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.
MintGuinea 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.
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