Back to Blog

Why Are My Dog’s Eyes Red? A Vet’s 2025 Guide to Causes, Treatment & Prevention 🐶👁️

  • 115 days ago
  • 7 min read
Why Are My Dog’s Eyes Red? A Vet’s 2025 Guide to Causes, Treatment & Prevention 🐶👁️

    In this article

Red Eyes in Dogs? A Vet’s 2025 Guide to Causes, Care & Prevention 🐶👁️

By Dr. Duncan Houston BVSc

1. Why Red Eyes Matter

Redness in a dog’s eye means inflammation—either on the surface (conjunctiva, cornea) or inside (uvea, sclera)—and can range from harmless irritation to sight‑threatening disease. Prompt assessment is key.

2. Where the Redness Comes From

  • Episcleral injection: deeper ocular inflammation (uveitis, glaucoma).
  • Conjunctival hyperemia: “pink eye,” usually allergies or surface infection.
  • Subconjunctival hemorrhage: bruising under the conjunctiva, from trauma or clotting issues.
  • Corneal neovascularization: new vessels over the cornea from chronic ulcers or inflammation.
  • Hyphema: blood inside the eye, seen in trauma, hypertension, and uveitis.

3. Common Causes of Red Eyes

🌿 Allergies and Irritants

Pollen, dust, smoke or chemicals may cause conjunctivitis with mild redness and tearing.

🤒 Infectious or Inflammatory

Conjunctivitis—bacterial or viral—with discharge, squinting, swollen conjunctivae.

😢 Dry Eye (KCS)

Reduced tear production leads to redness, mucous discharge, and corneal changes.

👁️ Eyelid Issues

  • Entropion – inward eyelid rubbing the cornea irritates/redness.
  • Cherry Eye – prolapsed third eyelid gland, appears bright red and swollen.

🩸 Trauma & Foreign Bodies

Tree branches, grass seeds, or blunt injury can cause ulcers, hemorrhage, or even a ruptured globe.

🟣 Corneal Ulcers

Scratches or infections that damage the cornea are extremely painful and red, and need immediate treatment.

⚠️ Uveitis & Glaucoma

Inflammation or raised intraocular pressure causes redness, cloudiness, and squinting, which can lead to blindness.

🧬 Degenerative Conditions

Corneal dystrophy (inherited cloudiness) usually isn’t painful but can cause vessels to form over the cornea.

🔬 Systemic Issues

Hypertension, clotting disorders, tumors behind the eye, or autoimmune disease may cause hemorrhage or uveitis.

4. Signs That Mean Urgent Vet Care

  • Severe squinting or pawing at the eye
  • Cloudy cornea or change in pupil size
  • Bleeding in or around the eye
  • Visible ulcer (fluorescein stain positive)
  • Changes in vision or bumping into objects
  • Discharge that is thick, yellow, green, or bloody
  • Severe swelling of eyelids or tissues

These may indicate corneal ulcers, glaucoma, uveitis, hemorrhage or foreign body—treat within hours to avoid vision loss.

5. What You Can Do At Home

  • Gently clean discharge with warm saline and soft cloth
  • Apply cold compress briefly for comfort
  • Avoid rubbing or applying drops without vet advice
  • Keep the environment free of smoke, dust, and pollen
  • Use an e‑collar to protect the eye if necessary

These are supportive measures—don’t use ointments or drops unless prescribed by a vet.

6. Vet Diagnosis & Tests 🧪

  • Full physical and vision assessment
  • Fluorescein stain for ulcers
  • Schirmer tear test for tear production (KCS)
  • Tonometer for intraocular pressure (glaucoma)
  • Bloodwork, urinalysis, and blood pressure check
  • Imaging (ultrasound/CT/MRI) if deeper structures are involved

7. Treatment Options

  • Allergies/Conjunctivitis: topical antihistamines or antibiotics
  • KCS: tear stimulants (cyclosporine) + artificial tears
  • Entropion/Cherry-eye: surgical correction
  • Ulcers: antibiotic drops, pain relief, and possible surgery
  • Glaucoma: medications, laser, or drainage surgery
  • Uveitis: steroids or NSAIDs, treat underlying disease

8. Prevention Strategies

  • Protect eyes during walks, keep bushes trimmed
  • Regular vet visits—eye pressure and tear checks
  • Manage allergies and use safe grooming products
  • Monitor for early signs—redness, tearing, pawing

9. Ask A Vet Support 🐾

  • 📱 Ask A Vet App – immediate guidance for red eye concerns
  • 🛠️ Woopf & Purrz EyeCare Kits™ – saline drops, charts, protective tools
  • 🎓 Eye Health Webinars – detect red flags, injury prevention, breed-specific care

10. Final Takeaway

Red eyes can be benign or serious. Monitor the severity, discharge type, and related signs. If anything seems off—pain, vision changes, ulcers—see your vet without delay. Eye conditions escalate fast, but early intervention saves sight and comfort. 🐶👁️❤️

Concerned about your dog’s red eyes? Visit AskAVet.com or open the app—veterinary help is just a click away.

Dog Approved
Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted
Dog Approved
Build to Last
Easy to Clean
Vet-Designed & Tested
Adventure-ready
Quality Tested & Trusted