The kidney failure risk from grapes is well-established in dogs. Evidence in cats is less clear — cats are listed by the ASPCA as susceptible but far fewer cases are documented. The unknown toxin means there is no safe dose to calculate. The precautionary approach: treat any grape ingestion in cats as a potential emergency and contact your vet or Poison Control.
Grapes & Cats — What We Know and Don't Know
| Question | Dogs | Cats |
|---|---|---|
| Documented kidney failure cases | ⚠️ Many documented | Very few documented |
| Listed as toxic by ASPCA | ✅ Yes | ✅ Yes (both species) |
| Toxic compound identified | ❌ Still unknown | ❌ Still unknown |
| Safe dose established | ❌ No safe dose | ❌ No safe dose |
| Veterinary guidance | ⚠️ Treat as emergency | ⚠️ Treat as precautionary emergency |
The reason fewer cat cases are documented is likely behavioural — cats are obligate carnivores that rarely seek out fruit. This doesn't mean they're immune; it means they're less likely to eat enough to cause documented toxicity.
Signs of Possible Grape Toxicity in Cats
Frequently Asked Questions
Grape toxicity is far better documented in dogs. Cats appear less susceptible, but the unknown toxin means we cannot rule out risk. Always treat cat ingestion as potentially serious.
Yes — call Poison Control or your vet. One grape is unlikely to cause serious harm for a cat based on current evidence, but the precautionary principle applies given the unknown toxin.
Cats lack sweet taste receptors and are obligate carnivores — they have little natural interest in fruit. This is why documented cat toxicity cases are rare, not because cats are immune.
The same precautionary approach applies — raisins carry the same concentrated unknown toxin as grapes. Avoid entirely and call Poison Control if ingested.
Monitor for vomiting, lethargy, loss of appetite, and decreased urination over 24–48 hours. Call your vet or Poison Control regardless.