Safe dosage in mg, tablets, and liquid — calculated by your dog's weight, age, and symptom type. Always confirm with your vet.
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Benadryl (diphenhydramine) is one of the most commonly used over-the-counter medications for dogs — for allergic reactions, bee stings, hives, motion sickness, and mild anxiety. The dosing principle is simple: 1mg per pound of body weight, up to a maximum of 50mg per dose.
This calculator gives you the exact dose in milligrams, number of standard 25mg tablets, and liquid dosing volume — along with the next safe dose timing, and specific cautions for your dog's situation.
Diphenhydramine (the active ingredient in Benadryl) is one of the few human medications that veterinarians commonly recommend for home use in dogs. It works by blocking histamine receptors, reducing allergic symptoms including itching, hives, swelling, and runny eyes.
| Dog Weight | Dose (mg) | Standard Tablets (25mg) | Children's Liquid (12.5mg/5ml) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Under 10 lbs | 5–10mg | ¼ tablet | 2–4 ml |
| 10–25 lbs | 10–25mg | ½–1 tablet | 4–10 ml |
| 25–50 lbs | 25–50mg | 1–2 tablets | 10–20 ml |
| 50–75 lbs | 50mg (max) | 2 tablets | 20 ml |
| Over 75 lbs | 50mg (max) | 2 tablets | 20 ml |
This is the most dangerous mistake pet owners make. Never give your dog: Benadryl-D (contains pseudoephedrine, which is toxic), any Benadryl formula with "decongestant," any liquid formula containing xylitol (a sweetener toxic to dogs — check all ingredients), combination products with pain relievers (acetaminophen is toxic to dogs), or any "non-drowsy" formula (these often contain different active ingredients). Stick to plain diphenhydramine only and verify the ingredients label every time.
Dogs with glaucoma, enlarged prostate, or cardiovascular disease should not receive diphenhydramine — it can worsen these conditions. Dogs on MAOIs, amitraz, or other antihistamines should not receive Benadryl without veterinary guidance due to interaction risk. Puppies under 12 weeks and pregnant or nursing dogs should only receive medications under direct veterinary supervision.
Call your vet or go to an emergency animal hospital immediately if your dog shows: difficulty breathing, extreme facial or throat swelling, vomiting or diarrhea after the dose, pale or white gums, collapse or weakness, or no improvement in severe symptoms within 30 minutes. Anaphylaxis in dogs is a medical emergency — antihistamines alone cannot treat it.
Diphenhydramine (Benadryl) is one of the most commonly administered over-the-counter medications to dogs by owners, used primarily for allergic reactions, anxiety, and motion sickness. The dosing framework in this calculator is based on veterinary pharmacology reference standards and reflects the same approach used by veterinarians when calculating safe OTC antihistamine doses for dogs. This tool does not replace veterinary consultation — always contact your veterinarian or an emergency animal hospital if your dog is experiencing a severe allergic reaction.
Veterinary drug dosing is calculated on a mg/kg basis because drug distribution, metabolism, and elimination rate are all proportional to body mass. A 5kg Chihuahua and a 40kg Labrador require dramatically different doses, and using a human-centric flat-dose approach (e.g., "give one tablet") would seriously underdose large dogs and could overdose toy breeds:
| Dog Weight | Safe Dose Range | Standard 25mg Tablets | Liquid 12.5mg/5ml |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 kg (11 lbs) | 5–10 mg | ¼ tablet (cautious approach) | 2–4 ml |
| 10 kg (22 lbs) | 10–20 mg | ½ tablet | 4–8 ml |
| 20 kg (44 lbs) | 20–40 mg | 1 tablet | 8–16 ml |
| 30 kg (66 lbs) | 30–50 mg | 1–2 tablets (cap at 50mg) | 12–16 ml |
| 40+ kg (88+ lbs) | 50 mg (maximum) | 2 tablets | 16–20 ml |
The 50mg per-dose maximum applies regardless of body weight. Very large dogs do not receive proportionally higher doses because the therapeutic window does not scale linearly at high body masses, and the 50mg ceiling reflects the dose at which sedation side effects become pronounced.
This is the most safety-critical parameter in this calculator. Many Benadryl products contain additional active ingredients that are toxic to dogs:
| Formulation | Safe for Dogs? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Plain diphenhydramine HCl (25mg tablets) | ✓ Yes — use this | Single active ingredient. Standard adult Benadryl tablets. |
| Benadryl Liquid (Children's, plain DPH) | ✓ Yes (check label) | Useful for precise dosing in small dogs. Verify it contains ONLY diphenhydramine. |
| Benadryl Allergy + Decongestant (with pseudoephedrine) | ✗ NO — toxic | Pseudoephedrine is highly toxic to dogs. Can cause seizures, hyperthermia, and death. |
| Benadryl-D (with decongestants) | ✗ NO — toxic | Same reason — decongestant active ingredients are contraindicated. |
| Benadryl with Xylitol (some liquid formulas) | ✗ NO — toxic | Xylitol causes life-threatening hypoglycemia and liver failure in dogs. Always check ingredient list for xylitol. |
| Benadryl liquid gels (gel caps) | ⚠️ Caution | May contain propylene glycol in some formulations. Check label. Tablet form is safer default. |
Diphenhydramine should NOT be administered without veterinary guidance when your dog has: glaucoma (can increase intraocular pressure), prostatic disease, urinary retention disorders, cardiovascular disease, hyperthyroidism, or is currently taking MAOIs, CNS depressants, or other antihistamines. Pregnant or nursing dogs require veterinary consultation before any OTC medication.
If your dog is experiencing a severe allergic reaction — collapse, difficulty breathing, facial swelling, repeated vomiting — diphenhydramine is insufficient. This is a potential anaphylaxis emergency requiring immediate veterinary treatment including epinephrine. Do not delay emergency care to administer Benadryl.
Merck Veterinary Manual (diphenhydramine dosing section); Plumb's Veterinary Drug Handbook (10th edition); ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center OTC medication guidance; Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care Society (VECCS) published toxicology protocols.