What Is Gabapentin and What Does It Treat?
Gabapentin is a versatile prescription medication used in dogs for pain, seizures and anxiety. It is the same drug sold for people under the brand name Neurontin, and it is used off-label in veterinary medicine — where it has become one of the most widely prescribed multi-purpose medicines.
Gabapentin was originally developed as an anticonvulsant, but it is now valued for several different effects. It is thought to work by binding to a particular subunit of calcium channels in nerve cells, which calms over-excited or “hyper-sensitised” nerves. This single action explains its three main veterinary uses:
- Chronic and neuropathic pain — gabapentin is especially useful for nerve-related pain and is often added to other pain treatments for conditions such as arthritis, intervertebral disc disease and cancer pain.
- Seizures — it is used as an add-on anticonvulsant for dogs whose epilepsy is not fully controlled by first-line medications.
- Situational anxiety — gabapentin has a calming, mildly sedating effect, making it popular for veterinary visits, travel and grooming, given as a single dose beforehand.
Gabapentin is generally well tolerated and has a wide safety margin, which is a large part of why vets reach for it so often. Its main effect to be aware of is sedation.
Gabapentin is a prescription medication. Use the calculator above to understand the typical dosing, but the actual dose and plan belong with your veterinarian. For more, see PuppaDogs’ guide to gabapentin for dogs.
How the Gabapentin Dosage Calculator Works
Because gabapentin is dosed so differently for its different uses, the calculator first asks what it is for, then estimates the dose from your dog’s body weight. It:
- Shows the dose range and a typical starting dose for pain, seizures or anxiety.
- Converts it into capsules, tablets or millilitres of liquid.
- Issues a clear xylitol warning if you select a liquid form.
Enter your dog’s weight, choose the reason for use and the form you have, tick any health considerations, then press Calculate Dose.
How Gabapentin Doses Are Calculated for Dogs
Gabapentin has a famously wide dose range, and the right amount depends heavily on what it is being used for:
| Use | Typical dose | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| Chronic / neuropathic pain | ~5–10 mg/kg | every 8–12 hours |
| Seizures (add-on) | ~10–20 mg/kg | every 8 hours |
| Situational anxiety | ~20–30 mg/kg | a single dose, 1–2 hours before the event |
Veterinarians often start at the lower end and increase gradually as needed — and for situational anxiety, some vets use considerably higher single doses (up to 30–60 mg/kg) for difficult cases. Dogs also vary in how quickly they process gabapentin, so the “right” dose is genuinely individual.
Forms and Strengths
Gabapentin comes as capsules (commonly 100, 300 and 400 mg), tablets (600 and 800 mg), and an oral liquid (often 50 mg/mL). The liquid form carries an important warning — see below.
Gabapentin Dosage Chart for Dogs (Pain)
This chart shows the pain dose range (5–10 mg/kg). It is a reference only — your veterinarian’s prescription takes priority.
| Dog weight | Per-dose range (5–10 mg/kg) | Frequency |
|---|---|---|
| 5 kg (11 lb) | 25–50 mg | every 8–12 h |
| 10 kg (22 lb) | 50–100 mg | every 8–12 h |
| 20 kg (44 lb) | 100–200 mg | every 8–12 h |
| 30 kg (66 lb) | 150–300 mg | every 8–12 h |
| 40 kg (88 lb) | 200–400 mg | every 8–12 h |
The Critical Warning: Xylitol in Liquid Gabapentin
This is the single most important safety point on this page. Many human gabapentin oral liquids contain xylitol — an artificial sweetener that is highly toxic to dogs. Even small amounts of xylitol can cause a dangerous drop in blood sugar, and larger amounts can cause liver failure.
If your dog needs a liquid form of gabapentin — for example because it is a small dog or will not take capsules — do not use a human gabapentin solution without checking. Confirm with your veterinarian and pharmacist that the product is xylitol-free, or have a xylitol-free version specially compounded. The capsule and tablet forms do not carry this risk.
How to Give Gabapentin to Your Dog
For Pain or Seizures (Ongoing Use)
- Give it every day, on the schedule your vet sets (typically every 8–12 hours).
- With or without food — either is fine.
- Do not stop abruptly — see the warning below.
For Situational Anxiety
- Give it as a single dose 1–2 hours before the stressful event — the vet visit, car journey or grooming appointment.
- Trial it first. Give a practice dose on a calm, ordinary day so you can see how sedated your individual dog becomes before relying on it for the real event.
Side Effects and Safety Warnings
Gabapentin is generally very well tolerated. The most common side effects are mild sedation and a slightly wobbly, unsteady walk (ataxia), especially when treatment first starts or the dose is increased. These usually ease within a few days. Occasionally there is mild stomach upset.
Do Not Stop Ongoing Gabapentin Abruptly
If gabapentin has been used regularly for pain or seizures, it should not be stopped suddenly. Abrupt withdrawal can cause rebound pain, and in a dog with epilepsy can increase the risk of seizures. Any change should be made by tapering the dose gradually under veterinary guidance.
When to Use Caution
- Kidney disease — gabapentin is cleared by the kidneys; the dose or interval needs adjusting.
- Senior or debilitated dogs — more sensitive to sedation; vets often start low.
- Dogs on opioids or other sedatives — the sedative effects add together; tell your vet everything your dog takes.
How Gabapentin Fits Into Pain and Anxiety Care
Gabapentin is rarely a complete solution on its own — it is a team player. For chronic pain, it is frequently combined with an NSAID or other pain medication, since it tackles the *nerve* component of pain particularly well; PuppaDogs’ codeine calculator and guides to options such as Librela cover other parts of the pain-control picture. For anxiety, gabapentin works best as part of a calm, low-stress plan, and may be combined with behaviour-friendly approaches like those described in PuppaDogs’ guide to Sileo. Your veterinarian will design the right combination.
Conclusion
Gabapentin is a safe, versatile and widely used medication for canine pain, seizures and situational anxiety, with doses that differ markedly by use — roughly 5–10 mg/kg for pain, 10–20 mg/kg for seizures, and 20–30 mg/kg as a single pre-event dose for anxiety. The calculator above gives you that estimate and converts it into capsules or liquid. The keys to using it well are matching the dose to the purpose, never stopping ongoing treatment abruptly, doing a trial dose before an important event — and, above all, making sure any liquid form is xylitol-free. Always confirm the plan with your veterinarian.
Frequently Asked Questions
How much gabapentin can I give my dog?
It depends on the purpose. For chronic or neuropathic pain, gabapentin is typically dosed at about 5-10 mg/kg every 8-12 hours; for seizures, around 10-20 mg/kg every 8 hours; and for situational anxiety, roughly 20-30 mg/kg as a single dose 1-2 hours before the stressful event. Your veterinarian sets the exact dose.
How long does gabapentin take to work in dogs?
For situational anxiety, gabapentin is given 1-2 hours before the event because that is roughly how long it takes to reach a useful effect. For ongoing pain or seizures, it works fairly quickly per dose, but the overall benefit is best judged over the first week or two of regular dosing as the dose is adjusted.
Is liquid gabapentin safe for dogs?
Only if it is xylitol-free. Many human gabapentin oral liquids contain xylitol, which is highly toxic to dogs and can cause a dangerous drop in blood sugar and liver damage. Before using any liquid gabapentin, confirm with your vet and pharmacist that it is xylitol-free, or have a xylitol-free version compounded. Capsules and tablets do not carry this risk.
What are the side effects of gabapentin in dogs?
Gabapentin is generally well tolerated. The most common side effects are mild sedation and a slightly wobbly, unsteady walk, especially when treatment first starts or the dose increases. These usually ease within a few days. Occasionally there is mild stomach upset.
Can I stop giving my dog gabapentin suddenly?
If gabapentin has been used regularly for pain or seizures, it should not be stopped abruptly. Sudden withdrawal can cause rebound pain and, in dogs with epilepsy, an increased seizure risk. Any change should be made by tapering the dose gradually under veterinary guidance. A single situational-anxiety dose does not carry this concern.
Does gabapentin sedate dogs?
Yes, mild sedation is gabapentin’s most noticeable effect, and it is part of why the drug is useful for situational anxiety. The degree of sedation varies between individual dogs, which is why it is wise to trial a dose on a calm day before relying on gabapentin for an important event such as a vet visit.
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.
- Plumb DC. Plumb’s Veterinary Drug Handbook. 10th ed. Hoboken, NJ: Wiley-Blackwell, 2023 – gabapentin monograph.
- Merck Veterinary Manual. Pain management and anticonvulsant therapy in dogs – gabapentin. merckvetmanual.com.
- American Animal Hospital Association (AAHA). 2022 Pain Management Guidelines for Dogs and Cats. aaha.org.
- ASPCA Animal Poison Control Center / Pet Poison Helpline. Xylitol toxicosis in dogs. aspca.org.
- PuppaDogs. Gabapentin for Dogs: Uses, Dosage, and Safety. puppadogs.com.















