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Can Cats Eat 3 min read Updated 15 Apr 2026

Can Cats Eat Custard? Dairy, Sugar & Vanilla Extract

Sophie Turner
Reviewed by
Sophie Turner · B. Animal & Veterinary Bioscience, University of Melbourne
Last reviewed 15 Apr 2026
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Custard is not suitable for cats due to three problematic components: lactose (dairy intolerance issue), sugar (empty calories), and vanilla extract (contains alcohol). Most adult cats are lactose intolerant; custard is pure dairy cream and milk, triggering GI upset in the majority of cats. Additionally, custard is 15–20% sugar—meaningless calories for obligate carnivores who cannot taste sweetness. Most critical is vanilla extract, a common custard flavouring containing 35% ethanol alcohol. While the alcohol concentration in a small custard serving might not poison a cat, even small amounts of alcohol are metabolically problematic for felines whose bodies process ethanol differently than humans. A single tablespoon of custard (15g) contains roughly 8 calories with zero nutritional value.

Can Cats Eat Custard? The Full Answer

Cats are obligate carnivores and have zero nutritional requirement for dairy-based desserts. Custard is engineered for human palates—a combination of egg, cream, milk, sugar, and vanilla extract heated to create a smooth, sweet pudding. For cats, custard is a triple threat.

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Lactose problem: Custard is 80% dairy (cream and milk). Most cats lose lactase production after weaning; adult cats lack enzymes to digest milk lactose. The undigested lactose passes to the colon where bacteria ferment it, producing gas, bloating, and diarrhoea. Even a small custard serving triggers GI upset in lactose-intolerant cats.

Sugar overload: Custard contains 15–20g sugar per 100g—a cat eating 2 tablespoons (30g) ingests 5–6g sugar with zero satiation value (cats cannot taste sweet). This represents empty calories promoting obesity and metabolic dysfunction.

Vanilla extract alcohol: Most custard recipes use vanilla extract as flavouring. Standard vanilla extract contains 35% ethanol. A single tablespoon of custard (which might contain 1/4 teaspoon vanilla extract) contains roughly 0.05–0.1g alcohol—a tiny amount but still metabolically problematic. Cats' livers are less efficient at metabolising ethanol than humans' and dogs'; even small alcohol doses can cause neurological signs, hypoglycaemia, or acidosis.

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The combination of lactose + sugar + alcohol makes custard a poor choice for any cat.

How to Safely Serve Custard to Your Cat

  1. Do not serve custard to cats
  2. If accidentally consumed: monitor for 4–6 hours
  3. Provide fresh water access
  4. Watch for GI upset (diarrhoea) or neurological signs (tremors, lethargy)

Frequently Asked Questions

Is custard dangerous if my cat eats a tiny amount?

A single lick is unlikely to cause severe toxicity, but GI upset is probable due to lactose. Monitor 4–6 hours.

What about lactose-free custard—is that safer?

Lactose-free custard removes the lactose issue but retains sugar and vanilla extract (alcohol). Marginally better but still not suitable.

Is alcohol in vanilla extract a serious concern?

In tiny amounts, alcohol toxicity is unlikely. However, cats metabolise alcohol poorly. Avoid entirely.

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My cat ate a spoonful of custard. What should I do?

Monitor 4–6 hours for vomiting, diarrhoea, lethargy, or tremors. Most likely outcome is mild GI upset. Contact vet if severe.

Can I use custard as a way to give my cat medicine?

No. Custard's lactose interferes with absorption and sugar/alcohol make it inappropriate. Use cooked meat or commercial medicine delivery instead.

Explore more: This article is part of our Cat Food & Nutrition Hub — browse all guides in this topic.
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Hazel Russell
Written by

Hazel Russell

BVSc — Charles Sturt University

Founder of Pet Care Community. BVSc (Charles Sturt University). Hazel buys, tests, and reviews pet products for real Australian conditions — so you don't waste your money on stuff that doesn't work.

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