The Dog Raisin & Grape Toxicity Calculator is a free, science-backed tool designed to help dog owners, veterinarians, and pet-care professionals quickly assess how dangerous a grape or raisin ingestion event may be for a dog.
Grapes, raisins, sultanas, and currants are all known to cause acute kidney injury (AKI) in dogs, but the exact toxic mechanism remains unknown. What makes this especially dangerous is that there is no established "safe" dose — even tiny amounts have caused fatal kidney failure in some dogs, while others appear unaffected after eating larger quantities. This unpredictability is precisely why any ingestion event must be treated as potentially serious.
This calculator computes a dose per kilogram of body weight and maps it to a 5-level risk tier based on published veterinary guidelines, giving you clear, colour-coded guidance on whether immediate emergency care is needed.
⚙️ How Does It Work?
1 — Enter Details
Input your dog's weight, the quantity ingested, and choose the food type (fresh grapes vs. dried raisins/sultanas).
2 — Unit Conversion
All values are automatically converted to SI units (kg and g) for accurate dose calculation, regardless of whether you used lbs or oz.
3 — Dose Calculation
A toxicity multiplier is applied (raisins are ~4× more concentrated than fresh grapes) and the dose per kg of body weight is computed.
4 — Risk Tier
The adjusted dose is matched against a 5-level risk scale derived from ASPCA Poison Control and peer-reviewed veterinary literature.
Why a multiplier? Drying grapes into raisins removes ~75% of their water content, concentrating the toxic compound per gram. Currants are considered slightly more potent than standard raisins. The multiplier normalises all food types to a "fresh grape equivalent dose."
Adjusted Dose (g/kg)
Risk Level
Typical Concern
< 2.5
Safe
Monitor at home
2.5 – 7.5
Low
Contact vet for advice
7.5 – 20
Medium
Vet visit recommended soon
20 – 32
High
Emergency vet care
> 32
Critical
Immediate emergency care
✅ Practical Benefits for Users
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Instant Answers
Get a risk assessment in seconds — no searching through confusing articles during a stressful emergency.
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Precise Dose-Based Results
Unlike generic warnings, this tool calculates your dog's specific risk based on actual weight and quantity.
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Actionable Guidance
Each risk tier comes with a clear to-do list so you know exactly what to do next.
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kg & lbs / g & oz Support
Works for users in any country with automatic unit conversion built in.
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Vet-Communication Ready
The calculated dose per kg helps you give your vet the precise information they need quickly.
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Fully Responsive
Works seamlessly on any device — use it at home, at the dog park, or in the car on the way to the vet.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
The exact toxic compound in grapes and raisins has not been definitively identified, making this one of the more mysterious toxicoses in veterinary medicine. Research as of 2023 suggests tartaric acid may be the culprit, but this is not yet fully confirmed. What is well-documented is that ingestion can lead to acute kidney injury (AKI) in dogs, causing symptoms such as vomiting, diarrhoea, lethargy, loss of appetite, abdominal pain, decreased urination, and ultimately kidney failure within 24–72 hours. Because the mechanism is unknown, no dose is considered safe.
Yes — gram for gram, raisins are significantly more toxic than fresh grapes because the drying process removes most of the water content, concentrating the toxic substance. A single raisin contains roughly the same amount of toxin as 4–5 grapes of equivalent weight. Currants and sultanas follow a similar pattern. This is why the calculator applies a 4× to 4.5× multiplier to dried fruit compared to fresh grapes when computing the adjusted dose.
While the calculated dose may appear low for a single raisin and a large dog, veterinarians widely advise contacting a poison helpline or vet even for one raisin — especially for small or toy breeds. Some dogs have developed severe kidney failure after eating just a few raisins. There is no established threshold below which exposure is confirmed safe. When in doubt, always consult a veterinarian rather than waiting for symptoms to appear, as early intervention (e.g. induced vomiting or activated charcoal) dramatically improves outcomes.
Provide the following information as precisely as possible: (1) your dog's weight and breed; (2) the type of fruit ingested (grape, raisin, sultana, currant); (3) the estimated quantity; (4) the time of ingestion; (5) any symptoms already observed (vomiting, lethargy, etc.); and (6) any other foods or medications your dog had recently. The adjusted dose per kg that this calculator produces is exactly the kind of data your vet needs to make a rapid triage decision, so consider having it on hand when you call.
Medical Disclaimer
This tool is provided for informational and educational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice, diagnosis, or treatment. The risk thresholds used are based on published veterinary literature and ASPCA guidelines, but individual dogs may react differently to grape/raisin ingestion — some have experienced acute kidney failure after ingesting amounts classified here as "low risk." Never rely solely on this calculator when making decisions about your pet's health. If your dog has ingested any amount of grapes, raisins, sultanas, or currants, contact your veterinarian or an emergency animal poison hotline immediately. The creators and distributors of this tool accept no liability for any outcomes resulting from its use.
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Subrata Das Gupta
Subrata Das Gupta is the founder of DogCalcHub, a platform that provides smart online tools to help dog owners with health, nutrition, and daily care decisions. His goal is to make pet care simple, accurate, and accessible for everyone.