The Short Answer
Stop giving your dog traditional rawhide.
While it is one of the most popular treats in history, rawhide is not food. It is a byproduct of the leather industryâessentially a scrap of leather that has been chemically stripped, bleached, and glued into a bone shape.
It scores a verdict of AVOID for two critical reasons:
1. It doesn't digest. If your dog swallows a large chunk, it can swell in the stomach and cause a fatal intestinal blockage.
2. It is chemically processed. Production involves lime baths, bleach, and synthetic adhesives that you wouldn't want your dog eating.
Why This Matters
Itâs a choking hazard that requires surgery to fix.
Rawhide becomes a slippery, rubbery mess when chewed. It doesn't dissolve in the stomach like meat; it sits there. If a piece lodges in the intestine, it creates a blockage that can kill a dog within days without expensive emergency surgery. See Is Rawhide Dangerous for detailed blockage statistics.
You are feeding your dog leather chemicals.
To turn a rotting cow hide into a pristine white bone, manufacturers use a cocktail of chemicals. This often includes sodium sulfide (to remove hair) and hydrogen peroxide (to bleach it white). In 2017, a massive recall was issued because manufacturers were washing rawhide with quaternary ammoniumâa compound used to clean factory machinery, not food.
Cross-contamination is common.
Because rawhide is often manufactured in countries with loose regulations (and then shipped to the US for packaging), it has a history of Salmonella and E. Coli contamination. This puts both your dog and your human family members at risk. Dog Treat Ingredients To Avoid covers other contaminants to watch for.
What's Actually In Rawhide
Rawhide is not "dried meat." It is the inner layer of the hide that remains after the top layer is tanned for leather goods.
- Sodium Sulfide â Used in the "liming" process to strip hair and fat from the hide.
- Hydrogen Peroxide / Bleach â Used to turn the naturally dark/grey hide into the clean "white" look consumers expect.
- Glue / Adhesives â Often used to keep the hide rolled in that perfect "bone" shape. The FDA does not require these glues to be listed on the label.
- Artificial Colors â Titanium dioxide (white) or Yellow #5 are often painted on to make it look "fresh." Dog Treat Ingredients To Avoid
What to Look For
If you absolutely must buy a hide-based chew, you need to be extremely selective.
Green Flags:
- "Collagen Chews" â These are made from the corium layer but processed differently (extruded) to be more digestible.
- US-Sourced and Made â Hides sourced in the US are less likely to be preserved with toxic salts for long ocean transport.
- Unbleached â Look for chews that are tan or brown, not blinding white.
Red Flags:
- "Made in China / Mexico / Brazil" â These regions have a history of using unapproved processing chemicals (like the 2017 quaternary ammonium recall). Are Dog Treats From China Safe
- Bright White Color â Indicates heavy bleaching.
- Knotted Ends â The knots are the most dangerous part; dogs often tear them off and swallow them whole.
The Best Options
If your dog needs to chew (and they do!), there are safer, fully digestible alternatives. See Healthiest Dog Treat for a full ranking.
| Alternative | Verdict | Why It's Better |
|---|---|---|
| Bully Sticks | â Recommended | Single-ingredient beef muscle. Fully digestible and high protein. Are Bully Sticks Safe |
| Yak Cheese Chews | â Recommended | Hard as rock but dissolves in stomach acid. Great for power chewers. |
| Beef Trachea | â Recommended | Natural source of glucosamine/chondroitin. Safe, crunchy, and hollow. |
| Rawhide | đ« Avoid | Choking hazard, indigestible, chemical processing. |
The Bottom Line
1. Throw away the rawhide. The risk of bowel obstruction or choking outweighs any dental benefit.
2. Switch to Bully Sticks or Yak Chews. These provide the same chewing satisfaction but are made of food, not leather byproducts.
3. Monitor all chewing. Even with safe treats, always watch your dog. If a chew gets small enough to swallow whole, take it away.
FAQ
Is American-made rawhide safe?
It is safer, but not "safe." US-made rawhide avoids some illegal preservation chemicals used overseas, but the fundamental problem remains: rawhide is indigestible leather. It still poses a significant choking and blockage risk regardless of where it was made.
Does rawhide actually clean teeth?
Technically yes, but at a cost. The mechanical action of chewing rawhide does scrape tartar off teeth. However, dental chews or brushing are far safer methods that don't risk emergency surgery. See Are Dental Chews Safe for better options.
What happens if my dog swallows a piece of rawhide?
Watch them closely. If it's a small piece, they may pass it. If it's large, rawhide swells in the stomach and can cause a blockage. Watch for vomiting, lethargy, or straining to poop. If you see these signs, go to the vet immediately.
Are "retriever rolls" safer than knotted bones?
Marginally. Knotted bones are worse because the knots break off easily. Retriever rolls (long cylinders) are harder to swallow whole, but once they unroll and get soggy, they can still be inhaled or swallowed, posing the same obstruction risks.
References (22)
- 1. justfoodfordogs.com
- 2. ellevetsciences.com
- 3. fox13news.com
- 4. thehonestkitchen.com
- 5. thepetslarder.co.uk
- 6. petmate.com
- 7. akc.org
- 8. fox35orlando.com
- 9. ruffstartrescue.org
- 10. happyhoundtreatco.com.au
- 11. dvm360.com
- 12. hemopet.org
- 13. purina.co.uk
- 14. scrumbles.co.uk
- 15. fda.gov
- 16. lakeforestvets.com
- 17. dogsinc.org
- 18. trupanion.com
- 19. vets-now.com
- 20. dogkrazy.com
- 21. tartarshield.com
- 22. mlahvet.com