Call ASPCA Poison Control: (888) 426-4435 or go to your nearest emergency vet. Do not wait for symptoms to appear.
Grapes, raisins, currants, and sultanas are all toxic to dogs. The exact toxic compound is still unknown, making every ingestion unpredictable — some dogs develop life-threatening kidney failure from a few grapes while others show no symptoms. Because there is no established safe dose, all ingestion must be treated as an emergency.
Beagles were bred to follow their nose, and that instinct extends to food — they are tireless scavengers capable of locating and consuming toxic substances that other dogs would ignore. Their size puts them at moderate risk: not so small that tiny amounts are instantly dangerous, but not large enough to buffer a significant ingestion. Beagles are also known to eat quickly without chewing.
Why Does Breed Matter for Grapes Toxicity?
Toxic doses for grapes are calculated per kilogram of body weight. A Beagle typically weighs 9–14 kg, which directly determines how much an unknown nephrotoxic compound their body is exposed to relative to their size. Beyond weight, Beagles have specific traits — outlined in the breed profile above — that can affect how quickly symptoms develop, how severe they become, and what complications to watch for.
When you call Poison Control, always give your dog's exact current weight, not a breed average. Even within the Beagle breed, a significant weight difference changes the risk calculation meaningfully.
How Much Grapes Is Toxic to a Beagle?
These thresholds are based on the typical Beagle weight range of 9–14 kg. Always use your dog's actual weight for the most accurate estimate. Use our Grape Toxicity calculator to enter your dog's exact weight.
| Dog weight | Mild signs | Serious signs | Potentially fatal |
|---|---|---|---|
| 9 kg (small Beagle) | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount |
| 11 kg (average Beagle) | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount |
| 14 kg (large Beagle) | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount | No safe dose — any amount |
ℹ️ No established safe dose. Even a single grape has caused acute kidney failure in some dogs. Risk is unpredictable — treat all ingestion as an emergency. Source: ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center dose thresholds. Always confirm with your vet.
Symptoms of Grapes Poisoning in Beagles
Symptoms typically appear within 6–12 hours of ingestion. Watch for:
Due to Beagle-specific traits noted above, pay particular attention to vomiting that contains undigested food, which may give clues about what else was consumed alongside the toxin.
What to Do If Your Beagle Ate Grapes
- Stay calm and note how much they ate — estimate the amount and type of grapes and your dog's weight. This information is critical for the vet.
- Call ASPCA Poison Control immediately — (888) 426-4435. Available 24/7. A $95 consultation fee may apply, but they will advise whether you need emergency care.
- Do not induce vomiting unless specifically instructed by a vet or Poison Control. Inducing vomiting incorrectly can cause additional harm.
- Go to an emergency vet if symptoms are already present, if a large amount was consumed, or if Poison Control advises it. Find a 24-hour emergency vet near you.
- Bring the packaging of the food or substance if possible — ingredient lists help the vet calculate exact toxin exposure.
Special Considerations for Beagles
Beagles are used extensively in toxicology research partly because their GI absorption is well-characterised. Vets are generally familiar with Beagle-specific pharmacokinetics. Because Beagles eat rapidly, the amount consumed may be higher than initially estimated — always err on the side of the higher end of any estimate when speaking to Poison Control.
Frequently Asked Questions
There is no safe number. Some dogs have developed acute kidney failure after just one or two grapes, while others appeared unaffected by more. The toxic mechanism is unknown and unpredictable — always call Poison Control.
Yes — raisins are dried grapes and contain a much higher concentration of the toxic compound per gram. Even a small number of raisins can cause kidney failure in a small dog.
The unknown compound in grapes causes acute tubular necrosis — damage to the kidney's filtering cells. This can result in complete kidney failure within 24–72 hours if untreated.
Some dogs appear unaffected while others develop severe kidney failure. Current research cannot predict which outcome will occur — this unpredictability is exactly why all ingestion must be treated as an emergency.