Household danger · 2 min read

Is Hair dye dangerous for cats?

No — dangerous

No. Hair dye contains peroxide and aromatic amines (PPD) that are toxic to cats — both as a skin irritant and a systemic toxin if licked from fur or clothing. Box-dye bathroom accidents are a common US emergency.

If your cat has just eaten hair dye

  1. Wash any dye off the cat's fur and skin immediately with warm water and Dawn dish soap.
  2. Don't use vinegar or anything else to 'neutralise' — water is correct.
  3. Call your vet or the ASPCA Poison Control on (888) 426-4435.
  4. If the cat has licked dye, don't induce vomiting.

What's the full picture?

The main risks are para-phenylenediamine (PPD) and hydrogen peroxide. PPD causes severe allergic-type reactions and systemic toxicity; peroxide causes caustic burns to mouth, skin, and eyes.

A cat that walks across a towel with dye on it, or investigates a dripping bottle, can quickly get significant skin contact that transfers to their tongue when grooming. Wash the cat immediately with pet-safe shampoo.

Close the bathroom door when dyeing hair. Dispose of applicator gloves and wipes in a sealed bin.

Symptoms to watch for

Immediate
Skin irritation, burns, drooling.
Hours to days
Systemic toxicity — vomiting, anemia, kidney or liver injury with larger exposures.

About this guidance

Every entry on this site is compiled from published US veterinary toxicology sources — AAFP, ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center (ASPCA APCC) references, AVMA-registered practice materials, and peer-reviewed feline medicine literature. Where the evidence is mixed, we err on the cautious side because cats are unusually sensitive to many common substances that are harmless to humans and even to dogs.

This is general information written for US cat owners. It is not personalised veterinary advice for your specific cat, their age, weight, medical history, or the exact exposure you're dealing with. If your cat has eaten something or is unwell, call your vet first. The ASPCA Poison Control on (888) 426-4435 is available 24/7 for a small fee and can tell you whether an emergency visit is needed.

Entries are reviewed and updated as new research emerges. Spotted an error? Let us know — corrections are investigated and applied within 24 hours. For more context on how we work, see about and our full disclaimer.

Last reviewed: · By the Cat Ate It editorial team

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