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Can Cats Eat 6 min read Updated 18 Apr 2026

Can Cats Eat Yoghurt? Dairy, Lactose, and the Plain vs Flavoured Divide

Hazel Russell BVSc on yoghurt and cats — most adult cats are lactose intolerant, plain is lower risk than flavoured, and sugar-free yoghurts may contain xylitol. Full guide.

Sophie Turner
Reviewed by
Sophie Turner · B. Animal & Veterinary Bioscience, University of Melbourne
Last reviewed 18 Apr 2026
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⚠️ Quick Answer

With caution — cats and yoghurt

Plain, unsweetened yoghurt is lower risk than milk for cats because the fermentation process converts some of the lactose to lactic acid. However, most adult cats still have reduced lactase activity and will experience some degree of GI upset from dairy. Flavoured yoghurts — fruit, vanilla, honey — add unnecessary sugar and potential allergens. Sugar-free yoghurts sometimes contain xylitol, which is toxic to cats. Plain, full-fat yoghurt in small amounts is the least problematic dairy option; there is no nutritional case for including it.

🏆 PawKeen Safety Score™ — Yoghurt for Cats

6/10
Safety
5/10
Nutritional Benefit
5/10
Worth It?
Why the middle score? Yoghurt sits in the grey zone — some forms or preparations are fine, others aren't. Read the serving guide and emergency section below carefully before offering.
Sophie Turner's Verdict B. Animal & Veterinary Bioscience, University of Melbourne · Product Reviewer & Pet Parent Writer
"Plain yoghurt is one of the dairy products I'm least concerned about in small amounts — the fermentation process genuinely reduces the lactose load. That said, I'm not recommending it as a treat. The standard advice stands: cats don't need dairy, adult cats aren't designed to digest it efficiently, and the main benefit being promoted (probiotic support) is better achieved with a species-appropriate feline probiotic. The xylitol concern in sugar-free varieties is the real reason this food warrants the label check."

The straight answer

Plain, unsweetened yoghurt is one of the more tolerable dairy products for cats — not because dairy is appropriate, but because fermentation reduces the lactose content relative to raw milk. Flavoured yoghurts add sugar, honey, fruit purees, and in sugar-free varieties, potentially xylitol. The label check on any yoghurt before offering it to a cat is not optional.

Dairy and cats — the basic biology

The persistent belief that cats love milk is culturally embedded but biologically inaccurate for adult cats. The reality:

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Kittens produce lactase (the enzyme that breaks down lactose) in sufficient quantities to digest their mother's milk. After weaning — typically around 8 weeks — lactase production declines because there is no longer a biological demand for it. By adulthood, most cats have significantly reduced lactase activity compared to their kitten levels.

This decline is not universal: some adult cats retain more lactase activity than others and can tolerate modest dairy amounts without obvious symptoms. But the baseline expectation for any adult cat encountering dairy is some degree of lactose malabsorption — ranging from subclinical (no obvious symptoms) to frank GI upset (vomiting, diarrhoea, gas).

Why yoghurt is better than plain milk

Yoghurt is produced by fermenting milk with live bacterial cultures (Lactobacillus bulgaricus and Streptococcus thermophilus). These bacteria convert lactose to lactic acid as part of their fermentation metabolism. The result is a product with:

  • Lower lactose content than starting milk (~5g per 100g raw milk → ~4–5g per 100g yoghurt)
  • A more acidic environment that can slow gastric emptying slightly
  • Live bacterial cultures that may provide some digestive support

The reduction in lactose is meaningful but not complete. Cats with significant lactase deficiency will still react to yoghurt.

The xylitol danger in Australian yoghurt products

This is the section that matters most if your cat ate yoghurt from your fridge. Scan the ingredient label of any yoghurt product:

Terms that indicate xylitol: "xylitol," "birch sugar," "sugar alcohol," "sweetener (967)."

Xylitol is used in "light," "diet," "sugar-free," and "reduced calorie" yoghurt products. In cats (and dogs), xylitol triggers rapid insulin release that causes hypoglycaemia — blood sugar drops rapidly. Signs appear within 30–60 minutes: weakness, disorientation, collapse. Liver damage can occur at higher doses.

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Australian supermarket brands that market reduced-sugar or no-added-sugar yoghurt variations should be checked. This includes many of the popular "high-protein" Greek-style yoghurts that use xylitol or erythritol to reduce sugar content while maintaining palatability.

Yoghurt types compared

Yoghurt type Safe for cats? Notes
Plain full-fat unsweetened Low risk (small amount) Best option if using any yoghurt
Plain low-fat unsweetened Check label Low-fat versions more likely to contain artificial sweeteners
Honey yoghurt Not recommended Added sugar
Fruit yoghurt Not recommended Sugar, artificial colours, potential grape/raisin contamination
Vanilla yoghurt Not recommended Vanilla extract contains alcohol
Greek yoghurt (plain) Low risk (small amount) Lower lactose than regular yoghurt
Sugar-free / diet yoghurt Potentially dangerous Check for xylitol — may be toxic
Lactose-free dairy yoghurt Low risk Lactose removed but still dairy protein/fat

🍽️ Serving Guide — Yoghurt for Cats

Half a teaspoon of plain, full-fat, unsweetened yoghurt, occasionally. Not a regular supplement.

🐱
Kitten
Under 4 mo
Half a teaspoon, occasionally
🐈
Adult Cat
4–10 kg
Half to one teaspoon, occasionally
🦁
Senior Cat
10+ years
One teaspoon, occasionally

Frequency: occasional treat only. Treats should make up no more than 10% of daily calorie intake. If diarrhoea or vomiting occurs, discontinue and consult your vet.

🚨 My Cat Ate Yoghurt — What Now?

Plain yoghurt is not a toxicity emergency. If the yoghurt was sugar-free, low-fat, or artificially sweetened, check the ingredient label for xylitol. If xylitol is present, call the Animal Poisons Helpline on 1300 869 738 immediately.

Signs that warrant a vet call:

  • Loose stools and gas from lactose within 4–8 hours. Vomiting in more lactose-sensitive cats. With sugar-free yoghurt: xylitol toxicity — hypoglycaemia signs within 30–60 minutes (weakness
  • disorientation
  • collapse)

If your cat ate a large amount or is showing the signs above: Don't wait — call immediately.

📞 Animal Poisons Helpline: 1300 869 738

Available 24/7 across Australia. Have your cat's weight, breed and approximate quantity consumed ready when you call.

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Frequently Asked Questions

Can yoghurt help with my cat's upset stomach?
The probiotic claim for yoghurt as a cat digestive supplement doesn't have strong evidence. The bacterial strains in human yoghurt are not optimally calibrated for feline gut microbiome support. If your cat has ongoing digestive issues, a veterinary probiotic containing Enterococcus faecium (FortiFlora is widely available in Australia) is a more targeted approach.
My cat ate a container of flavoured yoghurt — what do I do?
First, check the ingredient label for xylitol. If xylitol is present, call the Animal Poisons Helpline on 1300 869 738 immediately. If no xylitol is present, expect GI upset — loose stools, possibly vomiting — from the sugar and lactose load. Monitor for 12–24 hours.
Is lactose-free yoghurt safe for cats?

Lactose-free dairy yoghurt (enzyme-treated to break down the lactose) removes the main dairy-related problem for cats. It still contains dairy fat and protein; a small amount is low risk for a healthy cat. Useful for cats with diagnosed lactose intolerance who tolerate dairy in other respects.


For more on dairy and cats, see our guides to cream and Greek yoghurt, and our cat food safety hub.

📚 Sources & Further Reading

Explore more: This article is part of our Cat Food & Nutrition Hub — browse all guides in this topic.
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Hazel Russell
Written by

Hazel Russell

BVSc — Charles Sturt University

Founder of Pet Care Community. BVSc (Charles Sturt University). Hazel buys, tests, and reviews pet products for real Australian conditions — so you don't waste your money on stuff that doesn't work.

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