Kennel Cough in Dogs: Symptoms & When to See a Vet (2026)
If your dog suddenly sounds like a goose honking or keeps hacking as though something's stuck in the throat, kennel cough is a strong suspect — especially a few days after boarding, daycare, the groomer, or the dog park. Most cases are mild and clear up on their own, but a few aren't, and the trick is knowing which is which. This guide walks through the tell-tale cough, how contagious it really is, the red flags that mean 'call the vet,' recovery, and what the Bordetella vaccine actually does, based on veterinary references.
La tos de las perreras (Bordetella / traqueobronquitis infecciosa) suele aparecer como una tos seca y repentina que suena como un ganso o como si algo estuviera atascado en la garganta, a menudo unos días después de una guardería, residencia, peluquería o del parque para perros. La mayoría de los perros adultos sanos siguen animados y comiendo, y los casos leves se resuelven solos en 1–2 semanas con reposo y aislamiento de otros perros. Acude al veterinario si tu perro es un cachorro, es mayor o tiene enfermedad cardíaca o pulmonar; si la tos dura más de una semana o empeora; o si hay fiebre, falta de apetito, letargo, secreción nasal espesa y coloreada, o respiración rápida o dificultosa. Es muy contagiosa entre perros y un perro puede eliminar el germen durante semanas después de que cese la tos, así que mantenlo alejado de otros perros hasta que el veterinario lo autorice. La vacuna de Bordetella reduce el riesgo y la gravedad, pero no cubre todas las causas.
What kennel cough actually is
"Kennel cough" is the everyday name for infectious tracheobronchitis — inflammation of the windpipe and airways caused by a mix of bugs a dog picks up from other dogs. The bacterium Bordetella bronchiseptica is the classic culprit, but canine parainfluenza virus, canine adenovirus type 2, and others often play a part, and several can hit at once. It spreads through the air when an infected dog coughs or sneezes, through nose-to-nose contact, and off shared bowls, toys, and kennel surfaces. Anywhere dogs mix closely — boarding kennels, daycare, shelters, grooming salons, shows, the dog park — is where it thrives, which is exactly how it earned its name.
Kennel cough signs at a glance
| Sign | What it may mean | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Honking, hacking cough | Classic kennel cough — irritated airway | Rest; call vet if it lasts >1 week or worsens |
| Gagging up white foam after coughing | Clearing mucus — usually not vomiting | Normal-ish; monitor, keep dog away from others |
| Cough + still bright, eating, playful | Typical mild case | Home rest; isolate; recheck if no better in 7–10 days |
| Lethargy, poor appetite, fever | Possible pneumonia or another illness | See a vet promptly |
| Thick yellow/green nasal discharge | Secondary bacterial infection | See a vet — antibiotics may be needed |
| Fast, labored, or open-mouth breathing | Serious lower-airway involvement | Emergency — go now |
See a vet vs. rest at home
See a veterinarian: If your dog is a young puppy, a senior, or has an existing heart or lung condition; if the cough drags on past 7–10 days or gets worse instead of better; if there's a fever, loss of appetite, marked lethargy, or thick colored discharge from the nose or eyes; or if breathing looks fast or labored. Brachycephalic (flat-faced) breeds like Bulldogs and Pugs also deserve a lower threshold, since their airways are already compromised.
Usually fine to rest at home: An otherwise-healthy adult dog with a honking cough who is still bright, eating, drinking, and playful can often be watched at home with rest and isolation from other dogs, since many mild cases resolve on their own within about 1–2 weeks. Even then, a quick call to your vet to confirm the plan is sensible — and if anything on the 'see a vet' list appears, switch gears.
How contagious is it — and for how long
Very. Kennel cough spreads easily among dogs, which is why one coughing dog at daycare can turn into a whole outbreak. Signs usually show up within roughly 2–10 days of exposure. The part owners often miss: a dog can keep shedding the organism and infecting others for weeks after the cough itself has stopped — with Bordetella, shedding can continue for up to several weeks. Because of that, keep a coughing dog well away from other dogs — no daycare, boarding, parks, or grooming — until your vet says it's safe, generally at least a week or two past recovery. It's a respiratory infection of dogs; healthy people are at very low risk, though it's still wise to wash your hands.
Typical US cost ranges
- Basic vet exam for a coughing dog: USD 50–100
- Bordetella vaccine (annual): USD 20–50
- Antibiotics / cough suppressant for a mild case: USD 20–80
- Chest X-rays if pneumonia is suspected: USD 150–400
- Hospitalization for pneumonia (severe): USD 1,000–4,000+
A straightforward mild case is inexpensive — an exam plus maybe a short course of medication. Costs climb only when a cough is missed and turns into pneumonia, which is the main reason to have an early look if your dog is very young, older, or not bouncing back.
Home care & the vaccine
For a mild case, the mainstays are rest, isolation, and patience. Use a harness instead of a neck collar so you're not pressing on an already-irritated windpipe, keep the air humid (a steamy bathroom helps), and don't push exercise. Your vet may prescribe a cough suppressant or antibiotics if a bacterial component is likely — don't reach for human cough medicines, as some are toxic to dogs. On prevention: the Bordetella vaccine comes as an intranasal spray, an oral drop, or an injection, and is usually given yearly (sometimes every 6 months for high-exposure dogs). It lowers the risk and severity but doesn't cover every organism behind kennel cough, so a vaccinated dog can still catch a milder version. Many boarding and daycare facilities require it within the past year.
Triage fast with PetCare AI
Not sure whether that honking cough needs a vet tonight or just rest? Describe it to PetCare AI — the sound, how long it's lasted, whether your dog is still eating and playful, any fever, nasal discharge, or fast breathing, plus recent boarding or daycare — and ask the AI vet assistant "My dog has a honking cough after daycare — does he need to be seen?" to gauge urgency. Use the in-app finder to locate a nearby clinic or 24-hour hospital if breathing looks off. PetCare AI helps you triage, but it doesn't replace an exam — for a puppy, a senior, labored breathing, or a cough that won't quit, see a veterinarian.
Preguntas frecuentes
¿Cómo suena la tos de las perreras?
El signo distintivo es una tos fuerte y seca, tipo graznido de ganso, que puede terminar en una arcada o en expulsar un poco de espuma blanca, como si el perro intentara aclararse la garganta. Suele venir en accesos, sobre todo tras la emoción, el ejercicio o la presión de un collar en el cuello.
¿Cuánto dura la tos de las perreras?
En un perro por lo demás sano, la tos leve suele mejorar en 1–2 semanas, y muchos perros están notablemente mejor en 7–10 días. Si persiste más allá de eso, empeora, o se acompaña de fiebre, letargo o falta de apetito, haz que lo revisen, porque puede estar desarrollándose una infección secundaria o neumonía.
¿La tos de las perreras es contagiosa para otros perros o personas?
Para otros perros, sí, mucho. Se propaga por el aire y por superficies compartidas, los signos aparecen unos 2–10 días tras la exposición, y un perro puede seguir eliminando el germen durante semanas después de que cese la tos, así que mantenlo alejado de otros perros hasta que el veterinario lo autorice. Para personas sanas el riesgo es muy bajo, aunque lavarse las manos sigue siendo sensato.
¿La vacuna de Bordetella previene por completo la tos de las perreras?
No. La tos de las perreras puede estar causada por varias bacterias y virus, y la vacuna se dirige a las principales (sobre todo Bordetella, a menudo con parainfluenza). Reduce la probabilidad y la gravedad, pero un perro vacunado aún puede contraer una versión más leve. Viene como spray nasal, gota oral o inyección, y suele reforzarse cada año.
¿Cuándo es una emergencia un perro que tose?
Respiración rápida, dificultosa o con la boca abierta, encías azuladas, colapso, o un perro débil, con fiebre y sin comer, deben verse de inmediato: pueden indicar neumonía en lugar de una simple tos de las perreras. Los cachorros, los perros mayores, las razas de cara plana y los perros con enfermedad cardíaca o pulmonar deben verse cuanto antes.
Guías relacionadas
Pregunte a la IA veterinaria 24/7
Consulta gratuita con IA, calendario de cuidados y búsqueda de clínicas veterinarias cercanas.
Probar PetCare AI gratis