Can Peonies Kill Cats? | Safer Than Lilies, Not Safe

No, peonies rarely kill cats, but they are toxic and can cause vomiting, diarrhea, and depression that requires veterinary attention.

Peonies bring bold color to spring gardens, but every bloom carries a worry for cat owners: Can Peonies Kill Cats? The straight answer is almost never, but the plant contains a toxin called paeonol that causes vomiting, diarrhea, and lethargy serious enough to need a vet. Unlike lilies, which attack the kidneys within hours, peonies irritate the digestive system. Most cats recover fully with basic care, but the risk is real enough that every owner should know the symptoms and the right response.

How Toxic Are Peonies to Cats?

Peonies are classified as mildly to moderately toxic to cats by the ASPCA’s toxic plant database and pet poison control centers. The primary toxin, paeonol, is concentrated in the roots, bark, and stems, with lower levels in the flowers and petals. Ingestion rarely kills a healthy adult cat, but a large amount or a small kitten with underlying issues could face serious complications.

The key factor is dose. A few petals licked off the floor may cause mild drooling or a single bout of vomiting. A whole stem chewed and swallowed can produce several days of vomiting, diarrhea, and lethargy. Death is possible in extreme cases — a cat that consumes a large volume of roots or bark, or a cat that already has kidney or liver problems — but those cases are uncommon. Most veterinary sources agree that peony poisoning is rarely life threatening when treated promptly.

What Symptoms Should You Watch For?

Symptoms appear within a few hours of ingestion and usually involve the digestive system. Cats may vomit, have diarrhea, seem tired or depressed, drool more than normal, or lose interest in food. Most cases resolve within 12 to 24 hours with supportive care.

The most common mistake owners make is confusing peony poisoning with lily poisoning. Lilies cause rapid kidney failure with subtle early signs — peonies cause obvious GI upset. If your cat is vomiting after chewing a peony, it is unpleasant but not the emergency that a lily would be. Still, any vomiting in a cat should trigger a call to your vet for guidance.

Symptom Typical Onset Severity
Vomiting Within a few hours Mild to moderate
Diarrhea Within a few hours Mild to moderate
Depression / lethargy Within a few hours Mild to moderate
Drooling Within a few hours Mild
Loss of appetite Within a few hours Mild to moderate
Stomach pain (hiding, tense posture) Within a few hours Mild to moderate
Dehydration (if symptoms persist) 6–12 hours Moderate

What Makes Peonies Toxic

The toxin in peonies is paeonol, a compound that irritates the lining of the stomach and intestines. It does not attack the kidneys or liver directly. The highest concentration is in the roots, which means a cat that digs up and chews a peony root is at greater risk than one that brushes against a flower.

Paeonol affects cats differently than dogs. Dogs may eat an entire peony bush with mild vomiting; cats are more sensitive and show symptoms sooner. This is why peonies appear on every major toxic plant list for cats but not on every list for dogs. The compound persists in all parts of the plant — fresh, wilted, or dried — so no form of peony is truly safe around a curious cat.

First Aid Steps After Ingestion

The right response to peony ingestion is simple: remove the plant material, do not induce vomiting, and call your vet. Acting quickly but calmly gives your cat the best outcome.

  • Clear the mouth and fur. Remove any visible peony pieces from the cat’s mouth, teeth, and paws. Check between toes for stuck fragments.
  • Rinse gently if needed. If the cat tolerates it, rinse the mouth with clean water to reduce oral irritation. Do not force it.
  • Do not induce vomiting. Unless your veterinarian specifically instructs you to do so, forcing vomiting can cause aspiration, chemical burns, or additional stress.
  • Monitor for 6 to 12 hours. Most symptoms appear within this window. Note when symptoms start and how often they occur.
  • Call for help. Contact your vet or the Pet Poison Helpline at (855) 764-7661 if the cat ate a significant amount, symptoms are severe or worsening, or you are unsure how much was consumed.

A single episode of vomiting with no other signs is usually manageable at home with your vet’s guidance. Repeated vomiting, weakness, or refusal to eat warrants a professional exam and possibly fluids to prevent dehydration.

Factor Peonies True Lilies
Primary toxin Paeonol Unknown (affects kidneys)
Typical outcome Mild to moderate GI upset Acute kidney failure, often fatal
Speed of onset Gradual (hours) Rapid (hours)
Vet intervention Usually supportive care Emergency hospitalization
Survival rate Very high with care Low without immediate treatment
Most toxic part Roots, bark, stems All parts including pollen
Risk level for cats Low (rarely fatal) Extreme (highly fatal)

Are Dried and Cut Peonies Safe?

Dried peonies remain toxic. The paeonol compound persists in wilted and dried plant material, though at lower concentrations. A dried petal that falls off a bouquet onto the floor is less dangerous than a fresh stem, but it can still cause vomiting in a cat that eats it.

Indoor bouquets pose the same risk as outdoor gardens. A cut peony in a vase on the dining table can drop leaves and petals onto surfaces a cat reaches. The safest approach is to keep peonies out of homes with cats entirely, whether the plants are fresh, dried, or floral-arrangement quality. The same rule applies to peony foliage in compost piles — cats that roam outdoors can find and chew discarded stems.

Keeping Cats Safe Around Peonies

Peonies are not the plant to panic over the way you would a lily, but they are not harmless either. The risk is mild to moderate, treatable with basic veterinary care, and rarely fatal. The most important facts to remember: peonies are toxic but not typically lethal, the toxin causes GI upset rather than organ failure, symptoms show up within hours, fresh and dried plant material both carry risk, and the correct first aid is to clear the mouth, skip induced vomiting, and call your vet. If a peony and a cat share your home or garden, know these steps before an incident happens — a fast response turns a scary moment into a manageable one.

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