Can cats eat biscuits? The straightforward answer is no. While most plain biscuits won’t poison your cat, they present significant health risks that make them inappropriate treats. Biscuits designed for humans contain ingredients toxic or hazardous to cats, lack nutritional value for obligate carnivores, and can trigger obesity, dental disease, and metabolic issues. This guide explores what’s dangerous about biscuits, why cats are attracted to them, and what treats actually support feline health.
Why Biscuits Are Problematic for Cats
High Carbohydrate Content
Biscuits are typically 60-75% carbohydrates. Cats are obligate carnivores-their digestive systems evolved to metabolize meat, not plants. A cat’s pancreas isn’t designed to regulate high carb loads:
- Insulin spikes: Carbs trigger rapid blood sugar rise → insulin surge → energy crash → hunger 30 minutes later
- Diabetes risk: Repeated insulin surges over months/years increase type 2 diabetes risk 10-fold
- Obesity: Excess carbs convert to fat. A single biscuit contains 10-20 calories; meaningless to humans but 4-8% of a cat’s daily calories
- Digestive fermentation: Undigested carbs ferment in the colon, causing gas, bloating, and diarrhea
Sugar & Sweeteners
Many biscuits contain added sugars or artificial sweeteners:
- Sugar: Accelerates obesity, dental disease, and diabetes. Cats don’t taste sweetness (they lack sweet taste receptors), so sugar offers zero appeal to them-humans are eating it, not your cat.
- Xylitol: Artificial sweetener toxic to cats. Just 0.5g can cause hypoglycemia and liver failure. Check ingredient lists religiously.
- Sorbitol: Sugar alcohol that causes gas, bloating, and diarrhea in cats
Salt Content
Savory biscuits contain salt. Cats require only ~40mg sodium daily. One salted biscuit may contain 100-200mg sodium-5x daily requirement:
- Excess sodium causes thirst and urination changes
- Chronic excess contributes to hypertension
- Can trigger salt toxicosis symptoms (tremors, disorientation) in susceptible cats
Fat & Digestive Stress
Biscuits are typically 15-30% fat (butter, oil, shortening). Cats cannot efficiently metabolize high fat loads:
- Pancreatitis risk: High fat triggers pancreatic inflammation (extremely painful, requires hospitalization)
- GI upset: Vomiting, diarrhea, cramping within 2-12 hours
- Malabsorption: Excess fat overwhelms digestive capacity; cats absorb fewer nutrients from meals
Biscuit Types: Ranked by Danger
| Biscuit Type | Hazard Level | Why It’s Risky |
|---|---|---|
| Plain unsweetened biscuit | MODERATE | Carbs + fat; minimal immediate harm but nutritionally empty |
| Salted biscuit | HIGH | Sodium toxicity risk; salt sensitivity varies by cat |
| Buttery/oily biscuit | HIGH | Pancreatitis risk; high fat can cause acute GI upset |
| Sweet biscuit (sugar) | HIGH | Obesity + diabetes risk; empty calories; dental disease |
| Chocolate biscuit | EXTREME | Theobromine (chocolate toxin) causes heart arrhythmias, tremors, toxicity |
| Biscuit w/xylitol | EXTREME | Causes hypoglycemia + liver failure within hours; potentially fatal |
| Garlic/onion biscuit | EXTREME | Thiosulfates damage red blood cells (hemolytic anemia) |
| Macadamia biscuit | EXTREME | Macadamia nut toxin causes paralysis, tremors, hyperthermia |
Ingredient Breakdown: What Makes Biscuits Unsafe
Flour & Grains
The flour base provides carbs cats don’t need. While wheat flour itself isn’t toxic, it contributes to carb overload. Some biscuits contain corn flour (inexpensive filler) which is even less digestible for cats.
Leavening Agents (Baking Soda & Baking Powder)
Used to make biscuits fluffy. In tiny amounts (used in biscuits), they’re not acutely dangerous. However, if your cat consumes a raw biscuit dough containing baking soda in bulk, the alkaline chemical reaction can cause serious issues.
Spices & Flavorings
Common biscuit additions that harm cats:
- Cinnamon: Can irritate mouth and GI tract; potentially toxic in large amounts
- Nutmeg: Contains myristicin (a compound that causes hallucinations and tremors)
- Garlic & onion powder: Contain thiosulfates that damage red blood cells
- Vanilla extract: Often alcohol-based; toxic to cats
Hidden Dangers
- Raisins or dried fruit: Some biscuits (like scones) contain grapes/raisins, which are toxic to cats
- Nuts (especially macadamia): Found in some sweet biscuits
- Artificial sweeteners: Xylitol especially; check labels carefully
Behavioral & Health Effects of Regular Biscuit Consumption
Short-Term (1-2 Hours)
- Elevated blood sugar → energy spike, then crash
- Digestive fermentation → gas, bloating, possible loose stool
- Increased thirst (from carbs and salt)
Medium-Term (Weeks)
- Increased overall calorie intake → gradual weight gain
- Behavioral changes: increased hunger, food-seeking
- Reduced appetite for nutritious meals (empty calories fill fast)
- Dental disease begins (sugar feeds bacteria)
Long-Term (Months to Years)
- Obesity (overweight cats have 2-3x more health issues)
- Type 2 diabetes (high carb diet primary risk factor)
- Dental disease → tooth loss → oral infections
- Joint stress from excess weight → arthritis
- Fatty liver disease (hepatic lipidosis)
- Shortened lifespan (overweight cats live 1-3 years less)