Christmas Orchid — Arne Larsen (?)
Photo by Arne Larsen (?)Wikimedia CommonsCC BY-SA 3.0
dog safety reference

Is Christmas Orchid safe for dogs?

Cattleya trianaei

The Christmas Orchid is a popular epiphytic orchid known for its large, showy, and fragrant winter blooms. It is considered non-toxic to household pets, though its fibrous nature may cause minor digestive discomfort if consumed in large quantities.

Cattleya OrchidCattleya trianaeiTriana's Cattleya
Light
Bright indirect light
Habit
Epiphytic
Care
Moderate

Safety status

Dogs

Generally safe

Consulted references do not classify the plant as toxic for that pet type, while still allowing for mild GI upset if large amounts are chewed.

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

What this means for your dog

Safe for dogs — ASPCA lists Cattleya orchids (which include the winter-blooming Christmas Orchid) as non-toxic to dogs; a dog that mouths a bloom isn't at poisoning risk.

Sources: ASPCA.

If a pet has chewed or swallowed plant material and is showing symptoms, contact a veterinarian or poison resource immediately. This product is for structured reference, not diagnosis.

Dogsconcern notes

Common signs

None expected, though ingestion of large amounts of fibrous plant material may cause mild vomiting or diarrhea.

Escalation note

This plant is non-toxic. If your dog consumes a significant amount and shows persistent signs of distress, contact your veterinarian.

Bring it home

Christmas Orchidis generally pet-safe in ordinary household exposure. If you’d like one for your space, here’s a starting point.

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Source evidence

ASPCA Toxic Plant List

toxicology · 99% reliability

Open source

Non-toxic to dogs and cats.

Kew Plants of the World Online

botanical · 95% reliability

Open source

Accepted scientific name for Cattleya trianaei.

Cats & dogs pagecats page

Same dog verdict

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