Pumpkin sits in the kitchen, and suddenly those big dog eyes are watching every move. Sound familiar? Before scooping some into the bowl, it’s worth knowing exactly what pumpkin does for dogs — because the answer is actually pretty exciting.
The short version: yes, dogs can eat pumpkin, and it’s genuinely one of the best whole foods an owner can add to their dog’s diet. But there’s a right way and a wrong way to do it, and a few things that can catch even experienced dog owners off guard.
Let’s get into all of it — the benefits, the precautions, and 10 treat recipes worth bookmarking.
Is Pumpkin Actually Good for Dogs?
Not everything that’s healthy for humans translates well to dogs. Pumpkin, though, is one of those rare wins for both species. Plain, cooked pumpkin is packed with nutrients that directly support canine health — and vets have been recommending it for years for good reason.
Here’s what makes pumpkin such a standout:
- Fiber — supports healthy digestion and helps regulate both constipation and diarrhea
- Beta-carotene — converts to Vitamin A, which supports vision, immune function, and skin health
- Potassium — supports healthy muscle function and heart health
- Vitamin C — boosts immune health and acts as an antioxidant
- Zinc — promotes healthy skin and coat
- Low in calories — great for dogs that need to manage their weight
- High water content — supports hydration, especially helpful for dogs that don’t drink enough
Ever wonder why vets so often suggest pumpkin for digestive issues? It’s the soluble fiber. It absorbs excess water in the digestive tract for diarrhea, and adds bulk to help move things along when constipation is the problem. It genuinely works both ways — which is kind of impressive for one ingredient.
10 Healthy Pumpkin Dog Treat Recipes
Here’s where things get fun. These recipes use simple, dog-safe ingredients and keep things practical — no obscure ingredients, no all-day baking projects. Most of them take under 30 minutes from start to finish.
Recipe 1: Classic Pumpkin Peanut Butter Biscuits
The OG of homemade dog treats. Dogs lose their minds for this combination, and it’s easy to see why.
Classic Pumpkin Peanut Butter Biscuits
The crowd-pleaser combo — gut-friendly, crispy & endlessly batchable
Ingredients
1 cup plain canned pumpkin
⚠️ Not pumpkin pie filling — plain 100% pumpkin only
½ cup natural peanut butter
⚠️ Xylitol-free — always check the label
2 eggs
two eggs for a larger batch — gives the dough good structure
2½ cups whole wheat flour
✦ Or oat flour for sensitive stomachs — same amount, same method
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mix pumpkin, peanut butter, and eggs until smooth.
Gradually stir in flour until a firm dough forms.
Roll out to about ¼ inch thickness and cut into shapes.
Bake for 25–30 minutes until golden and firm.
Cool completely before serving.
🎃 Batch tip: This is one of the larger recipes in the series — 2½ cups of flour gives you a generous yield. Bake the full batch and freeze half in a zip-lock bag immediately after cooling. The biscuits freeze perfectly and taste just as good straight from frozen as they do fresh. A Sunday batch can cover two or three weeks of treats.
Storage: Airtight container in the fridge for up to 1 week, or freeze for up to 3 months.
Recipe 2: Frozen Pumpkin Yogurt Bites
Perfect for summer. These take about five minutes to make and dogs treat them like they’re the best thing that’s ever happened.
Frozen Pumpkin Yogurt Bites
3 ingredients, one bowl, four minutes of actual work — the rest is the freezer’s job
Ingredients
1 cup plain canned pumpkin
⚠️ Not pumpkin pie filling — plain 100% pumpkin only
1 cup plain Greek yogurt, unsweetened
no artificial sweeteners — freezes firm and creamy
1 tbsp honey
✦ Optional — skip for diabetic dogs or puppies under 1 year
Instructions
Mix all ingredients until smooth.
Spoon into silicone molds or an ice cube tray.
Freeze for at least 4 hours.
Pop out and serve straight from the freezer.
🧊 Simplest frozen treat in this series: One bowl, one spoon, four steps. The pumpkin-to-yogurt ratio here gives you a properly orange bite with a creamy freeze — not watery, not icy. Store unmolded bites in a zip-lock bag in the freezer so you can pull one out at a time without thawing the whole batch. Keeps for up to 2 months.
Storage: Keep in a freezer bag for up to 2 months.
Recipe 3: Pumpkin Oat Soft Chews
Great for senior dogs or pups with dental sensitivities who struggle with crunchy treats.
Pumpkin Oat Soft Chews
Gut-friendly, fiber-rich & one bowl from start to baking sheet
Ingredients
1 cup plain pumpkin puree
⚠️ Not pumpkin pie filling — plain only
1½ cups rolled oats
✦ Plain, old-fashioned rolled oats — not instant, not flavored
¼ cup unsweetened applesauce
adds moisture and a subtle apple note — check for no added sugar
1 egg
holds the chews together so they don’t crumble
Instructions
Preheat oven to 325°F (160°C).
Combine all ingredients and mix into a soft dough.
Drop spoonfuls onto a lined baking sheet.
Bake for 15–18 minutes until set but still slightly soft.
Cool before serving.
🎃 Soft treat reminder: These must be refrigerated — more moisture than crunchy treats means a much shorter room-temperature shelf life. They’ll last 5 days in the fridge or 3 months in the freezer. If they firm up more than you’d like after refrigerating, a quick 10 seconds in the microwave (no longer) softens them right back. Good for senior dogs or picky eaters who prefer a chew over a crunch.
Storage: Refrigerate in an airtight container for up to 5 days.
Recipe 4: Pumpkin and Banana Training Treats
Small, soft, and incredibly easy to make. These work perfectly as high-reward training treats because they’re bite-sized and dogs can eat them quickly without breaking focus.
Pumpkin & Banana Training Treats
Egg-free, 4 ingredients & marble-sized for maximum reps per session
Ingredients
½ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
1 ripe banana, mashed
acts as both binder and natural sweetener — no egg needed
1 cup oat flour
forms the base of the dough
¼ cup rolled oats
✦ Adds a little texture and chew to each bite
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mash banana and mix with pumpkin.
Stir in oat flour and rolled oats until combined.
Roll into small balls — marble-sized for training portions.
Flatten slightly on a lined baking sheet.
Bake for 12–15 minutes.
Cool completely before use.
🎯 Egg-free note: The banana does the binding work here — no egg needed, which makes this one of the simpler recipes in this series and a good option for dogs with egg sensitivities. Marble-sized portions mean a full batch can yield 60–80 treats — enough for several training sessions. Store in an airtight container for up to 5 days, or freeze for up to 3 months.
Storage: Fridge for 5 days or freeze for up to 3 months.
Recipe 5: No-Bake Pumpkin Coconut Balls
Zero oven time. Mix, roll, chill — done. These are a lifesaver on busy days when there’s still a treat-loving dog staring from across the room.
No-Bake Pumpkin Coconut Balls
Mix, roll, chill — no oven, no eggs, ready in an hour
Ingredients
½ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
¼ cup unsweetened shredded coconut
unsweetened only — adds texture and a light coconut flavour
1 cup oat flour
gives the balls body so they hold their shape in the fridge
2 tbsp coconut oil, melted
✦ The fat that binds and firms everything up once chilled
Instructions
Mix all ingredients together until a firm dough forms.
Roll into small balls.
Refrigerate for at least 1 hour before serving.
🥥 How it sets: The coconut oil is liquid at room temperature but firms up in the fridge — that’s what holds these balls together. Don’t skip the chill time or they’ll fall apart at the first bite. If the dough feels too wet to roll, add oat flour a tablespoon at a time. Store in the fridge for up to a week; they soften quickly at room temperature so serve cold.
Storage: Fridge for up to 1 week or freezer for 2 months.
Recipe 6: Pumpkin and Carrot Crunch Biscuits
Two superfoods in one treat. Carrots add natural sweetness and a satisfying crunch that dogs love, plus an extra hit of beta-carotene.
Pumpkin & Carrot Crunch Biscuits
Veggie-packed, warmly spiced & baked to a proper satisfying crunch
Ingredients
¾ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
½ cup carrots, finely grated
grate fine — blends into the dough and adds moisture and colour
1 egg
binds the dough and helps achieve a crisp bake
2 cups whole wheat flour
gives these biscuits their satisfying crunch
¼ tsp cinnamon
✦ Dog-safe in small amounts — adds warmth without heat
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mix pumpkin, carrot, and egg together.
Stir in flour and cinnamon to form a dough.
Roll out and cut into shapes.
Bake for 25 minutes until crisp.
Cool fully before serving — they firm up more as they cool.
🥕 Crunch tip: The full 25 minutes is important here — these biscuits need time to dry out properly for that satisfying snap. If they feel soft when you pull them from the oven, that’s normal; they crisp up significantly on the cooling rack. Store in an airtight container at room temperature for up to 2 weeks — one of the longer shelf-stable treats in this series.
Storage: Airtight container at room temperature for 3 days, or fridge for 1 week.
Recipe 7: Pumpkin Chicken Jerky Treats
A protein-packed treat for dogs that go crazy for meat-based rewards. FYI, the pumpkin here acts as a natural binder and adds a fiber boost alongside the protein.
Pumpkin Chicken Jerky Treats
Low and slow — 2 hours in the oven, chewy strips that last a week
Ingredients
1 cup cooked chicken breast, shredded
✦ Plain, no seasoning — blend or chop finely before mixing
½ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
1 cup oat flour
gives the jerky its structure so strips hold together when dried
1 egg
binds the mixture into a spreadable, cohesive dough
Instructions
Preheat oven to 250°F (120°C) — low and slow is essential for jerky.
Blend or finely chop the shredded chicken until it’s almost paste-like.
Mix all ingredients into a smooth, spreadable dough.
Spread thinly and evenly on a lined baking sheet.
Score into strips with a knife or pizza cutter before baking.
Bake for 1.5–2 hours until dry and chewy throughout.
Cool completely, then break along scored lines.
🌡️ Low temp note: 250°F (120°C) is not a typo — this is a dehydration bake, not a regular bake. The low temperature slowly removes moisture rather than cooking quickly. Thin spreading is critical: too thick and the center stays soft and won’t store well. Aim for roughly 3–4mm thickness. Store in the fridge for up to a week or freeze for up to 3 months.
Storage: Airtight container in the fridge for up to 1 week.
Recipe 8: Pumpkin and Apple Pupcakes
Because sometimes a dog deserves a little something special. These mini muffin-style treats look adorable and taste (apparently) amazing — at least judging by the reaction from the test subjects.
Pumpkin & Apple Pupcakes
Mini muffins with yogurt frosting — the birthday cake your dog actually deserves
Ingredients — Pupcakes
½ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
½ cup unsweetened applesauce
no added sugar — check the label
1 egg
binds and gives the muffins their structure
1 cup whole wheat flour
gives body and a satisfying texture
½ tsp baking powder
✦ Aluminum-free — gives the pupcakes their lift
Ingredients — Yogurt Frosting
3 tbsp plain Greek yogurt
unsweetened — the creamy base of the frosting
1 tbsp plain pumpkin
stirred into the yogurt — gives colour and a subtle earthiness
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mix pumpkin, applesauce, and egg together.
Stir in flour and baking powder.
Spoon into a mini muffin tin lined with paper cups.
Bake for 12–15 minutes.
Cool completely, then top with the yogurt frosting mixture.
Refrigerate until serving — the frosting needs to stay cold.
🎂 Celebration tip: These are the most presentation-worthy treat in this series — mini size, frosted top, and an orange-and-cream colour combination that photographs beautifully. Frost just before serving or the night before at most; yogurt frosting softens the top of the pupcake if left overnight. A toothpick inserted in the center should come out clean at 15 minutes. Store unfrosted pupcakes for up to 3 days; add frosting at serving time for best results.
Storage: Fridge for up to 4 days. Skip the frosting if freezing — freeze plain and add frosting fresh.
Recipe 9: Pumpkin Sardine Biscuits
Stay with this one — it sounds weird, but dogs are absolutely wild for it. Sardines pack omega-3 fatty acids that support coat health and joint function, and pumpkin balances it all out.
Pumpkin Sardine Biscuits
Omega-3 meets gut health — high-value, gut-friendly & very aromatic
Ingredients
1 can sardines in water, drained
⚠️ No salt added — regular canned sardines are too high in sodium
½ cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
1 egg
binds everything into a rollable dough
1½ cups oat flour
✦ More flour than most biscuit recipes — sardines add significant moisture
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mash sardines thoroughly — no large chunks.
Mix with pumpkin and egg until combined.
Stir in oat flour to form a dough — it will be firmer than expected.
Roll out and cut into small shapes.
Bake for 20–25 minutes until firm throughout.
Cool before serving.
🪟 Smell warning: Open a window — sardines baking at 350°F for 25 minutes is an experience your kitchen will remember. Worth it: the strong smell is exactly what makes these a high-value training reward. Sardines in water with no salt added is non-negotiable on the label — regular varieties have sodium levels that accumulate quickly in small treats. Store in the fridge for up to a week.
Storage: Because of the fish content, refrigerate immediately and use within 4 days. Freeze for up to 6 weeks.
Recipe 10: Pumpkin Turmeric Anti-Inflammatory Bites
These are practically a wellness supplement in treat form. Turmeric is a natural anti-inflammatory that can support joint health in older dogs — combined with pumpkin, it’s a powerhouse pairing.
Pumpkin Turmeric Anti-Inflammatory Bites
Golden, gut-soothing & with a pinch of black pepper for the same reason you do
Ingredients
1 cup plain pumpkin
⚠️ Not pie filling — plain pumpkin puree only
¼ tsp ground turmeric
✦ Anti-inflammatory — the reason these are golden coloured
A pinch of black pepper
✦ Activates turmeric’s benefits — same principle as in human food
1 tbsp coconut oil
healthy fat that also helps the body absorb turmeric’s active compounds
1½ cups oat flour
gives the biscuits their structure and crunch
Instructions
Preheat oven to 350°F (175°C).
Mix pumpkin, turmeric, black pepper, and coconut oil together.
Stir in oat flour until a firm dough forms.
Roll and cut into small shapes.
Bake for 20 minutes until firm.
Cool completely before serving.
🟡 Turmeric stain warning: Your hands, your counter, your dog’s beard — all going yellow. It washes off, but fair warning before you roll with enthusiasm. The piperine in black pepper increases turmeric’s bioavailability significantly — it’s not just a flavour choice, it’s why the pairing exists. Coconut oil serves the same purpose: fat helps curcumin absorb. All three work together. Store in an airtight container for up to 2 weeks.
Storage: Airtight container in the fridge for 1 week or freeze for 3 months.
How Much Pumpkin Can a Dog Have?
More isn’t always better, even with something as wholesome as pumpkin. Too much pumpkin can actually cause digestive upset — which is ironic given that it’s often used to fix digestive issues in the first place.
General guidelines by dog size:
- Small dogs (under 20 lbs): 1 teaspoon per day
- Medium dogs (20–50 lbs): 1 to 2 tablespoons per day
- Large dogs (50+ lbs): 2 to 5 tablespoons per day
Start on the lower end and observe how the dog responds. These amounts work as a daily supplement or as an occasional treat ingredient — which is exactly what the recipes below are built around.
What Kind of Pumpkin Is Safe?
This part matters more than most people realize. Not all pumpkin products are created equal, and one common mistake can do more harm than good.

Plain Canned Pumpkin ✅
This is the gold standard for convenience. Look for 100% pure pumpkin with absolutely no additives. One ingredient on the label: pumpkin. That’s it.
Fresh Cooked Pumpkin ✅
Roasted or steamed plain pumpkin works beautifully. Remove the skin and seeds before serving — more on seeds in a moment.
Pumpkin Puree (Unsweetened) ✅
Same rules as canned — check that label carefully and make sure it contains nothing but pumpkin.
Pumpkin Pie Filling ❌
This is the one that trips people up. Pumpkin pie filling contains sugar, spices, and sometimes xylitol — a sweetener that is toxic to dogs. The can looks almost identical to plain pumpkin puree on store shelves. Always double-check the label before opening.
Pumpkin Seeds ✅ (with prep)
Raw pumpkin seeds aren’t toxic, but they need to be cleaned, roasted plain, and ground or crushed before serving. Whole seeds can be a choking hazard and harder to digest. Skip any salted or flavored versions entirely.
Can Pumpkin Help With Specific Health Issues?
Short answer: yes, and it’s one of the reasons so many dog owners keep a can in the pantry at all times.
Diarrhea
The soluble fiber in pumpkin absorbs excess water in the gut and helps firm up loose stools. Start with a small amount — one teaspoon for small dogs, one tablespoon for larger dogs — and give it with a regular meal.
Constipation
The same fiber adds bulk and helps stimulate movement through the digestive tract. The high water content also helps soften things up. A little pumpkin mixed into food can get things moving within 24 hours.
Weight Management
Pumpkin is filling, low in calories, and adds volume to a meal without adding much to the calorie count. Some owners replace a small portion of their dog’s regular food with pumpkin to help manage weight — a simple trick that actually works.
Anal Gland Issues
This one surprises people. The added fiber from pumpkin can help produce firmer stools, which naturally help express the anal glands during bowel movements. It’s not a cure for chronic anal gland problems, but it can help as a preventive measure.
Quick Reference: Dog-Safe Pumpkin Ingredient Pairings
When building homemade pumpkin treats,
✅
These ingredients all get a green light alongside pumpkin:
- Peanut butter (xylitol-free)
- Plain Greek yogurt (unsweetened)
- Oat flour or whole wheat flour
- Eggs
- Banana
- Unsweetened applesauce
- Carrots
- Coconut oil (in moderation)
- Turmeric (small amounts)
- Sardines in water (no salt)
- Plain cooked chickenGeneral admission and member discounts for one adult
❌
And a few things to always avoid in dog treats regardless of how natural they sound:
- Xylitol (in any form)
- Nutmeg
- Raisins or grapes
- Onion or garlic powder
- Excess salt
- Chocolate
- Artificial sweeteners
Final Thoughts
Pumpkin is one of those rare ingredients that manages to be genuinely nutritious, incredibly versatile, and universally loved by dogs. Adding it to a dog’s diet — whether as a daily supplement or baked into treats — is one of the simplest upgrades any dog owner can make.
The 10 recipes above cover every kind of dog and every kind of occasion, from everyday training treats to birthday pupcakes. Pick one, give it a try, and watch the reaction. Chances are the dog will make the decision of which recipe to make again very easy. 🙂
Now go raid that pantry — there’s a can of pumpkin in there with someone’s name on it.
