Heatstroke in Dogs: Signs, First Aid & Prevention (2026)
Heatstroke kills dogs fast — studies put the death rate as high as 50% once it's advanced, and the damage can keep unfolding for days. A dog left in a car on a mild 70°F day can hit a dangerous core temperature within about 15 minutes. This guide follows Cornell and AAHA guidance on the temperature that signals real danger, the warning signs to catch early, the cool-first first aid that actually saves lives, and how to keep your dog out of trouble in the first place.
Heatstroke in dogs is a life-threatening emergency. A normal rectal temperature is about 101–102.5°F; above roughly 104°F (40°C) is heatstroke, and past 106°F organs start to fail. Early signs are heavy panting, bright red gums, drooling, and weakness; emergencies show collapse, tremors, or seizures. First aid: move to shade and pour cool (not ice-cold) tap water over the belly, armpits, and groin with a fan running, cooling before and during the drive to the vet — but stop at about 103°F. Never use ice water (it traps heat) and never force water into the mouth. Flat-faced breeds like Bulldogs and Pugs, overweight, and senior dogs are highest risk, and a car on a 70°F day can turn deadly in 15 minutes. Every case needs a vet, because organ damage can appear 12–72 hours later.
What counts as heatstroke — the numbers
A healthy dog runs a normal rectal temperature of about 101–102.5°F (38.3–39.2°C). Trouble starts above roughly 104°F (40°C), which vets treat as the clinical line for heatstroke. Once the core climbs past about 106°F (41°C) organs begin to take damage, and readings of 107–109°F (41.7–42.8°C) are the range where multi-organ failure and death become likely. Dogs don't sweat like we do — they shed heat mainly by panting, which fails quickly in humid or still air, so their temperature can spike far faster than most owners expect.
Warning signs by stage
| Stage | What you'll notice | What to do |
|---|---|---|
| Early / heat stress | Heavy panting, bright red gums, drooling, seeking shade, restlessness | Stop activity, move to cool shade, offer small sips of water |
| Worsening | Frantic panting, thick sticky saliva, wobbly gait, weakness, vomiting or diarrhea | Start active cooling now and call an emergency vet |
| Emergency | Collapse, confusion, tremors, seizures, very dark or pale gums, unconsciousness | Cool en route and get to a 24-hour hospital immediately |
First aid: cool first, then drive
Cool before you transport: Research on dogs shows that starting to cool the dog before the car ride — not waiting until you reach the clinic — improves outcomes. Move to shade, then pour or spray cool (not ice-cold) tap water over the belly, armpits, groin, and paw pads, where blood runs close to the surface. Point a fan at the wet dog; evaporation pulls heat out faster than water alone. Keep cooling until the rectal temperature drops to about 103°F (39.4°C), then stop and head to the vet — overshooting can drop them into dangerous hypothermia.
Then go, even if they seem better: Every heatstroke dog needs a vet, because the worst complications — kidney injury, abnormal clotting (DIC), and organ failure — often surface 12 to 72 hours later, long after the dog looks recovered. The clinic will check core temperature, run bloodwork, and start IV fluids and monitoring.
What NOT to do
Skip the ice water and ice packs. Ice-cold water makes surface blood vessels clamp shut, which traps heat in the core exactly where the organs are — it can make heatstroke worse, not better. Cool tap water plus airflow is the safer, more effective choice. Don't force water down a struggling or dazed dog's throat either; during heatstroke, vomiting and aspiration into the lungs can be deadly. Let an alert dog drink small amounts on its own, and never assume a short rest 'fixed it' — the internal damage can be silent at first.
Dogs at highest risk
- Flat-faced (brachycephalic) breeds — Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Pugs, Boxers, Boston Terriers — are more than twice as likely to get heatstroke; their short airways make panting far less effective
- Overweight or heavily muscled dogs, and thick or dark double coats
- Very young puppies and senior dogs, who regulate temperature poorly
- Dogs with heart or airway disease, or laryngeal paralysis
- Any dog exercising hard, or left in a car, sunroom, or yard without shade and water
If your dog is on this list, treat hot and humid days as a real hazard: shorten walks, go out early or late, and watch the gums and panting closely. Brachycephalic dogs in particular can slide from 'fine' to emergency in minutes.
Hot cars and the cost of an ER visit
- 70°F (21°C) day: a closed car can reach ~99°F in 20 minutes and 120°F+ before long
- Brain damage or death can happen in as little as 15 minutes
- Cracking a window barely helps — never leave a dog in a parked car
- Emergency heatstroke treatment often runs USD 1,000–5,000+ with hospitalization and bloodwork
The math is brutal and simple: a few minutes in a warm car can cost a dog its life, and even a survivable case can mean days of intensive care and a large bill. Prevention — shade, water, cool timing, and never leaving a dog in a vehicle — is the only reliable protection.
Preventing heatstroke
On warm days, walk in the early morning or evening, carry water, and rest in shade often. Check the pavement with the back of your hand — if it's too hot to hold for five seconds, it's too hot for paws. Provide constant shade and fresh water outdoors, and use fans or AC indoors for at-risk dogs. Never leave a dog in a parked car, even briefly, even with a window cracked. Learn your dog's normal panting so you can spot when it turns frantic. When in doubt on a hot day, cut the activity short.
Track heat risk with PetCare AI
Use PetCare AI to note your dog's breed, weight, and any airway or heart issues, so you have a clear picture of heat risk before summer hits. Ask the AI vet assistant questions like "Is my French Bulldog safe to walk when it's 85°F and humid?" to think through the day, and use the in-app finder to locate the nearest 24-hour hospital in advance — the minutes you save looking it up later could matter. For any suspected heatstroke, start cooling and get to a veterinarian right away.
Frequently asked questions
At what temperature does a dog have heatstroke?
A dog's normal rectal temperature is about 101–102.5°F (38.3–39.2°C). Above roughly 104°F (40°C) is treated as heatstroke, organ damage begins past about 106°F (41°C), and 107–109°F is the range where multi-organ failure and death become likely. You can't judge this by feel — it needs a rectal thermometer, and any suspected case needs a vet.
What are the first signs of heatstroke in a dog?
The earliest signs are heavy, frantic panting, very bright red gums, thick drool, restlessness, and weakness. As it worsens you may see vomiting, diarrhea, a wobbly gait, and confusion. Collapse, tremors, and seizures are late, dangerous signs that mean you should be cooling the dog and heading to an emergency vet immediately.
How do you cool down a dog with heatstroke?
Move it to shade and pour or spray cool (not ice-cold) tap water over the belly, armpits, groin, and paws, then point a fan at the wet dog so evaporation carries heat away. Start cooling before you drive and keep going in the car. Stop once the rectal temperature reaches about 103°F (39.4°C) to avoid overshooting into hypothermia, then get to the vet.
Should I use ice water on an overheated dog?
No. Ice water and ice packs make surface blood vessels constrict, which traps heat in the core near the organs and can make heatstroke worse. Use cool tap water plus a fan instead. Also don't force water down the dog's throat — vomiting and aspiration during heatstroke can be fatal; let an alert dog sip on its own.
Which dogs are most at risk of heatstroke?
Flat-faced (brachycephalic) breeds — Bulldogs, French Bulldogs, Pugs, Boxers, Boston Terriers — are over twice as likely to overheat because their short airways make panting inefficient. Overweight dogs, thick-coated breeds, very young or senior dogs, and those with heart or airway disease are also high-risk, as is any dog left in a car or exercising in heat.
Can a dog get heatstroke in a car on a mild day?
Yes. On a 70°F (21°C) day a closed car can reach about 99°F within 20 minutes and climb past 120°F, and a dog can suffer brain damage or die in as little as 15 minutes. Cracking a window barely helps. Never leave a dog in a parked car, even briefly.
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