Symptoms

Dog Vomiting & Diarrhea — When to Worry

Most vomiting and diarrhea is minor and self-resolving. But some causes are life-threatening. Here's how to tell the difference.

📖 8 min read

Dogs vomit more readily than almost any other mammal — it's an evolutionary adaptation that helped them survive as opportunistic scavengers. Most vomiting and diarrhea episodes in otherwise healthy dogs resolve on their own within 24–48 hours. But a subset of causes are serious or life-threatening, and knowing how to distinguish them prevents both unnecessary worry and dangerous delays in treatment.

Types of Vomit — What They Mean

What You SeeLikely CauseUrgency
Undigested food shortly after eatingAte too fast, regurgitationMonitor
Partially digested food, bileStandard vomiting (stomach upset)Monitor if once
Yellow/white foam on empty stomachBile vomiting (bilious vomiting syndrome)Call vet if recurring daily
Bright red bloodUpper GI irritation or bleedingCall vet today
Coffee-ground appearance (dark red/brown)Digested blood — internal bleedingEmergency vet
Foreign material (plastic, fabric)Ingested object — possible obstructionCall vet immediately
Repeated vomiting (5+ times) with bloated abdomenGDV (bloat) — life-threateningEmergency vet now

Types of Diarrhea

AppearanceLikely CauseUrgency
Soft, formed, no bloodDietary change, mild upsetMonitor, bland diet
Liquid, wateryInfection, stress, dietary indiscretionMonitor if once; call if persisting
Bright red blood coating stoolLower bowel (colon) irritationCall vet same day
Bloody and very frequent (10+ times)Hemorrhagic gastroenteritis or parvoEmergency vet
Black, tarry stoolDigested blood (upper GI bleed)Emergency vet

Home Treatment for Mild Upset

  1. Withhold food for 6–12 hours (adults only — never fast puppies)
    Let the GI tract rest. Always keep fresh water available — dehydration is the main risk with vomiting and diarrhea.
  2. Transition to bland diet
    After the fast: boiled chicken breast (no skin/bones) + plain white rice in a 1:3 ratio (chicken:rice). Feed small amounts every 4–6 hours for 2–3 days, then gradually reintroduce regular food.
  3. Monitor for dehydration
    Pinch the skin on the back of the neck — if it doesn't spring back quickly, the dog may be dehydrated. Also check gum moisture (should be wet). Call vet if dehydration signs present.

Emergency Signs — Go Now

  • Bloated abdomen with retching (GDV/bloat)
  • Blood in vomit that looks like coffee grounds
  • Profuse bloody diarrhea
  • Vomiting + lethargy + pale gums
  • Known or suspected toxin ingestion
  • Unvaccinated puppy with bloody diarrhea (suspect parvo)
  • Foreign object known to have been swallowed
  • Signs of dehydration in a small dog or puppy

The Bland Diet in Detail

Boiled chicken and rice works because it's highly digestible, low in fat, and low in fiber — giving the GI tract minimal work to do while recovering.

  • Chicken: Boneless, skinless breast. Boil until fully cooked. Shred or dice.
  • Rice: Plain white rice (not brown — too much fiber). Cook fully, no seasoning, no butter.
  • Ratio: 1 part chicken to 3 parts rice by volume
  • Amount: Same daily calories as normal food, split into 3–4 small meals
  • Transition back: Day 3–4 mix 75% bland + 25% regular food; Day 5–6 mix 50/50; Day 7 back to regular
Key Takeaway: One or two vomiting episodes or one episode of loose stool in an otherwise healthy, alert dog is almost always minor. A 6–12 hour fast followed by bland diet resolves most cases. Blood in vomit or stool, bloated abdomen, lethargy alongside GI symptoms, or an unvaccinated puppy require immediate vet contact.