Short answer: Dogs can carry human norovirus in their gut without becoming sick, and the virus can be transmitted human-to-dog-to-human. Dogs do not appear to develop typical norovirus gastroenteritis themselves. The bigger concern is that an infected human can shed virus that contaminates the household.
What you should actually do
- Caddy 2015 (J Clin Microbiol): dogs in a UK outbreak study were found to be subclinical carriers of human norovirus.
- No documented cases of dogs developing classical norovirus illness.
- Hand-washing after handling a dog during a household norovirus outbreak is reasonable.
- Canine-specific noroviruses exist but are different strains – clinical significance unclear.
- Most vomiting + diarrhea in dogs is NOT norovirus – rule out dietary, parasitic, parvo, HGE first.
Norovirus is impressively durable in the environment – survives weeks on surfaces, resistant to alcohol-based sanitizers (use bleach 1:50). When a household member is sick, wash hands before/after dog contact and clean shared surfaces.
If your dog has vomiting + diarrhea during a household norovirus outbreak, work the dog up for the common canine causes rather than assuming cross-species transmission.
Dig deeper
⚕️ Medical Disclaimer
The information on this page is intended for educational purposes only and does not replace a hands-on veterinary examination. Drug doses depend on your dog’s complete clinical picture, concurrent medications, and the exact product formulation. Always confirm dosing with your veterinarian before administering any medication, and contact a 24-hour veterinary emergency service or animal poison control immediately if you suspect a medication overdose or adverse reaction. Editorial standards: every drug dose published on PuppaDogs is cross-checked against multiple authoritative veterinary references and reviewed by PuppaDogs Veterinary Editorial Team before publication.
















