Acetaminophen (Tylenol, Panadol) is highly toxic to dogs. Unlike cats (who are even more sensitive), dogs have some ability to metabolise acetaminophen — but at doses commonly found in one or two human tablets, it causes serious liver damage and methemoglobinemia. Never give Tylenol to dogs.
🚨 Emergency
This substance is toxic to dogs. If your dog has already ingested it, call ASPCA Poison Control at (888) 426-4435 immediately.
Toxic Dose Information
This table shows toxic thresholds — not recommended doses. There is no safe dose.
| Dose / Amount | Effect | Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Any amount | Potentially toxic | Liver damage risk |
| 75–100mg/kg | Moderate-severe toxicity | GI, liver, methemoglobin |
| 200mg/kg+ | Severe / potentially fatal | Liver failure |
| Single 500mg tablet for 5 lb dog | Extremely dangerous | Emergency |
ℹ️ Note: There is no safe dose of acetaminophen for dogs. This table shows toxic thresholds, not recommended doses.
Never Use These Products
- Tylenol or generic acetaminophen of any formulation
- Cold & flu medications (almost always contain acetaminophen)
- PM-formulated sleep aids (contain acetaminophen)
- Combination pain relievers listing 'APAP'
- Any dose without explicit vet direction
Signs of Toxicity
- No legitimate use in dogs — veterinary alternatives are always safer
- In rare cases vets may use it at very specific doses for specific conditions — never self-administer
Signs of Toxicity
🚨 Emergency Steps
Any ingestion of can dogs have tylenol warrants an immediate call to Poison Control.
Frequently Asked Questions
Call Poison Control immediately at (888) 426-4435. Acetaminophen causes liver damage in dogs — treatment within 2 hours is most effective.
Potentially, especially for small dogs. A standard 500mg tablet can cause toxicity in a dog under 10 lbs.
No. While the dose is lower, it still contains acetaminophen. Children's formulas often also contain xylitol, making them even more dangerous.
Nothing OTC without vet guidance. Prescription veterinary NSAIDs (Carprofen, Meloxicam, Galliprant) are the safe option. Call your vet.
Call ASPCA Poison Control at (888) 426-4435 or go to an emergency vet immediately. Note the dose and your dog's weight.