Updated

Small mammal food safety

Can Small Mammals Eat Mint?

Tiny fresh herb

Fresh mint can be a tiny washed herb for some healthy small mammals. Guinea pigs and rats may have a small leaf piece occasionally; hamsters, mice, and gerbils need a much smaller piece. Chinchillas and ferrets should usually skip it.

Tiny washed mint leaf piece on a saucer beside fresh mint sprigs, hay, water, and a gram scale.Mint
SafetyTiny fresh herb
TryFresh washed mint leaf only; no mint oil, extract, tea, candy, toothpaste, gum, or flavored products.

Guinea pigs

Small occasional leaf

A guinea pig may have a small washed mint piece occasionally, but hay and familiar vitamin C foods stay central.

Syrian and dwarf hamsters

Tiny shred

A hamster may have a tiny washed mint shred occasionally. Remove wet leftovers from the hoard.

Rats

Small herb piece

A rat may have a small mint piece if the normal staple and stool stay steady.

Mice

Tiny shred

A mouse needs only a tiny shred. Skipping fresh herbs is often simpler.

Gerbils

Tiny rare piece

A gerbil may have a tiny mint piece rarely, but wet fresh foods should stay controlled.

Chinchillas

Usually skip

Skip fresh mint for chinchillas unless an exotic-pet veterinarian gives a specific plan.

Ferrets

Do not feed

Do not feed mint to ferrets. Ferrets need meat-based food, not herbs.

Leaf, not oil

This page is about a plain fresh leaf. Oils, extracts, gum, candy, toothpaste, and menthol products are different risks.

Strong herbs stay tiny

Mint has a strong scent and wilts quickly. A tiny piece is easier to manage than a wet herb pile.

Use the plain leaf

  • Use fresh plain mint leaves from a food-safe, pet-safe, or untreated source.
  • Wash well, shake off excess water, and tear off a tiny piece.
  • Remove leftovers before they wilt, sour, or get hidden in bedding.

Avoid

  • Mint essential oil, peppermint oil, extracts, tea, candy, gum, toothpaste, cough drops, menthol products, pesticide-treated leaves, wilted leaves, and large wet herb piles.
  • Using mint as a breathing treatment, calming aid, or appetite fix.
  • Mint for animals with breathing irritation, appetite, stool, droppings, urinary, dental, weight, or digestive concerns unless an exotic-pet veterinarian approves.

Watch

  • Soft stool, gas, reduced appetite, fewer droppings, wet hoards, mouth irritation, sneezing from strong scent, quietness, or ignored greens.
  • Call an exotic-pet veterinarian promptly if a guinea pig, chinchilla, weak animal, or animal with abnormal signs eats less or produces fewer droppings.

Portion

Guinea pigs or rats: a small torn leaf piece occasionally. Hamsters, mice, or gerbils: a tiny leaf shred. Chinchillas and ferrets: none unless a veterinarian gives a plan.

Helpful food-safety supplies

Optional tools for measuring, storing, serving, and cleaning up small portions safely.

Affiliate links: Furball Cove may earn from qualifying purchases at no extra cost to you.

Small stainless prep bowls with washed herbs and vegetable pieces

Prep bowls

Separate washed produce, safe pieces, and discard parts before anything reaches the habitat.

Small animal hay feeder filled with clean hay against a neutral backdrop

Hay feeder

Helps keep hay reachable and away from damp bedding for animals that need hay.

Canvas hay storage bag with clean timothy hay near a feeding area

Hay storage bag

Keep hay cleaner, drier, and easier to move near the feeding area.

References