Pet ingestion lookup

My cat ate Bay Laurel - what should I do?

Laurus nobilis

Potentially toxic

Contact your veterinarian or an animal poison-control resource now, especially if any amount was chewed or swallowed.

Verified against ASPCA/provenance audit 2026-05-06 on May 6, 2026.

Safety verdict

Consulted references classify the plant as toxic or irritating for that pet type.

Signs to watch for

Vomiting, diarrhea, and potential gastrointestinal irritation.

Escalation note

Ingestion can lead to physical blockage or irritation due to the rigid nature of the leaves. Please contact your veterinarian if your cat has ingested any part of this plant.

First aid at home

Remove any visible leaf fragments from your cat's mouth and offer fresh water. Do not induce vomiting — if a leaf is present, vomiting can worsen the risk of esophageal trauma. Pet Poison Helpline specifically advises owners not to use hydrogen peroxide or homemade antidotes without first speaking to a veterinary professional.

What to watch for

ASPCA lists vomiting and diarrhea as the typical signs, with the explicit warning that ingestion of whole leaves can cause obstruction. In cats, watch for repeated unproductive retching, refusal to eat, lethargy, hunched posture, or signs of belly pain — all of which can signal a leaf lodged in the GI tract rather than simple gastritis.

Time window

GI signs typically begin within hours of ingestion. Obstruction-related signs may develop or worsen over the following 24 to 72 hours. Specific timing is not detailed in ASPCA's listing.

When to call the vet

Call your veterinarian or ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435) if vomiting persists, your cat will not eat, or you notice signs of abdominal discomfort. Whole-leaf ingestion in a small cat is an immediate-call scenario because of the obstruction risk — do not wait to see how it goes.

What this means for your cat

Bay Laurel — the same dried leaf you would add to a stew — is listed by ASPCA as toxic to cats. The risk is twofold: irritant essential oils (eugenol and others) upset a cat's digestive tract, and the leaves themselves are stiff enough that a mouthful of fresh foliage can cause mechanical obstruction.

Sources: ASPCA, Pet Poison Helpline.

Poison-control resources

Plant identity pageBay Laurel & cats

This page summarizes source-bound plant-safety information and is not veterinary advice.