My Senior Dog Is Not Eating: Reasons and What You Should Do
You know your senior dog's routine better than anyone. So when they turn away from the food bowl — especially more than once — it hits different. A dog who has always been food-motivated suddenly refusing meals is one of the most common reasons older dog owners reach out to a vet.
The reassuring news: not every case is a crisis. But some are. Here's how to start figuring out what's going on.
Why Senior Dogs Stop Eating
Dental Pain and Tooth Problems
Dental disease is one of the most frequently missed causes of appetite loss in senior dogs. Broken teeth, abscesses, inflamed gums, and loose teeth make eating genuinely painful. Your dog may approach the bowl, sniff the food, and walk away — pointing to oral discomfort rather than a complete loss of appetite.
Nausea
Senior dogs are more prone to kidney disease, liver disease, and other conditions that cause chronic nausea. A nauseated dog won't want to eat, may lick their lips frequently, and might eat grass when outside.
Pain From Arthritis
For a dog with significant joint pain, bending down to a floor-level bowl may be uncomfortable enough to discourage eating.
Cognitive Dysfunction (Dog Dementia)
Dogs with canine cognitive dysfunction may forget to eat, lose interest in food, or become confused about where their bowl is located.
Underlying Disease
Kidney disease, liver disease, Addison's disease, diabetes, cancer — many serious illnesses cause appetite suppression.
Medication Side Effects
If your senior dog recently started a new medication, reduced appetite can be a side effect worth discussing with your vet.
When to Worry: Emergency Signs
Call your vet immediately if your senior dog:
- Has not eaten for more than 24–48 hours
- Is also not drinking water
- Is vomiting or has diarrhea alongside the appetite loss
- Appears weak, lethargic, or disoriented
- Has a distended or painful belly
- Is losing weight rapidly (AAHA Canine Life Stage Guidelines, 2019).
What's going on with your pet?
Describe symptoms or snap a photo. Voyage tells you urgency, home care, and whether you need a vet.
First, tell us about your pet
Breed and age make a real difference in how Voyage interprets symptoms.
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What to Do at Home
Start with basics: is the food fresh? Has the recipe changed? Try warming food slightly to enhance aroma. Elevate the food bowl for arthritic dogs. If your dog eats one meal but not another, monitor closely over 24 hours. Two consecutive missed meals warrant a vet call. Log how much they're eating — even rough estimates help your vet.
Still Not Sure if Your Dog Needs a Vet?
When you're not sure if this is wait-and-see or call-tonight, Voyage AI Vet triages in under 2 minutes. Describe what you're seeing in chat, share photos of your dog's posture, the food bowl, and any visible discomfort, or hop on a live video call if you want a second pair of eyes. Every answer comes with citations to the actual veterinary literature it's pulling from — so you see exactly where the guidance comes from, not just a chatbot's word.