Easter is full of things dogs should never get near, and most of them are chocolate. Our Easter range lets your dog join in with treats made to look the part, so the chocolate eggs and hot cross buns can stay safely out of reach.
A dog-safe Easter
The main hazards are easy to remember: chocolate of any kind, and hot cross buns, simnel cake and anything with raisins, sultanas or currants, all of which are toxic to dogs. Even the plastic grass in an Easter basket can cause trouble if swallowed. The simple answer is to give your dog their own carob eggs and bunny cookies while everyone else has theirs.
Carob, not chocolate: Our Easter eggs are made with carob, which looks like chocolate but contains none of the theobromine that makes real chocolate dangerous for dogs.
The Easter range
Carob Easter eggs
The dog-safe answer to a chocolate egg: carob and yoghurt shaped and decorated for Easter, with no chocolate and no added sugar.
Hand-decorated bunny cookies
Easter-shaped cookies and treats, baked for dogs and decorated to look like part of the hunt.
Easter gift boxes
Ready-to-give boxes of mixed Easter treats for the dog in the family.
What makes ours different
We have made treats for dogs and other pets since 2007 in our HACCP-certified kitchen on the Sunshine Coast, now stocked across Australia, the UK, US, Ireland, Singapore, Germany and Japan. Festive to look at, genuinely dog-safe to eat.
Frequently asked questions
Can dogs eat Easter chocolate?
No. Chocolate is toxic to dogs. Give your dog a carob Easter egg instead, which looks like chocolate but is completely dog-safe.
Are hot cross buns safe for dogs?
No. The raisins, sultanas and currants in them are toxic to dogs, so keep hot cross buns well out of reach.
What can dogs have at Easter?
Treats made specifically for dogs, like carob eggs and decorated bunny cookies, which give them the look and taste of Easter without the risk.
Is carob safe for dogs?
Yes. Carob contains no theobromine or caffeine, so it is a safe chocolate substitute for dogs.