Foods tracked
250+
Across dog, cat, and small pet categories
🥦 Vegetables
Low-calorie crunchy vegetable, popular treat.
Green Bean falls under the vegetables category in our pet food safety database. For dogs, green bean is rated as safe, with a recommended portion of several beans. For cats, the same food is rated safe, with a suggested portion of a few beans. Ratings in our database are anchored to veterinary toxicology references, ASPCA Animal Poison Control guidance, and peer-reviewed nutrition research — not anecdotal reports — so pet owners can make decisions based on the same evidence a vet would cite in clinic.
Dog- and cat-specific reactions to the same food can differ significantly because of metabolic differences between the two species. When properly prepared, green bean offers dogs measurable benefits — including vitamins c & k and iron. Cats can similarly benefit from fiber and low calorie. When a pet food is rated caution or unsafe, the rating typically reflects either a compound that is marginally tolerated in small amounts, a preparation step (cooking, removing pits, peeling) that transforms risk, or a quantity threshold above which gastrointestinal distress or organ stress becomes likely.
This page links out to species-specific full guides for green bean covering warning signs, emergency steps, and cross-reference data. If your pet has consumed a large amount of any food rated caution or worse, the ASPCA Animal Poison Control hotline at 888-426-4435 operates 24/7. Use the dog and cat cards below to move from this overview into the detailed safety, portion, preparation, and risk data for your specific pet.
Read our methodology — how this data is sourced, computed, and verified.
Foods tracked
250+
Across dog, cat, and small pet categories
Data sources
3
FDA, AAFCO, manufacturer filings
Update frequency
Monthly
Recall data refreshed weekly
Composite score weighing FDA enforcement reports, AAFCO compliance, and manufacturer disclosure completeness.
Source: ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center + FDA + AAFCO Pet food safety classification (toxicity + FDA enforcement) · 2026 Q1 Safety data combines ASPCA toxicity classifications, FDA pet food enforcement reports, and AAFCO ingredient compliance status.