⚠️ TOXIC

Onion Toxicity in Border Collies

Breed-specific guide — toxic doses, symptoms & emergency steps for 2026

🐾 Border Collie · 12–20 kg (27–45 lbs) 📅 Updated March 2026 ⏱ 5 min read
⚠️ If your Border Collie just ate onions, act now:
Call ASPCA Poison Control: (888) 426-4435 or go to your nearest emergency vet. Do not wait for symptoms to appear.
🐾
Quick Answer
Yes — Onions Are Toxic to Dogs

Onions, garlic, leeks, and chives contain thiosulfate compounds that damage red blood cells, causing haemolytic anaemia. All forms are toxic — raw, cooked, dried, and powdered. Onion powder is especially dangerous because it is highly concentrated. Toxicity is cumulative, meaning repeated small exposures (e.g., leftover food with onion) can build up to a dangerous level over days.

⚠️ HIGH RISK — Cumulative Toxicity, Symptoms Appear Late
🐶 Border Collie — Breed Profile
Typical weight
12–20 kg
In pounds
27–45 lbs
Size class
Medium

Border Collies carry the MDR1 (ABCB1) gene mutation at higher rates than most breeds, which impairs the blood-brain barrier's ability to exclude certain drugs and toxins. This means some substances — including common antiparasitic medications and certain sedatives used in treatment — can cause severe neurological toxicity in Border Collies even at doses safe for other breeds. This gene mutation is critical to disclose to your vet.

Breed-Specific Risk

Why Does Breed Matter for Onions Toxicity?

Toxic doses for onions are calculated per kilogram of body weight. A Border Collie typically weighs 12–20 kg, which directly determines how much N-propyl disulfide (thiosulfate compounds) their body is exposed to relative to their size. Beyond weight, Border Collies 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 Border Collie breed, a significant weight difference changes the risk calculation meaningfully.

Toxic Dose Thresholds

How Much Onions Is Toxic to a Border Collie?

These thresholds are based on the typical Border Collie weight range of 12–20 kg. Always use your dog's actual weight for the most accurate estimate. Use our Onion Toxicity calculator to enter your dog's exact weight.

Dog weight Mild signs Serious signs Potentially fatal
12 kg (small Border Collie) 60 g of raw onion 120 g of raw onion 360 g of raw onion
16 kg (average Border Collie) 80 g of raw onion 160 g of raw onion 480 g of raw onion
20 kg (large Border Collie) 100 g of raw onion 200 g of raw onion 600 g of raw onion

ℹ️ Toxic dose is approximately 5g/kg of raw onion. Onion powder is ~5× more potent by weight. Cumulative exposure over multiple meals can cause anaemia without any single large ingestion. Source: ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center dose thresholds. Always confirm with your vet.

What to Watch For

Symptoms of Onions Poisoning in Border Collies

Symptoms typically appear within Several days (haemolytic anaemia builds over time) of ingestion. Watch for:

😮 Lethargy and weakness
💧 Pale or yellowish gums
❤️ Rapid heart rate
😮‍💨 Rapid or laboured breathing
🤢 Vomiting and diarrhea
😵 Exercise intolerance
🩸 Reddish or brown urine
🫀 Fainting or collapse (severe anaemia)

Due to Border Collie-specific traits noted above, pay particular attention to neurological signs — seizures, disorientation, or dilated pupils — which the MDR1 mutation can make more severe in Border Collies.

Emergency Steps

What to Do If Your Border Collie Ate Onions

  1. Stay calm and note how much they ate — estimate the amount and type of onions and your dog's weight. This information is critical for the vet.
  2. 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.
  3. Do not induce vomiting unless specifically instructed by a vet or Poison Control. Inducing vomiting incorrectly can cause additional harm.
  4. 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.
  5. Bring the packaging of the food or substance if possible — ingredient lists help the vet calculate exact toxin exposure.
Special Considerations

Special Considerations for Border Collies

Border Collies with the MDR1 gene mutation require a vet who knows about this — it affects which antidotes and support medications are safe to use. If you don't know your Border Collie's MDR1 status, inform the vet anyway and request that MDR1-sensitive drugs be avoided until testing can be done. This is not a minor detail in a poisoning scenario.

People Also Ask

Frequently Asked Questions

No — cooking does not destroy the toxic thiosulfate compounds. Cooked, raw, dehydrated, and powdered onions are all toxic to dogs.

Approximately 5g of raw onion per kilogram of body weight is considered a toxic dose, but cumulative exposure from regular small amounts is also dangerous.

Yes — all Allium species (onions, garlic, leeks, chives, shallots) contain the same toxic compounds. Garlic is approximately 5× more potent than onion per gram.

Treatment involves decontamination if exposure was recent, followed by supportive care. Severe anaemia may require blood transfusion. N-acetylcysteine is sometimes used as a protective agent for red blood cells.

⚠️ Medical disclaimer: PawsandPrevent is for informational purposes only and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice. In any suspected poisoning, contact ASPCA Poison Control at (888) 426-4435 or go to an emergency vet immediately. Toxic dose thresholds are general guidelines — individual dogs may react differently.