Updated
Cat safety check
Is Philodendron Toxic to Cats?
Toxic
Philodendron is not a cat-safe chewing plant.
Ask your vet
If your cat ate this and you are unsure about safety, call your veterinarian or pet poison control with your cat's weight, the amount, and the product or plant name.
What this means at home
Treat philodendron as a plant to keep out of cat rooms, not just up on a shelf. Curious cats climb, knock vases over, bat at leaves, and drink from saucers or vase water when nobody is watching.
If your cat chewed it
Move the plant away, save the plant name or a photo, estimate what part your cat reached, and call your veterinarian or pet poison control. Do not wait for symptoms if the plant is known to be risky or the amount is unclear.
Make the room easier to manage
Choose safer plants for cat-accessible rooms, block soil digging, skip loose trimmings, and give your cat better outlets like grass made for cats, scratchers, window perches, and daily play.
What to do
- Keep leaves and vines away.
- Call your vet for drooling, mouth pain, vomiting, or trouble swallowing.
Avoid
- Call your vet for drooling, mouth pain, vomiting, or trouble swallowing.
- Do not assume hanging means unreachable.
Watch for
- Vomiting, diarrhea, drooling, weakness, tremors, breathing trouble, pain, collapse, or behavior that feels wrong.
- Any toxin exposure where the amount, ingredient, or plant identity is uncertain.
Amount
No safe amount. Call your veterinarian or a pet poison hotline if your cat ate this.





