Garlic belongs to the Allium family and is 5 times more concentrated in thiosulfates than onions. It causes hemolytic anemia by destroying red blood cells. All forms are dangerous — raw, cooked, powdered, and as supplements like garlic pills.
Why Is This Toxic to Dogs?
Garlic's toxic compounds (organosulfides, thiosulfates) oxidize hemoglobin in red blood cells, forming Heinz bodies that cause the cells to be destroyed faster than the bone marrow can replace them. This results in hemolytic anemia.
Many pet owners mistakenly believe garlic has health benefits for dogs — this is a dangerous myth. Any amount of garlic supplementation can accumulate to toxic levels over time, especially in small dogs or dogs with pre-existing anemia.
| Form | Concentration | Toxic Amount | Risk Level |
|---|---|---|---|
| Garlic Powder | Most concentrated | 0.5g/kg body weight | EXTREME |
| Raw Garlic | High | 1–2 cloves for medium dogs | HIGH |
| Cooked Garlic | High (not reduced) | Same as raw | HIGH |
| Garlic Supplements | Concentrated | Cumulative risk | HIGH |
Symptoms to Watch For
Watch for these signs and call your vet immediately if any appear:
GI Symptoms
Vomiting, diarrhea, drooling. Blood damage has started but anemia not yet apparent.
Anemia Developing
Lethargy, pale gums, rapid breathing as red blood cell count drops.
Severe Anemia
Dog may need blood transfusion. Weakness, collapse risk.
Recovery
With treatment, slow recovery over 1–2 weeks. Without care, potentially fatal.
🚨 What To Do If Your Dog Was Exposed
Frequently Asked Questions
As little as 15–30g of garlic per kg of body weight can cause toxic changes. That's roughly 1–2 cloves for a 10 lb dog.
No. There is no safe amount. The idea that small amounts are beneficial is a myth not supported by veterinary science.
Yes. Garlic powder is approximately 3–4 times more concentrated than fresh garlic by weight, making it easier to accidentally give a toxic dose.
No. This is a dangerous folk remedy. Garlic does not reliably repel fleas and carries a real risk of toxic anemia.
GI upset appears first, but the characteristic anemia signs (pale gums, weakness, rapid breathing) develop 1–4 days later.