⚠️ Medication Safety · Dogs

Can Dogs Take Aspirin? Risks, Doses & Safer Alternatives

🩺 Vet-Reviewed📅 2025⏱ 5 min🐕 Dogs
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⚡ Quick Answer
⚠️ High Risk — Vets Rarely Recommend It

Aspirin can technically be given to dogs in very low doses, but modern vets rarely recommend it because safer alternatives exist. Aspirin causes significant GI bleeding risk in dogs and can interfere with other medications. Never give without explicit vet guidance.

⚠️ Vet Guidance Required Before Giving

⚠️ Important Warning

Always consult your veterinarian before giving any human medication to your dog. Dosing errors can be dangerous.

Dosing Reference

Dose Guide by Weight

These are general reference ranges. Always confirm the exact dose with your vet before giving.

Dog SizeDoseFrequency
Under 25 lbsNot recommended
25–50 lbs325mg (1 regular aspirin)Every 12 hours with food
50–100 lbs325–650mgEvery 12 hours with food
100+ lbs650mgEvery 12 hours with food

ℹ️ Note: Only buffered or enteric-coated aspirin reduces (but doesn't eliminate) GI risk. Never give ibuprofen or naproxen instead — they're far more toxic.

Critical Warnings

Never Use These Products

  • Ibuprofen (Advil, Motrin) — far more toxic to dogs
  • Naproxen (Aleve) — extremely toxic
  • Aspirin with acetaminophen
  • Aspirin for cats — toxic to cats
  • Long-term aspirin use without vet monitoring
When It May Be Used

Legitimate Uses

  • Pain management (only when vet-prescribed alternatives are unavailable)
  • Anti-inflammatory for osteoarthritis (under vet supervision)
  • Blood clot prevention in certain cardiac conditions (vet-directed only)
Possible Side Effects

Side Effects to Monitor

GI bleeding (most serious risk)
Vomiting and diarrhea
Ulcers with chronic use
Interference with blood clotting
Kidney damage with high doses or long-term use

🚨 Emergency Steps

If your dog has taken too much or shows adverse effects, contact your vet immediately.

1
Stop giving the medication — (888) 426-4435, 24/7.
2
Note the amount ingested and your pet's body weight.
3
Do not induce vomiting unless specifically told to by a vet.
4
Go to an emergency vet if your pet shows breathing difficulty, seizures, or collapse.
People Also Ask

Frequently Asked Questions

Baby aspirin (81mg) is sometimes used in dogs. However, this should only be given under vet guidance and not as a long-term solution.

Yes — aspirin is significantly safer than ibuprofen for dogs, but that doesn't make aspirin safe. Both carry GI and kidney risks.

Veterinary-prescription NSAIDs (Carprofen/Rimadyl, Meloxicam, Galliprant) are specifically designed for dogs and much safer. Ask your vet.

Yes — particularly through GI bleeding and ulceration. Signs include bloody vomit, black tarry stools, and lethargy.

No. A limp warrants a vet visit to determine the cause. Masking pain with aspirin can cause further injury and delay proper treatment.