Fatsia — (c) Colin Meurk, some rights reserved (CC BY-SA), uploaded by Colin Meurk
Photo by (c) Colin Meurk, some rights reserved (CC BY-SA), uploaded by Colin MeurkiNaturalistCC BY-SA
dog safety reference

Is Fatsia safe for dogs?

Fatsia japonica

Fatsia is a popular, shade-loving evergreen shrub known for its large, glossy, palm-like leaves. It is generally considered safe for households with pets, though its fibrous nature may cause minor digestive upset if consumed in large quantities.

Fatsia japonicaFigleaf PalmJapanese AraliaSpider's Web Fatsia
Light
Low to medium indirect light
Habit
Upright shrub
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

Dogs face no toxicity risk from Fatsia japonica — ASPCA classifies Japanese Aralia as non-toxic to dogs. A determined chewer may still get an upset stomach from a mouthful of leaves, but there's no poison to react to.

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

No specific toxicity symptoms are expected, though chewing or swallowing plant material may still cause mild stomach upset.

Escalation note

This plant is listed by ASPCA as non-toxic for this pet. Monitor for digestive upset after large ingestion and contact a veterinarian if symptoms persist.

Source evidence

ASPCA Toxic Plant List

toxicology · 99% reliability

Open source

Japanese Aralia (Fatsia japonica) is listed as non-toxic to both cats and dogs.

NC State Extension Plant Toolbox

botanical · 94% reliability

Open source

Fatsia japonica is a broadleaf evergreen shrub that thrives in shade and is widely used as an ornamental houseplant.

Cats & dogs pagecats page

Same dog verdict

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