Why Is My Dog Vomiting? A Pet Parent’s Guide to What It Could Mean
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Vomiting in dogs isn’t always a cause for alarm, but it can be a sign that something’s not right.
A single vomit in a dog who is otherwise bright, eating, and drinking is usually safe to watch at home. The job for you as a pet parent is to tell that apart from the smaller number of cases that need a vet the same day.
As a pet parent, it’s normal to worry. The good news? You don’t have to figure it out alone. My guide walks you through what vomiting could mean, what to look for, and when it’s time to check in with your vet.
We've also included a handy dog vomit chart to help you understand colours, textures and what to do next.
Most vomiting is mild and passes, but the picture around it tells you when to act. Knowing where that line sits is the hardest part, so here it is clearly.
A single vomit in a happy, hungry dog can usually be watched at home. Book a same-day or urgent vet visit if any of the following appear.
A bloated, hard belly with unproductive retching can signal bloat or a blockage, both emergencies.
A gastrointestinal obstruction from a swallowed object often shows as repeated vomiting and a dog that cannot keep food down. Don't wait the full day with puppies, senior dogs, or dogs with existing conditions, as they go downhill faster.
Colour is a clue to where the upset sits, but read it alongside how your dog is behaving rather than on its own.
Yellow or orange is bile, usually brought up on an empty stomach and most common first thing in the morning. A one-off in a bright, hungry dog is rarely serious.
How to help: Offer a small meal before bed so the stomach is not empty overnight, and feed smaller, more frequent meals.

White froth or clear liquid is usually an empty stomach, mild acid, or water brought back up. It often looks worse than it is as a one-off.
How to help: Watch a bright dog at home. See a vet promptly if the belly looks bloated or tight, which can signal bloat.

Black, tarry, or coffee-ground coloured vomit usually means digested blood from the stomach or upper gut. It can point to a bleeding ulcer, a swallowed toxin, or a foreign body, and it is a red flag even in small amounts.
How to help: See a vet the same day. Take a photo or sample if you can do so safely, and note anything your dog may have eaten or any medicines they are on.

Fresh red streaks or clots mean active bleeding in the stomach or food pipe. This always needs prompt attention.
How to help: See a vet the same day, and take a photo of the vomit to show them.

"The thing I most want to know when an owner calls is how the dog is in themselves, not just what the vomit looked like. A dog that is bright and keen for dinner is a very different call from one that is flat and turning away from food. If you can tell me that, and whether anything unusual was eaten, we are already halfway to the answer."
Texture tells you how the stomach is coping and how fast things are moving through.
A stringy, mucus-coated vomit suggests an irritated or inflamed stomach lining.
How to help: Rest the stomach briefly, then reintroduce bland food. See a vet if it repeats or your dog is off colour.

Foam is saliva and air mixed with stomach fluid or bile, again pointing to an empty or irritated stomach.
How to help: A small meal before bed and smaller, more frequent meals usually settle it.

Thin, watery vomit is usually stomach fluid or water brought back up, common after a big drink or on an empty stomach.
How to help: Offer small sips of water rather than a full bowl, then a small bland meal once your dog has settled.

Whole or barely-digested food, often brought up soon after eating, usually points to eating too fast or food that did not agree.
How to help: Slow meals down with smaller, more frequent portions. If it keeps happening soon after eating, it may be regurgitation rather than vomiting, so mention the timing to your vet.

A dark, gritty, coffee-ground texture is digested blood and is a red flag, even when the amount looks small.
How to help: See a vet promptly, and take a photo or sample if you can do so safely.

Most vomiting traces back to something the dog ate, an empty stomach, or a passing bug, but a smaller share signals something deeper.
Scavenging, table scraps, rich treats, or a sudden food change are the most common triggers. Dogs that bolt their food can also bring it back up soon after eating. Smaller, more frequent meals and a calmer mealtime help.
Some dogs bring up yellow bile or froth on an empty stomach, often first thing in the morning. This pattern, known as bilious vomiting syndrome, usually responds to a small meal before bed so the stomach is not empty overnight.
Some dogs react to specific proteins or ingredients with recurring vomiting, often alongside loose stool or itchy skin. A sensitive stomach diet can steady things over the longer term.
Intestinal worms, viral and bacterial infections, and swallowed toxins or plants all cause vomiting, sometimes with diarrhoea. Consistent parasite control and keeping human foods and chemicals out of reach removes a large slice of this risk.
When vomiting is frequent, or comes with weight loss, poor appetite, or a sore belly, the cause can sit deeper. Pancreatitis in dogs, liver or kidney disease, and some hormonal conditions can all cause it. These need a vet to diagnose and manage.
Repeated vomiting can come from a stubborn stomach upset, a swallowed object, a parasite or infection, or an underlying condition. A dog that keeps vomiting, especially with not eating, blood, or a sore belly, should see a vet the same day rather than being watched at home.
Yellow vomit is bile, usually brought up on an empty stomach, and is common first thing in the morning. A one-off in a bright, hungry dog is rarely serious, and a small meal before bed often prevents it. See a vet if it keeps happening or your dog seems unwell.
Wait until the vomiting has stopped and your dog seems settled, then offer small sips of water followed by a small bland meal. Return to normal food gradually. Do not force food on a dog that is flat, painful, or still vomiting, and see a vet instead.
Worry and call a vet when vomiting is repeated, contains blood or looks like coffee grounds, comes with a bloated or painful belly, or your dog stops eating, seems weak, or is vomiting alongside ongoing diarrhoea. In tick season, vomiting with any wobbliness is an emergency.
For a bright dog with a one-off vomit, a short rest from food followed by a small bland meal and fresh water is the safest approach. A vet-recommended probiotic can help build up the gut after an upset. Avoid human medicines unless your vet advises them, as doses and safety differ in dogs.
Most vomiting is a passing upset that settles with a little rest, a bland meal, and a day of watching closely. Keep an eye on how your dog is in themselves rather than the colour alone, and trust the red flags: if your dog is flat, not eating, or bringing up blood, your vet would rather see them early.
Browse our dog probiotics and gut support range to help keep digestion steady.
Veterinarian & Vets Love Pets Partner
BVSc
Dr Jack Ayerbe OAM is a distinguished Geelong veterinarian with over 50 years of experience, the founder of Newtown Veterinary Practice, and a dedicated advocate for animal welfare and ethics.
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