What To Do Right Now If Your Dog Is Bitten
If your dog has just been bitten by a snake:
- DRIVE TO THE VET IMMEDIATELY — 24-hour emergency hospital with antivenom availability if possible
- Keep the dog AS CALM AND STILL AS POSSIBLE — reduced activity slows venom spread via the lymphatic system
- Carry rather than walk if practical
- Position the bite below heart level if possible
- PHOTOGRAPH the snake if safe — bring photo to vet; do NOT risk further bites trying to catch
- Bring the dead snake only if you can do so safely
What NOT To Do
- Do NOT apply tourniquets — cause tissue death from ischaemia, increase local injury
- Do NOT apply ice — vasoconstriction worsens local injury
- Do NOT try to suck out venom — TV-show first aid, dangerous and ineffective
- Do NOT give human medications including aspirin or ibuprofen (worsen coagulopathy)
- Do NOT allow the dog to exercise
This calculator scores severity from local + systemic signs and gives species-specific guidance.
The Statistics
- 50-80% of snake bites in dogs cause envenomation
- 20-50% are “dry bites” — no venom injected (snake retains venom or strikes defensively)
- Dry bite vs envenomation is determined CLINICALLY — serial monitoring, sometimes hours of observation
- Even apparent dry bites warrant vet examination and 12-24 hour monitoring (signs can be delayed)
Local Signs Of Envenomation
- Fang marks — often 1-2 puncture wounds 1-3 cm apart (depending on snake size)
- Swelling — local oedema spreading from bite site
- Bruising / ecchymoses — viper envenomation classic
- Pain — usually significant
- Tissue necrosis — cytotoxic venoms (pit vipers especially)
- Haemorrhagic blebs — fluid-filled blisters from cytotoxin
Systemic Signs – Develop Minutes To Hours
- Vomiting — common early sign
- Lethargy — depression, weakness
- Collapse — severe envenomation
- Pale gums — shock from hypovolaemia, vasodilation
- Bleeding — gums, urine, faeces (coagulopathy)
- Red / brown urine — haemoglobinuria (haemolysis) or myoglobinuria (rhabdomyolysis)
- Paralysis / weakness — neurotoxic snakes
- Ptosis / dilated pupils — neurotoxic envenomation
- Muscle twitching / fasciculations
- Seizures
- Rapid breathing / dyspnoea
- Salivation — early sign in some envenomations
Species-Specific Guidance
US Pit Vipers (Rattlesnake, Copperhead, Cottonmouth)
Most common US snake envenomation. Hemotoxic / cytotoxic venom — tissue necrosis, coagulopathy, hypovolaemic shock.
- Antivenom: CroFab (Crotalidae Polyvalent Immune Fab) — the standard; highly effective when given promptly
- Cost: USD 500-1,500 per vial; multiple vials often needed; total USD 1,500-5,000+
- Mojave rattlesnakes have a more neurotoxic venom than other US rattlers — geographically specific consideration
- Treatment: antivenom + aggressive IV fluids + pain management + coagulation support
US Coral Snake
Neurotoxic — flaccid paralysis, respiratory failure. Signs may be delayed 12+ hours.
- Antivenom (NACI) increasingly scarce in production
- Mechanical ventilation may be needed for hours to days
- Watch for delayed signs — even apparent mild bites need 24-48h monitoring
Australian Brown Snake (Pseudonaja)
The leading cause of envenomation deaths in Australian dogs. Neurotoxic + coagulotoxic — rapid collapse, paralysis, bleeding.
- Pressure-Immobilisation Bandage (PIB) — Australian first-aid recommendation: firm pressure bandage over the bite, extending up the limb, plus immobilisation; slows venom transit during transport
- Snake Venom Detection Kit (SVDK) helps identify species
- Brown snake antivenom widely available at emergency vets
- Ventilatory support often required
Australian Tiger Snake (Notechis)
Neurotoxic + myotoxic + coagulotoxic — severe envenomation.
- Pressure-Immobilisation Bandage first aid
- Tiger snake antivenom
- Often more severe than brown snake in terms of myotoxicity (red/brown urine from rhabdomyolysis)
Australian Red-Bellied Black Snake
Myotoxic + haemolytic — usually less lethal than brown/tiger but significant.
- Tiger snake antivenom is the standard treatment
- Haemolysis common — monitor for haemoglobinuria
European Adder (Vipera berus)
Hemotoxic / cytotoxic — usually less severe than US pit vipers — mortality rare in dogs treated promptly.
- Local swelling, bruising, pain typical
- Systemic signs (vomiting, lethargy, occasionally hypotension)
- Antivenom: Viperfav, Vipera Tab — available at major veterinary hospitals
Cobra
Neurotoxic — paralysis, respiratory failure.
- Spitting cobras also cause ocular damage from venom in eye
- Species-specific antivenom
Mamba (Black Mamba especially)
Profoundly neurotoxic — rapid progression to respiratory failure.
- Polyvalent African snake antivenom
- Time-critical — antivenom in first 30-60 minutes critical
Russell’s Viper (Daboia, South Asia)
Hemotoxic + nephrotoxic — coagulopathy, acute kidney injury.
- Indian antivenoms target Russell’s viper
- Acute kidney injury is the leading cause of mortality
Antivenom – The Cornerstone Of Treatment
Antivenom is the only specific treatment for snake envenomation. Key principles:
- Species-specific where available (CroFab for US pit vipers; species-specific Australian; Viperfav for European adder; polyvalent for some regions)
- Most effective in first hour post-bite — every hour reduces efficacy
- Cost: USD 500-1,500 per vial; multiple vials often needed
- Supportive care alone has significant mortality for serious envenomations
When Antivenom Is Indicated
- Moderate to severe envenomation signs
- Coagulopathy (bleeding, prolonged PT/PTT, low fibrinogen)
- Neurotoxic signs (paralysis, ptosis, dilated pupils)
- Cardiovascular collapse
- Significant local effects spreading rapidly
Anaphylaxis To Antivenom
Rare but recognised — premedication with antihistamine + corticosteroid sometimes used. Acute treatment with adrenaline if reaction occurs.
Supportive Care
In addition to antivenom:
IV Fluid Resuscitation
- Hartmann’s / lactated Ringer’s — aggressive boluses for shock
- Hypovolaemic shock from third-spacing of fluid into envenomation site
Pain Management
- Opioids — pure agonists (morphine, methadone, fentanyl) for severe pain
- NSAIDs CONTRAINDICATED — worsen coagulopathy
Coagulation Support
- Fresh frozen plasma — replaces clotting factors
- Packed red cells or whole blood — for severe blood loss / haemolysis
- Serial monitoring: PT, PTT, fibrinogen, platelets, D-dimer (DIC)
Respiratory Support
- Oxygen supplementation
- Intubation and mechanical ventilation for neurotoxic paralysis
- Some neurotoxic envenomations require hours to days of ventilatory support
Wound Care
- Cleanse with saline
- Avoid debridement of necrotic tissue until demarcation has occurred (1-2 weeks)
- Broad-spectrum antibiotic — secondary infection prophylaxis
- Cold compresses contraindicated (counterintuitive — initial advice was ice; now recognised to worsen local effects)
Monitoring
- 24-48 hours minimum for moderate-severe envenomation
- CBC, biochemistry, coagulation panel serially
- Urinalysis for haemoglobinuria/myoglobinuria
- Urine output for AKI development
The Australian Pressure-Immobilisation Bandage
Specific Australian first-aid recommendation for elapid bites (brown, tiger, taipan, death adder):
- Apply firm pressure bandage over the bite site (not so tight as to cut off arterial flow — like firm strapping)
- Extend bandage up the limb
- Splint the limb if possible
- Keep dog still while transporting
Mechanism: slows venom transit via the lymphatic system without occluding arterial flow. Australian-specific: not recommended for cytotoxic snakes (US pit vipers, European adders) where compressing venom locally may worsen local effects.
Prevention
- Avoid known snake habitats during snake activity seasons (warmer months)
- Keep dogs on lead in unknown territory
- Clear brush and woodpiles around homes
- Rattlesnake vaccine (US southwest) — *Crotalus atrox* toxoid; partial protection; controversial efficacy; reasonable in high-exposure areas
- Snake aversion training — professional trainer using captive-bred non-venomous or defanged venomous snakes; controversial ethically but substantially reduces bite risk in trained dogs
Prognosis
Depends on:
- Species and venom toxicity
- Dose injected (size of bite, snake meal status)
- Time to treatment
- Concurrent disease
- Body size — smaller dogs receive higher per-kg venom dose
Generally:
- Treated dry bite or mild envenomation: very good prognosis
- Treated moderate envenomation: good prognosis (>90% survival in well-treated US pit viper cases)
- Severe envenomation: variable — Australian brown snake bites in untreated dogs have mortality 30-60%+; treated cases substantially better
- Treatment delay worsens prognosis significantly
Honest Caveats
- This calculator is an emergency triage tool — it does not replace immediate vet care
- Owner identification of snake species is often inaccurate — describe markings, not just snake name
- Many “non-venomous” identifications turn out to be venomous (especially juvenile copperheads/cottonmouths)
- Antivenom is the specific treatment — supportive care alone has significant mortality
- Cost of treatment can be substantial — discuss with vet, pet insurance helps significantly
Conclusion
Snake bites in dogs are emergencies — drive to the vet immediately. Antivenom is the cornerstone of treatment, most effective in the first hour. Species-specific antivenoms exist for major dangerous snakes (CroFab for US pit vipers, Australian brown/tiger/red-belly antivenoms, Viperfav for European adders). Do NOT apply tourniquets, ice, or try to suck out venom — outdated and harmful. Keep dog calm and still, photograph the snake if safe, transport immediately. Pressure-immobilisation bandage is the Australian-specific first aid for elapid bites. Supportive care alongside antivenom: IV fluids, opioid analgesia, fresh frozen plasma for coagulopathy, mechanical ventilation for neurotoxic paralysis. With prompt treatment, most envenomations are survivable; delay substantially worsens outcomes.
Frequently Asked Questions
What should I do if my dog is bitten by a snake?
Drive to the vet IMMEDIATELY – same-hour vet visit, preferably 24-hour emergency hospital with antivenom availability. Keep the dog AS CALM AND STILL AS POSSIBLE – reduced activity slows venom spread via lymphatic system. CARRY rather than walk if practical. PHOTOGRAPH the snake if safe (don’t risk further bites trying to catch). DO NOT: apply tourniquets (cause tissue death), apply ice (vasoconstriction worsens injury), try to suck out venom (TV-show first aid – dangerous), give human medications including aspirin (worsens coagulopathy), allow exercise. Antivenom is most effective in first hour.
Are snake bites in dogs fatal?
Depends on species, dose, treatment delay, and body size. 50-80% of snake bites cause envenomation; 20-50% are ‘dry bites’ with no venom. WITH PROMPT ANTIVENOM TREATMENT: very good prognosis for US pit viper bites (>90% survival); good for European adder bites (mortality rare); variable for Australian brown/tiger snake bites. Without treatment, severe envenomations have substantial mortality – Australian brown snake bites 30-60%+ untreated, much better treated. Time to antivenom is the single biggest determinant of outcome.
How much does snake bite treatment cost for dogs?
Substantial. ANTIVENOM (CroFab for US pit vipers): USD 500-1500 per vial; multiple vials often needed; total antivenom USD 1500-5000+. Plus hospitalisation, IV fluids, fresh frozen plasma for coagulopathy, sometimes blood transfusion, mechanical ventilation for neurotoxic envenomations, monitoring. Total cost for moderate-severe envenomation typically USD 2000-8000; severe cases USD 5000-15000+. Pet insurance with emergency coverage substantially reduces out-of-pocket. Some practices offer payment plans for emergency cases.
What is the pressure-immobilisation bandage for snake bite?
The Pressure-Immobilisation Bandage (PIB) is the Australian first-aid standard for ELAPID (brown, tiger, taipan, death adder) snake bites. Method: apply FIRM PRESSURE BANDAGE over the bite site (firm like strapping, NOT so tight as to cut off arterial flow); EXTEND bandage up the limb; SPLINT the limb if possible; keep dog still while transporting. Mechanism: slows venom transit via lymphatic system without occluding arterial blood flow. AUSTRALIAN-SPECIFIC – not recommended for cytotoxic snakes (US pit vipers, European adders) where compressing venom locally may worsen local injury.
Should I get a rattlesnake vaccine for my dog?
Rattlesnake vaccine (Crotalus atrox toxoid) is available in the US Southwest. PARTIAL PROTECTION – reduces severity of envenomation in some cases but doesn’t prevent illness completely; efficacy is controversial. REASONABLE for high-exposure dogs in endemic regions (rural US Southwest, ranching dogs). DOES NOT REPLACE prompt antivenom + supportive care if bitten. Some specialists are sceptical of efficacy; others advocate. Discuss with your vet based on local snake species (vaccine has variable effectiveness against different rattlesnake species – works best against Crotalus atrox).
How do I know if a snake is venomous?
Difficult for non-experts – and not worth risking further bites to investigate. General TENDENCIES (with many exceptions): VENOMOUS US PIT VIPERS (rattlesnakes, copperheads, cottonmouths) usually have triangular heads with elliptical pupils, heat-sensing pits between eye and nostril, and (rattlesnakes) characteristic rattles. NON-VENOMOUS snakes in US usually have round pupils and rounded heads. AUSTRALIAN snakes are mostly elapids with rounded heads – identification by colour, pattern, region. UK adders have characteristic zigzag dorsal pattern. PHOTOGRAPH safely if possible and bring to vet – description more useful than dead snake. Many ‘non-venomous’ identifications turn out to be venomous – treat ALL snake bites as envenomation until proven otherwise.
Related PuppaDogs Calculators
Continue building your dog’s personalised care plan with these related PuppaDogs calculators:
- Dog Pregnancy / Whelping Due-Date Calculator
- Puppy Weight Predictor (Adult Weight Calculator)
- Heatstroke Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Bloat (GDV) Risk Calculator for Dogs
- Dog Life Expectancy Calculator (Breed, Body Condition, Lifestyle)
- Spay/Neuter Timing Calculator for Dogs (Breed-Specific)
References & Further Reading
The dosing ranges and safety information on this page are drawn from the following veterinary references. Always defer to your own veterinarian and the manufacturer’s label for your specific product.
- American Heartworm Society / North American Snakebite Society guidelines.
- Peterson ME. Snake bite: pit vipers (Crotalidae). Clinical Techniques in Small Animal Practice.
- Padula AM, Leister E. Tiger snake (Notechis scutatus) envenomation in dogs and cats. Toxicon.
- Hopper K, Beck C, Slocombe RF. Survey of antivenom use in 134 cases of suspected snake envenomation in dogs from southern Australia. Australian Veterinary Journal.
- Berdoulay P, Schaer M, Starr J. Serum sickness in a dog associated with antivenin therapy for snake bite caused by Crotalus adamanteus. Journal of Veterinary Emergency and Critical Care.
- Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook – antivenoms, fresh frozen plasma.
- PuppaDogs. Toxin Ingestion Triage Calculator and Anaphylaxis Calculator. puppadogs.com.
















