Every dog deserves a proper celebration β and nothing says “I love you, you ridiculous furball” quite like a homemade cake made just for them.
Pumpkin dog cakes are the move. Simple ingredients, real nutrition, and zero of the sugar, chocolate, and artificial sweeteners that make human cakes a hard no for pups.
Pumpkin dog cake is built from the ground up with canine health in mind β and it shows. These recipes are forgiving, fast, and flexible enough to work for every dog, every diet, and every occasion.
FYI, they also smell incredible coming out of the oven, which means the dog will be supervising from approximately three inches away for the entire baking process. π
Pumpkin Dog Cake Recipes
Before you bake, learn more about why pumpkin is great for dogs and how to add it safely to their diet.
1. Classic Pumpkin Dog Cake (Baked)
The gold standard. Moist, golden, and universally loved β this is the one to start with.
Classic Pumpkin Dog Cake
Moist, fluffy & made with real pumpkin β a birthday-worthy bake dogs actually love
Ingredients
1 cup whole wheat flour
sifted β forms the structure of the cake
1 tsp baking soda
leavening β helps the cake rise evenly
Β½ cup plain pumpkin puree
β Must be plain pumpkin β NOT pumpkin pie filling (contains xylitol & spices toxic to dogs)
ΒΌ cup peanut butter
β Must be xylitol-free β check label carefully; xylitol is toxic to dogs even in small amounts
ΒΌ cup vegetable oil
keeps the cake moist β canola or sunflower oil also works
2 eggs
room temperature β helps batter come together smoothly
1 tsp vanilla extract
β¦ Use pure vanilla (not imitation) β no alcohol-heavy extracts
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350Β°F (175Β°C). Grease a 6-inch cake pan and set aside.
In a large bowl, whisk together flour and baking soda until combined.
In a separate bowl, whisk pumpkin puree, peanut butter, vegetable oil, eggs, and vanilla until smooth.
Pour wet ingredients into the dry bowl. Fold together until just combined β a few lumps are fine. Overstirring makes the cake dense.
Pour batter into the prepared pan and bake for 25β30 minutes, until a toothpick inserted in the center comes out clean.
Let cool in the pan for 10 minutes, then transfer to a wire rack. Cool completely before frosting or serving.
π Serving & storage: Slice into portions appropriate for your dog’s size β one slice at a time as an occasional treat, not a full meal replacement. Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 5 days, or freeze individual slices for up to 3 months. Thaw in the fridge overnight before serving. For frosting, plain whipped cream cheese or unsweetened plain yogurt spread on top works perfectly.
2. Easy No-Bake Pumpkin Dog Cake
No oven, no stress. This one sets in the fridge and comes together in under 10 minutes of actual effort.
Easy No-Bake Pumpkin Dog Cake
No oven needed β just mix, press, chill & frost for a fuss-free celebration cake
Ingredients
1 cup oat flour
β¦ Make your own by blending rolled oats β finer grind = smoother dough
Β½ cup plain pumpkin puree
β Plain pumpkin only β NOT pumpkin pie filling (contains xylitol & spices toxic to dogs)
ΒΌ cup peanut butter
β Must be xylitol-free β check every label; xylitol is toxic to dogs even in small amounts
Water, 1 tbsp at a time as needed
add gradually β dough should hold its shape without sticking to hands
π¦ Frosting
4 oz plain cream cheese, softened
leave out at room temperature for 20β30 min before mixing for easy spreading
1 tbsp honey
β¦ Use sparingly β a small amount is fine for adult dogs; skip for puppies under 1 year
Instructions
In a mixing bowl, combine oat flour, pumpkin puree, and peanut butter. Mix until a firm, cohesive dough forms.
If the dough feels dry or crumbly, add water one tablespoon at a time, mixing between each addition. Dough should hold its shape when pressed.
Press the dough firmly into a small cake pan lined with plastic wrap, or shape by hand into a round on a plate. Smooth the top with the back of a spoon.
Refrigerate for at least 2 hours until fully set and firm throughout. Don’t rush this β a soft center won’t hold frosting well.
Beat softened cream cheese and honey together until smooth. Once the cake is fully firm, apply frosting evenly over the top and sides. Return to fridge until ready to serve.
π Tips for a clean result: Lining the pan with plastic wrap makes it easy to lift the cake out without breaking. For a nicer presentation, use a small offset spatula or the back of a spoon dipped in warm water to smooth the frosting. If shaped by hand, chill on a flat plate uncovered for the first hour so the base sets without sticking. Refrigerate leftovers in an airtight container for up to 3 days β the frosting softens at room temperature, so keep chilled until serving.
3. Grain-Free Pumpkin Dog Cake
Perfect for dogs with wheat sensitivities or those that do better without grains. Almond flour swaps in at a 1:1 ratio; coconut flour is more absorbent β use only ΒΌ cup in place of 1 full cup of wheat flour.
Grain-Free Pumpkin Dog Cake
Almond or coconut flour base β lighter, grain-free & great for sensitive stomachs
Ingredients
1 cup almond flour or ΒΌ cup coconut flour
β¦ Not interchangeable 1:1 β coconut flour is far more absorbent; use only ΒΌ cup if substituting
1 tsp baking soda
leavening β helps the dense grain-free batter rise
Β½ cup plain pumpkin puree
β Plain pumpkin only β NOT pumpkin pie filling (contains xylitol & spices toxic to dogs)
ΒΌ cup sunflower seed butter or applesauce
β¦ Sunflower seed butter keeps it nut-free; applesauce makes a slightly sweeter, softer cake
ΒΌ cup coconut oil, melted
melt before mixing β solid coconut oil won’t incorporate evenly into the batter
2 eggs
room temperature β helps batter come together without lumps
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350Β°F (175Β°C). Grease a 6-inch cake pan and set aside.
In a bowl, whisk almond flour (or coconut flour) and baking soda together until evenly combined.
In a separate bowl, whisk pumpkin puree, sunflower seed butter (or applesauce), melted coconut oil, and eggs until smooth.
Pour wet ingredients into the dry and mix until smooth. Grain-free batters are denser than wheat batters β this is normal.
Pour into the prepared pan and bake for 20β25 minutes. Start checking at 18 minutes β grain-free cakes cook faster and can dry out quickly if overbaked.
A toothpick inserted in the center should come out with moist crumbs (not wet batter). Cool completely before adding any frosting.
πΏ Flour swap note: If using coconut flour, the batter will be noticeably thicker and the finished cake more dense and crumbly β this is expected. Coconut flour cakes are best served in smaller pieces and benefit from a creamy frosting (plain cream cheese or unsweetened yogurt works well) to add moisture. Almond flour produces a softer, more cake-like texture. Store unfrosted in an airtight container in the fridge for up to 4 days, or freeze slices for up to 2 months.
Looking for more grain-free ideas? Browse our easy grain-free dog recipes for even more wholesome options your pup will devour.
Quick substitution guide:
- Egg-free: 3 tablespoons unsweetened applesauce per egg, or 1 tablespoon ground flaxseed + 3 tablespoons water
- Peanut-free: Sunflower seed butter or coconut oil at a 1:1 swap
- Low-fat: Plain Greek yogurt in place of oil
For another easy homemade birthday treat, check out our banana version β no sugar added and just as tail-wagging good!
Frosting & Decoration Options

Two reliable frosting options β both simple, both dog-safe:
βοΈ Peanut Butter Yogurt Frosting: Equal parts plain Greek yogurt and xylitol-free peanut butter, mixed until smooth. Thick enough to pipe, easy to spread, and dogs are completely irrational about it.
βοΈ Pumpkin Yogurt Frosting: Two parts plain Greek yogurt to one part plain pumpkin puree. Naturally orange, slightly thinner β refrigerate 15β20 minutes before applying for best results.
βοΈ Dog-safe decoration ideas:
- Fresh blueberries, strawberry slices, or apple pieces
- Small training treats arranged around the edge
- Unsweetened coconut flakes or shredded carrot
- Carob chips (never chocolate)
- Pureed sweet potato or blueberry piped as borders
What Makes Pumpkin the Star Ingredient?
Plain pumpkin puree isn’t just a flavor choice β it’s one of the most genuinely useful ingredients in a dog treat baker’s arsenal. Vets recommend it constantly, and for good reason.
Digestive health is the headline benefit. Pumpkin is rich in soluble fiber, which regulates bowel movements in both directions β it helps with diarrhea and constipation, which is a remarkably useful trick for a single ingredient.
For dogs with sensitive stomachs, pumpkin is often the first thing a vet suggests adding to meals.
Beyond digestion, pumpkin delivers vitamins A, C, and E, potassium, iron, and antioxidants that support eye health, immune function, muscle health, and cellular repair.
The calorie count is low, making it appropriate even for dogs on weight management plans. And because the moisture content is high, it naturally keeps baked treats from drying out β which means less oil needed and a better texture overall.
β The one rule: always use plain canned pumpkin puree, never pumpkin pie filling. Pie filling contains added sugar, nutmeg, and spices that are harmful to dogs. The label should list one ingredient: pumpkin.
Ingredients to Always Avoid
- Xylitol β causes liver failure; lurks in sugar-free peanut butter and some yogurts
- Chocolate and cocoa β toxic at any amount
- Raisins and grapes β cause kidney failure
- Macadamia nuts β cause neurological symptoms
- Nutmeg β toxic even in small amounts
- Excessive sugar or salt β long-term health damage
Read every label. When in doubt, use single-ingredient items.
Portion Guide & Storage
| Dog Size | Weight | Serving Size |
| Extra Small | Under 10 lbs | 1-inch square |
| Small | 10β20 lbs | 1β2 inch piece |
| Medium | 20β50 lbs | 2β3 inch piece |
| Large | 50+ lbs | 3β4 inch piece |
- Unfrosted baked cake β fridge for 5 days; freezer for 3 months
- Frosted cake β fridge for 3β4 days
- No-bake cake β fridge for 3 days
- Pupcakes (frosted) β freezer for up to 2 months
Final Thoughts
Homemade pumpkin dog cake isn’t just a treat β it’s an event. The ingredients are clean, the recipes are genuinely hard to get wrong, and the reaction from the dog makes every minute of prep worth it.
Start with the classic baked version, try the no-bake when time is short, and go all-in on the grain-free option if there are dietary needs to work around. Whatever the occasion β birthday, gotcha day, or random Wednesday β that dog deserves a proper cake. Go make one. π
