human products (human products may contain THC, xylitol, or other dog-toxic ingredients).
- **Talk to a veterinarian first.**
- **Lower doses than human equivalents.**
- **Third-party testing matters** for quality.
## What You Should Not Do
- **Do not intentionally give THC-containing products to pets.** This is not a treatment; it is a poisoning.
- **Do not self-medicate pets with human cannabis products.**
- **Do not wait to see if a severely affected pet "sleeps it off."**
## Where to Go Next
Related reading: [responsible cannabis use tips](/blog/responsible-cannabis-use-tips-for-staying-safe-and-in-control), [how to store cannabis properly](/blog/how-to-store-cannabis-properly-keep-your-flower-fresh-longer), and [edibles 101](/blog/edibles-101-how-they-work-dosing-tips-and-what-to-expect).
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*This article is consumer education for adults 21+. Nothing here is medical, legal, or financial advice. Cannabis laws vary by state, always verify your state's current rules and, for health questions, consult a licensed clinician. For regulated New York retail, verify licensing via the OCM QR-code system at [cannabis.ny.gov](https://cannabis.ny.gov).*