Steamy afternoon, panting pup, and you holding a frosty treat your dog can actually eat. Yes please.
Let’s make raspberry popsicles for dogs that are safe, simple, and vet-friendly. Zero sketchy ingredients, zero fuss, maximum tail wags.
Ready to be your dog’s favorite human? Grab a blender and a few minutes. Let’s chill.
Why Raspberry Popsicles For Dogs Totally Slap
Raspberries bring fiber, vitamin C, and antioxidants to the party. Your dog gets a refreshing snack that tastes like summer and helps them stay hydrated. You get a clean-ingredient treat that won’t wreck their diet.
They’re also super flexible. You can customize the base for sensitive stomachs, senior teeth, or allergy-prone pups. FYI, moderation matters for all dogs, even treat goblins.
Ingredients: Safe, Simple, and Dog-Approved
You don’t need fancy stuff. Keep it short and wholesome.
- Fresh or frozen raspberries (unsweetened): 1 cup
- Plain, unsweetened yogurt (no xylitol, no artificial sweeteners): 1/2–1 cup
- Water or low-sodium bone broth (optional for thinning): 2–4 tablespoons
- Banana (optional for creaminess): 1/2 small ripe banana
- Silicone molds or ice cube tray + dog-safe “stick” like a carrot baton or a bully stick nub (optional)
Ingredient Notes You Shouldn’t Skip
- Yogurt: Choose plain, unsweetened. Greek yogurt works great. If your dog can’t do dairy, swap with goat’s milk kefir or water.
- Raspberries: They naturally have trace xylitol, but at levels considered safe in normal portions. Keep serving sizes small. IMO, whole-food raspberries beat anything flavored or sweetened.
- Broth: Low-sodium only. No onion, garlic, or weird additives.
How To Make Raspberry Popsicles For Dogs
This takes five minutes. The hardest part is waiting for them to freeze.
- Blend 1 cup raspberries with 1/2 cup plain yogurt. Add banana if using. Thin with water or broth to a pourable texture.
- Strain through a fine mesh if you want fewer seeds for sensitive tummies. Not required.
- Pour into silicone molds or an ice cube tray. For fun, insert a small carrot stick or bully stick nub as a handle.
- Freeze 3–4 hours until solid.
- Pop one out and serve outside or on a washable mat because pink.
Texture Tweaks
- For puppies/seniors: Blend extra smooth and go smaller molds.
- For crunchy lovers: Stir in a few whole berries after blending.
- For hot days: Add extra water for a more hydrating, less rich pop.
Portion Sizes and Safety (The Not-Boring Version)
Treats should stay under 10 percent of daily calories. Popsicles melt fast and taste awesome, so plan ahead.
- Small dogs (under 20 lb): 1 small cube or half a pop.
- Medium dogs (20–50 lb): 1–2 small cubes or one pop.
- Large dogs (50+ lb): 1–3 small cubes or one larger pop.
Watch your dog while they lick, especially if you used a “stick.” Avoid hard, swallowable sticks for gulpers. If your dog has pancreatitis, dairy intolerance, or a super sensitive GI tract, use water instead of yogurt and skip banana.
Flavor Upgrades Your Dog Will Beg For
You can riff on the base and still keep it dog-safe.
Berry Good Trio
Blend raspberries with a few blueberries and strawberries. Keep the total fruit to about 1 cup.
Peanut Butter Smoothie Pop
Add 1 teaspoon unsalted, xylitol-free peanut butter. Stir, don’t overdo it. Rich equals delicious but also equals, well, poop math.
Herbal Cooler
Finely chop fresh mint or basil and mix in. It smells fancy and can freshen dog breath a little.
Coconut Pupscicle
Swap half the yogurt with light coconut milk. Keep portions small since coconut can be rich.
Smart Storage and Zero-Mess Serving
Store popsicles in a freezer-safe container or bag for up to 2 months. Separate layers with parchment so they don’t fuse into a berry iceberg.
Serve outside, in the bathtub, or on a lick mat to contain the pink splash zone. If you want maximum enrichment, freeze the mix in a rubber treat toy. Longer licking = calmer pup. Science-ish.
What Makes Raspberries Dog-Friendly?
Short answer: the nutrients rock and the sugar stays on the lower side compared to some fruits.
- Fiber helps digestion and can slow down sugar absorption.
- Vitamin C and antioxidants support overall health.
- Water content boosts hydration, which matters on hot days.
Too many berries can cause loose stool, so stick to the portion guide. FYI, if your dog already has tummy drama, introduce new treats slowly.
Troubleshooting: Because Things Happen
My Dog Ignored It
Try adding a teaspoon of tuna water (from tuna in water, no salt added) to the blend or lightly smear a bit of peanut butter on the outside.
It Froze Too Hard
Let the pop sit at room temp for 3–5 minutes, or pour the mix into shallower molds next time. More water also softens the bite.
Pink Stains Everywhere
Serve on a towel, in the yard, or over a lick mat. If it hits fabric, cold water rinse first, then treat with a pet-safe stain remover.
FAQ
Can all dogs eat raspberry popsicles?
Most healthy dogs can, in moderation. Avoid for dogs with known berry allergies, severe GI issues, or after a pancreatitis episode unless your vet gives the green light. For dairy-sensitive dogs, use water, kefir, or goat’s milk alternatives.
How often can I give these?
A few times per week works for most dogs, as part of the 10 percent treat rule. Hot day and extra exercise? One small extra cube is fine IMO. Just watch stool quality and adjust.
Are store-bought popsicles safe for dogs?
Usually not. Many include artificial sweeteners like xylitol, added sugar, grapes, or dairy additives that can upset stomachs. Homemade means you control everything, which is a W for your dog.
Do raspberries really contain xylitol?
They contain tiny natural amounts. At normal treat portions, they’re considered safe for dogs. The real risk is artificial xylitol in human products, so always check labels on yogurt and peanut butter.
Can I use other fruits?
Yes. Blueberries, strawberries, mango, and banana all work. Avoid grapes and raisins entirely. Keep pineapple limited due to acidity and sugar.
What if my dog gulps the popsicle whole?
Make smaller cubes, skip any “stick,” and offer the treat in a slow-feeder or hold the edge while your dog licks. You know your dog best. Safety first, heroics second.
Conclusion
Raspberry popsicles for dogs check every box: easy, refreshing, and actually good for your pup in reasonable amounts. Blend a handful of real ingredients, freeze, and watch your dog lose their mind in the cutest way possible. Keep portions small, ingredients clean, and your camera ready. FYI, once your dog meets these pops, your ice cube trays belong to them now.

