Pet+ Activated Charcoal Gel

Vet-grade activated charcoal for dogs & cats — pre-dosed, ready in your cabinet for the 15 minutes that matter most.

  • Acts in 15 Minutes
  • Vet-Grade Charcoal
  • Pre-Dosed by Weight
  • Replaces $3,000 ER Visit
$49.99 $41.99 Summer Sale - Save $8
Order now for delivery to  United StatesUS by July 10th

Last 2026 batch shipping now.
Restock not until September.

Don't bet on the timing of the next emergency.

June Sold Out — 1,500+ tubes shipped
July Almost Sold Out — restock not until September
  • USED IN EMERGENCY VET PROTOCOLS
  • SAME CHARCOAL AS THE ER
  • 30-DAY MONEY-BACK GUARANTEE
The Problem

What Your Dog Will Try to Eat This Year

Dogs eat everything. Chocolate. Grapes. Onions. The painkiller you dropped on the floor. The sugar-free gum in your guest's bag.

And once they swallow it, you have 15 minutes before the toxins hit the bloodstream.

Most owners panic, drive 30 minutes to the emergency vet, and pay $2,500–$4,500 for activated charcoal and IV fluids — the exact treatment you could have started at home, in the first 60 seconds.

The catch? You needed it on your shelf before the emergency.

What's in YOUR house

12 things in the average home that can kill your dog.

Every item below sends thousands of dogs to the ER each year. Lethal doses are smaller than most owners realize.

Chocolate

Chocolate

1oz dark chocolate is toxic for a 20lb dog

Grapes & raisins

Grapes & raisins

A single grape can cause kidney failure in small dogs

Xylitol (sugar-free gum)

Xylitol (sugar-free gum)

2–3 pieces can cause severe hypoglycemia

Onions & garlic

Onions & garlic

A quarter onion can damage red blood cells

Ibuprofen / acetaminophen

Ibuprofen / acetaminophen

One pill can damage kidneys and liver

Macadamia nuts

Macadamia nuts

6 nuts cause weakness and tremors in a 20lb dog

Lily plants

Lily plants

2–3 leaves can cause kidney failure (esp. in cats)

Antifreeze

Antifreeze

1 teaspoon can be fatal for a small dog

Rat & ant bait

Rat & ant bait

Any amount is potentially lethal

Marijuana / edibles

Marijuana / edibles

THC causes severe toxicity in dogs; edibles compound chocolate risk

Alcohol

Alcohol

1oz can cause poisoning in a 20lb dog

Avocado pit

Avocado pit

Choking + persin toxin in seed, pit, and skin

I administer activated charcoal in nearly every toxic ingestion case I see. An owner keeping a vet-grade tube at home is the difference between a stable patient walking in and a critical one. Those first minutes are everything.

Dr. Emily Carter, DVMEmergency Veterinarian
The Solution

What vets reach for. Now in your hands.

Pet+ Activated Charcoal Gel binds toxins in your pet's gut before they hit the bloodstream — safely, gently, and without the trauma of induced vomiting.

  • The same charcoal ER vets use: Identical active ingredient to what a $400/hour emergency vet would administer — except this one is already in your cabinet when the clock starts.

  • Stops the poison before it hits the bloodstream: Binds toxins in the gut so they pass out safely. Untreated, most toxic substances cross into the bloodstream within 15 minutes.

  • No second emergency on top of the first: Peroxide burns the throat. Salt causes sodium poisoning. Bread does nothing. Charcoal gel binds toxins gently — no vomiting, no aspiration, no compounding trauma.

  • Acts in seconds, not minutes: Gel absorbs faster than capsules or powder. By the time a pill dissolves, the toxins already have a head start you can't take back.

  • Chicken-flavored — they take it willingly: Most pets swallow it like a treat. Critical: a struggling, panicked dog spitting out medicine is how you lose the window.

Without Pet+: ER, $3,000, hours of waiting

Panic. 32-minute drive. IV charcoal at $400/hour. A long, sleepless wait to know if your dog is okay.

With Pet+: 30 seconds in your kitchen

Open cabinet. One squeeze. Toxins bound in 15 minutes. The $45 already paid does what a $3,000 ER visit does.

How it works

Four steps. No panic. No guesswork.

Step 1

Remove the cap on the end of the applicator.

Step 2

Twist the dial based on your pet's weight (1cc per 1lb of bodyweight). For example, a 40 lb dog will need 40cc of Pet+ Activated Charcoal Gel.

Step 3

Insert the tip of the applicator directly into your pet's mouth. Slowly press the plunger, allowing time to swallow.

Step 4

Put the cap back on the tip of the applicator and store in a cool, dry place.

Don't try this at home

Pet+ vs the kitchen remedies people Google at 2am

Most home remedies for pet poisoning are myths — some of them dangerous. Here's what actually works.

Pet+ Activated Charcoal Gel DIY home remedies
Removes toxins
Binds 4,000+ toxins before they reach the bloodstream
Doesn't bind anything — at best, dilutes
Vet recommended
Yes — the exact intervention used in ER
Vets warn against — most cause more harm
Risk to your dog
Vet-formulated, food-grade, no side effects
Salt causes sodium poisoning. Mustard burns. Bread does nothing.
Time to act
30 seconds, pre-dosed by weight
Googling at 2am while your dog is shaking
Stops poison from being absorbed
Yes — binds in gut before bloodstream
No — just upset stomach, toxins still absorbed
Shelf life
2 years, sealed in your cabinet
Improvised from whatever's in the kitchen
What it actually does
Same charcoal a $400/hour vet would give
Guesswork dressed up as first aid
It happened to her too

Sarah had 14 minutes.

One Tuesday in March, the gap between an empty cabinet and a stocked one was the difference in how this night ended.

An empty dark chocolate wrapper on a kitchen counter at night

Part 1 of 4

It was a Tuesday night. Sarah was on the couch. Her three-year-old golden, Max, was in the kitchen. He'd found the dark chocolate bar she'd forgotten on the counter — the kind a dietician friend had given her last week.

He ate the whole thing.

A golden retriever looking up with concerned eyes

Part 2 of 4

By the time she came in, he was on his fourth piece.

His tail was low. He kept looking up at her. He knew.

A hand reaching into a kitchen cabinet for the Pet+ Charcoal Gel

Part 3 of 4

The ER is 32 minutes from her house. Poison control said it: “You have about 15 minutes before the theobromine hits his bloodstream — if you can get charcoal into him before then, that's your best shot.”

She had it. She'd bought it six months earlier on a whim, after another dog mom on her street had a close call. She'd never opened it.

A golden retriever sleeping peacefully on a sunlit bed

Part 4 of 4

She opened it that night. One squeeze of the gel. Max swallowed it like a treat.

By morning he was asleep on the foot of her bed, breathing slow and steady.

Max is seven now.

30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

30-Day Money-Back Guarantee

If you're not satisfied for any reason within 30 days, we refund every cent. The truth: we make this product hoping every customer leaves it sealed on a shelf for two years and never opens it. If you ever do reach for it, you should trust that it works — the same activated charcoal vets give in the ER, just already in your cabinet when the clock starts.

Get Pet+ Emergency Kit ⚡ Limited stock available
You asked. We answer.

Everything You Need to Know

Do I actually need this if my dog never eats things off the floor?

Every year in the US, over 38,000 dogs are rushed to the emergency vet for chocolate ingestion alone. Add grapes, ibuprofen, xylitol (sugar-free gum), onions, lily plants, and the actual number of close calls climbs into the hundreds of thousands.

The owners say the same thing afterward: “I had no idea she'd eat that.” Dogs are opportunistic — a counter, a guest's bag, a moment when your back's turned. The average dog has 2–3 toxic-substance encounters in its lifetime.

The product is $45 and sits sealed on a shelf for two years. The math is uncomfortable when you think it through.

When should I give it to my dog?

Use it in the first 15–60 minutes after your dog ingests something they shouldn't have: chocolate, grapes, raisins, onions, sugar-free gum (xylitol), human medications, or unknown substances. The sooner you act, the more toxin gets bound before it hits the bloodstream.

Always call your vet or the ASPCA Animal Poison Control hotline (888-426-4435) at the same time — Pet+ Charcoal Gel is a first-aid bridge, not a replacement for professional advice.

Is it safe? Are there side effects?

Yes — activated charcoal is one of the most well-studied substances in veterinary medicine. The most common side effect is black stool for 24–48 hours, which is harmless. Some dogs experience mild constipation; making sure they drink water resolves it.

Do not use if your dog is unconscious, having seizures, or has ingested a corrosive substance (bleach, drain cleaner). Call an emergency vet immediately in those cases.

How do I administer it?

The gel comes in a pre-dosed oral syringe — no measuring required. Place the syringe tip in the corner of your dog's mouth, between the cheek and back teeth, and slowly press the plunger. Most dogs accept it like any flavored treat. Dose chart by weight is printed on the bottle.

How long does the gel last on the shelf?

Two years from manufacture, sealed and stored at room temperature. Once opened, use within 90 days. Each bottle has the manufacture and expiration dates printed on the base.

Does it replace going to the vet?

No. Pet+ Charcoal Gel is a first-aid bridge — it buys you time and reduces toxin absorption while you talk to a vet or drive to one. It's the difference between a stable dog and a critical one when you arrive. For known toxic ingestions, always still seek professional veterinary care.

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