Cat Food Poisoning Symptoms! Short answer: Symptoms of food poisoning in cats include vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, loss of appetite, drooling, tremors, seizures, pale gums, red/brown urine, difficulty breathing, and collapse. If you see any of these, call your vet immediately.
Cats are curious creatures. They eat things they shouldn’t. Sometimes it’s a toxic food (onion, garlic, chocolate, grapes). Sometimes it’s a spoiled food (bacteria). Sometimes it’s a non-toxic food eaten in excess (fat → pancreatitis). Sometimes it’s a hidden danger (xylitol in sugar-free products, cherry pits).
Knowing the symptoms of food poisoning can save your cat’s life. This guide covers symptoms by toxin type, when to go to the emergency vet, what to do while waiting, and how to prevent poisoning.
For a complete list of safe and toxic foods, see our Cat Food Safety Guide — your pillar resource for everything your cat can and cannot eat.
Quick Answer: Cat Food Poisoning Symptoms — When to Worry
| Symptom | Action |
|---|---|
| Vomiting (once or twice) | Monitor. Call vet if continues. |
| Vomiting (repeated, forceful) | Call vet immediately |
| Diarrhea (mild) | Monitor hydration. |
| Diarrhea (watery, bloody) | Call vet immediately |
| Lethargy / weakness | Call vet immediately |
| Loss of appetite >12 hours | Call vet |
| Drooling / hypersalivation | Call vet |
| Pale or blue gums | Emergency vet |
| Red/brown urine | Emergency vet |
| Yellow gums/eyes (jaundice) | Emergency vet |
| Tremors / seizures | Emergency vet |
| Difficulty breathing | Emergency vet |
| Collapse / unresponsive | Emergency vet |
| Excessive thirst/urination | Call vet (possible kidney issues) |
| No urination (12+ hours) | Emergency vet |
General Symptoms of Food Poisoning in Cats
These symptoms can appear with many types of food poisoning. Timeframe varies by toxin (30 minutes to 4 days).
| Symptom | What it looks like | Possible cause |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | Repeated, forceful, possibly with food or bile | Many toxins, bacterial infection, pancreatitis |
| Diarrhea | Watery, frequent, possibly bloody | Many toxins, bacterial infection |
| Lethargy | Tired, hiding, not playing, unresponsive | Many toxins, organ failure |
| Loss of appetite | Refusing food | Many toxins, organ failure |
| Drooling | Excessive salivation | Mouth irritation, nausea, certain toxins |
| Abdominal pain | Hunched posture, crying when touched | Pancreatitis, blockage, toxin |
| Dehydration | Sunken eyes, dry gums, skin tenting | Vomiting/diarrhea fluid loss |
Symptoms by Type of Poisoning
Onion / Garlic Toxicity (Hemolytic Anemia)
Onion and garlic (and other Allium species) cause destruction of red blood cells (hemolytic anemia). Symptoms are delayed — typically 2-4 days after ingestion.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Pale or white gums | 2-4 days | Emergency |
| Red/brown urine (hemoglobinuria) | 2-4 days | Emergency |
| Weakness, lethargy | 2-4 days | Emergency |
| Rapid breathing | 2-4 days | Emergency |
| Jaundice (yellow gums/eyes) | 2-5 days | Emergency |
Chocolate / Caffeine Toxicity (Theobromine, Caffeine)
Chocolate contains theobromine and caffeine, which are toxic to cats. Dark chocolate and baking chocolate are most dangerous. Symptoms typically appear within 1-6 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Diarrhea | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Restlessness, hyperactivity | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Increased thirst | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Rapid breathing | 2-8 hours | Severe |
| Tremors | 2-8 hours | Emergency |
| Seizures | 2-12 hours | Emergency |
| Heart arrhythmias | 2-12 hours | Emergency |
Grape / Raisin Toxicity (Acute Kidney Failure)
Grapes and raisins can cause acute kidney failure in cats. The toxic dose is unpredictable — even one grape can be fatal. Symptoms typically appear within 6-24 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | 1-12 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Diarrhea | 1-12 hours | Moderate |
| Loss of appetite | 6-24 hours | Moderate |
| Increased thirst | 12-24 hours | Severe |
| Increased urination | 12-24 hours | Severe |
| Decreased/no urination | 24-72 hours | Emergency |
| Lethargy, weakness | 12-48 hours | Severe |
| Bad breath (ammonia smell) | 24-72 hours | Emergency |
Xylitol Toxicity (Sugar-Free Products)
Xylitol is a sugar substitute found in many sugar-free products (peanut butter, gum, candy, baked goods, toothpaste). It causes rapid insulin release → hypoglycemia (low blood sugar) and liver failure. Symptoms appear within 30-60 minutes.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | 30-60 min | Moderate-Severe |
| Weakness, lethargy | 30-60 min | Severe |
| Collapse | 30-90 min | Emergency |
| Seizures | 30-90 min | Emergency |
| Liver failure (jaundice) | 12-24 hours | Emergency |
See Can Cats Eat Peanut Butter for xylitol warnings
Pancreatitis (High-Fat Foods)
High-fat foods (bacon, ham, turkey skin, fried foods, fatty meat trimmings) are the #1 trigger for pancreatitis (inflammation of the pancreas). Symptoms typically appear within 2-12 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | 2-12 hours | Severe |
| Lethargy | 2-12 hours | Severe |
| Abdominal pain (hunched posture) | 2-12 hours | Emergency |
| Loss of appetite | 6-24 hours | Moderate |
| Dehydration | 6-24 hours | Severe |
| Fever | 12-24 hours | Severe |
Salt Poisoning (Salted Foods)
Salt poisoning occurs when cats eat salted foods (bacon, ham, deli meat, salted nuts, pickles, table salt). Symptoms typically appear within 1-6 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Excessive thirst | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Excessive urination | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Vomiting | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Diarrhea | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Lethargy | 2-12 hours | Severe |
| Tremors | 2-12 hours | Emergency |
| Seizures | 2-12 hours | Emergency |
Bacterial Food Poisoning (Salmonella, E. coli, Campylobacter)
Raw or undercooked meat, poultry, eggs, and raw fish can carry harmful bacteria. Symptoms typically appear within 12-72 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Vomiting | 12-72 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Diarrhea (often bloody) | 12-72 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Fever | 12-72 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Lethargy | 12-72 hours | Severe |
| Dehydration | 24-72 hours | Severe |
| Sepsis | 24-72 hours | Emergency |
See Can Cats Eat Raw Meat, Can Cats Eat Raw Chicken, Can Cats Eat Raw Fish
Cyanide Poisoning (Cherry Pits, Apple Seeds — Large Amounts)
Cherry pits, stems, and leaves contain cyanogenic glycosides (amygdalin), which release cyanide when chewed or crushed. Symptoms appear rapidly — 15-60 minutes.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Rapid breathing | 15-30 min | Severe |
| Bright red gums | 15-30 min | Severe |
| Blue/purple gums (late) | 30-60 min | Emergency |
| Weakness, collapse | 30-60 min | Emergency |
| Dilated pupils | 30-60 min | Emergency |
| Seizures | 30-90 min | Emergency |
| Death | 1-3 hours | Fatal without treatment |
Vitamin A Toxicity (Liver Overfeeding — Chronic)
Chronic overfeeding of liver (chicken liver, beef liver) causes vitamin A toxicity (hypervitaminosis A). This is a slow, cumulative process — not an acute poisoning. Symptoms develop over weeks to months.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Stiffness, lameness | Weeks to months | Severe |
| Reluctance to move | Weeks to months | Severe |
| Bone deformities (neck) | Months | Crippling |
| Loss of appetite | Weeks to months | Moderate |
| Weight loss | Weeks to months | Moderate |
Macadamia Nut Toxicity
Macadamia nuts are toxic to cats (and dogs). Symptoms typically appear within 12 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Weakness (especially hind legs) | 1-12 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Tremors | 1-12 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Vomiting | 1-12 hours | Moderate |
| Lethargy | 1-12 hours | Moderate |
| Hyperthermia (fever) | 1-12 hours | Moderate |
Citrus Toxicity (Essential Oils — Limonene, Linalool)
Oranges, lemons, limes, grapefruit, and other citrus fruits contain essential oils (limonene, linalool) that are toxic to cats. Symptoms typically appear within 30 minutes to 6 hours.
| Symptom | Timeframe | Severity |
|---|---|---|
| Drooling | 30 min – 2 hours | Moderate |
| Vomiting | 30 min – 4 hours | Moderate-Severe |
| Diarrhea | 1-6 hours | Moderate |
| Lethargy | 1-6 hours | Severe |
| Tremors | 2-8 hours | Emergency |
| Liver failure | 12-48 hours | Emergency |
Emergency Protocol — What to Do If You Think Your Cat Has Food Poisoning
Step 1: Assess the situation
| Question | Why it matters |
|---|---|
| What did your cat eat? | Identify the toxin |
| How much did they eat? | Estimate toxic dose |
| How long ago? | Determines if induced vomiting is possible |
| Do you have the package? | Bring to vet |
Step 2: Call for help
| Helpline | Phone Number | When to call |
|---|---|---|
| Pet Poison Helpline | 855-764-7661 | Any suspected poisoning |
| ASPCA Animal Poison Control | 888-426-4435 | Backup if first line is busy |
| Your local emergency vet | (keep on fridge) | For treatment |
Step 3: Do NOT induce vomiting unless told to
| Do NOT induce vomiting if: | Why |
|---|---|
| Cat is unconscious | Aspiration pneumonia risk |
| Cat is having seizures | Aspiration pneumonia risk |
| Cat has trouble breathing | Aspiration pneumonia risk |
| Toxin is caustic (acid/alkali) | More damage coming up |
| More than 2 hours have passed | Toxin already absorbed |
| You haven’t spoken to a vet | Incorrect induction is dangerous |
Step 4: Go to the emergency vet if any of these apply
- Cat ate a known toxin (onion, garlic, chocolate, grapes, xylitol, cherry pits, macadamia nuts, citrus)
- Cat is showing any symptoms (vomiting, lethargy, seizures, etc.)
- Cat has a pre-existing condition (kidney disease, liver disease, diabetes)
- Kitten or senior cat ate something suspicious
- You’re unsure — better safe than sorry
When to Go to the Emergency Vet (Red Flags)
Go IMMEDIATELY if you see any of these:
| Red flag | Possible cause |
|---|---|
| Seizures | Chocolate, xylitol, cyanide, salt poisoning |
| Collapse / unresponsive | Any severe poisoning |
| Difficulty breathing | Cyanide, chocolate, severe anemia |
| Blue or purple gums | Cyanide, severe anemia |
| Pale or white gums | Onion/garlic toxicity (anemia) |
| No urination for 12+ hours | Grape toxicity (kidney failure) |
| Red/brown urine | Onion/garlic toxicity (hemolysis) |
| Yellow gums/eyes | Liver failure (xylitol, sepsis) |
| Uncontrollable vomiting | Many toxins |
| Blood in vomit or stool | Many toxins, bacterial infection |
What to Bring to the Vet
| Item | Why |
|---|---|
| The package or label | Identifies toxin and concentration |
| A photo of what they ate | Helps vet determine treatment |
| A sample of vomit (if any) | Can be tested |
| A list of symptoms and when they started | Helps diagnosis |
| Your cat’s medical history | Pre-existing conditions matter |
How to Prevent Food Poisoning in Cats
| Prevention tip | Why |
|---|---|
| Store toxic foods out of reach | Onions, garlic, chocolate, grapes in closed cabinets |
| Secure trash cans | Lid-locking trash bins prevent scavenging |
| Don’t leave food unattended | Counter-surfing cats can steal dangerous foods |
| Read labels on human foods | Onion/garlic powder hidden in many foods (baby food, broths, sauces) |
| Never feed table scraps | Salt, fat, seasonings are dangerous |
| Keep houseplants out of reach | Many are toxic (lilies, etc.) |
| Post emergency numbers on the fridge | Pet Poison Helpline: 855-764-7661 |
FAQs About Cat Food Poisoning Symptoms
| Question | Answer |
|---|---|
| How long after eating something toxic do cats show symptoms? | Varies by toxin: 30 minutes (xylitol, cyanide) to 2-4 days (onion/garlic). |
| Can cats recover from food poisoning? | Yes — with prompt veterinary treatment. Delayed treatment has poorer prognosis. |
| What should I do if my cat ate something toxic but seems fine? | Call the vet anyway. Some toxins (onion, grapes) cause delayed symptoms. |
| Can I induce vomiting at home? | No — never unless directed by a vet. Incorrect induction can cause aspiration pneumonia. |
| Is milk a cure for poisoning? | No. Milk does not neutralize poisons. It may worsen vomiting/diarrhea (lactose intolerance). |
| Can I use hydrogen peroxide to induce vomiting in cats? | Not recommended. Hydrogen peroxide can cause severe gastritis in cats. Only use if directed by a vet. |
| How do I know if my cat is dehydrated? | Sunken eyes, dry/sticky gums, skin tenting (gently pull skin at scruff — if it doesn’t snap back quickly, dehydrated). |
Related Resources from AvailPet.com
Pillar page:
- Cat Food Safety Guide — complete A-to-Z resource for 54 foods
Emergency:
- What to Do If Your Cat Eats Something Toxic — step-by-step emergency protocol
About the Vet — Dr. Allona Jackson, DVM
I’m Dr. Allona Jackson, a practicing small-animal veterinarian with over 12 years of experience treating cats, dogs, and exotic pets.
I have treated poisoning cases including:
- Onion and garlic toxicity (hemolytic anemia, blood transfusions)
- Chocolate toxicity (theobromine poisoning)
- Grape toxicity (acute kidney failure)
- Xylitol poisoning (hypoglycemia, liver failure)
- Pancreatitis from high-fat foods
- Salt poisoning
- Bacterial infections from raw meat
My mission at AvailPet.com is simple: give cat owners accurate, life-saving information without the fluff. Every article on this site has been reviewed by me personally.
Conclusion
Knowing the symptoms of food poisoning can save your cat’s life.
Key takeaways:
- Symptoms vary by toxin — vomiting, diarrhea, lethargy, pale gums, red urine, seizures
- Different toxins have different timeframes — from 30 minutes (xylitol, cyanide) to 2-4 days (onion/garlic)
- When in doubt, call Pet Poison Helpline: 855-764-7661
- Do not wait for symptoms — some toxins cause delayed organ failure
- Do not induce vomiting without veterinary guidance
- Prevention is the best medicine: store toxic foods safely, secure trash cans, never feed table scraps
Bookmark our Cat Food Safety Guide for all 54 foods — it’s your complete resource for feeding your cat safely.
Your cat depends on you to feed wisely. You’ve got this.
- ✅ Vet-reviewed by Dr. Allona Jackson, DVM — 2026
- 📅 Last updated: May 2026
- ⚠️ Disclaimer: This content is for informational purposes only and does not constitute veterinary medical advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for diagnosis and treatment of your pet’s specific condition. In an emergency, call your vet or a pet poison helpline immediately.
- 🔗 Back to pillar: Cat Food Safety Guide
- 🔗 Emergency: Pet Poison Helpline: 855-764-7661





