Caffeine is a methylxanthine — the same class of toxin as theobromine in chocolate. Dogs are much more sensitive to caffeine than humans. Coffee grounds, tea bags, energy drinks, diet pills, and pre-workout supplements are all dangerous.
Why Is This Toxic to Dogs?
Caffeine stimulates the central nervous system and cardiovascular system far more dramatically in dogs than in humans. Dogs have a lower toxic threshold and cannot metabolize caffeine as efficiently.
Coffee grounds and tea bags are especially dangerous because they contain concentrated caffeine. A dog that raids the kitchen trash or compost can easily ingest a toxic dose.
| Source | Caffeine Level | Risk Threshold | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Coffee grounds | Most concentrated | Small amount for any dog | EXTREME |
| Espresso / strong coffee | High caffeine | Small amounts for small dogs | HIGH |
| Regular brewed coffee | Medium caffeine | Several cups for large dogs | MEDIUM–HIGH |
| Energy drinks | High caffeine + taurine | Any amount | HIGH |
Symptoms to Watch For
Watch for these signs and call your vet immediately if any appear:
Rapid Onset
Caffeine is absorbed quickly. Restlessness, vomiting may begin within 30 minutes.
Peak Toxicity
Heart rate spikes, tremors, seizure risk. Most critical window for treatment.
Sustained Effects
Symptoms may persist for several hours even with treatment.
Recovery
With treatment, most dogs recover. Fatal without care at high doses.
🚨 What To Do If Your Dog Was Exposed
Frequently Asked Questions
Toxic dose is approximately 140mg/kg body weight. A 10 lb dog would need about 63mg — roughly one shot of espresso.
A small lick is unlikely to cause serious harm for a large dog, but call your vet to be safe. Small dogs may show effects from even small amounts.
Yes. All caffeinated products are toxic including tea, energy drinks, pre-workout supplements, and caffeine pills.
Restlessness, panting, and vomiting are typically the first signs, appearing within 30–60 minutes of ingestion.
Most dogs recover fully with prompt treatment. IV fluids and medications to control heart rate and seizures are typically used.