Pet ingestion lookup

My cat ate Daffodil - what should I do?

Narcissus spp

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, excessive salivation, diarrhea, and in severe cases, tremors or cardiac arrhythmias.

Escalation note

Ingestion of the bulb is most dangerous. If your cat has consumed any part of a daffodil, contact your veterinarian or a pet poison control center immediately.

First aid at home

Take the cat away from the plant, wipe any bulb residue or pollen out of the mouth and off the fur, and bring a sample or photo of what was eaten — particularly important if a bulb was involved. Do not induce vomiting at home. Call your vet, ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435), or Pet Poison Helpline (855-764-7661).

What to watch for

Vomiting, drooling, and diarrhea early; with larger or bulb ingestions, tremors, low blood pressure, irregular heartbeat, or convulsions. Lycorine is a powerful emetic, so vomiting can be intense and repeated.

Time window

Symptoms typically begin within 2 hours of ingestion. Mild GI cases usually resolve within 24–48 hours with supportive care; severe cases involving cardiovascular or neurologic signs may require longer hospitalization.

When to call the vet

Call your vet or ASPCA Animal Poison Control (888-426-4435) immediately if your cat ate any part of a bulb or you see neurologic signs — tremors, weakness, or collapse. For leaf or flower ingestion with mild GI upset, call the same day for guidance.

What this means for your cat

Cats — toxic. ASPCA classifies daffodils (and all Narcissus species) as toxic to cats; lycorine and related alkaloids are present throughout the plant, with the bulb most concentrated. Even chewing on a stem from a vase or licking pollen off fur can produce strong GI symptoms in a small cat.

Sources: ASPCA, Pet Poison Helpline.

Source references

Poison-control resources

Plant identity pageDaffodil & cats

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