Are Calming Drugs and Supplements Safe for Horses?
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Are Calming Drugs and Supplements Safe for Horses? What Works and What To Avoid
By Dr Duncan Houston
There is no true “calming drug” for horses. Only sedation, management, or training.
This is one of the most misunderstood areas in equine care.
In practice, many horses labelled as “anxious” are responding to environment, handling, or training gaps. Medications and supplements are often used as a shortcut, but they rarely fix the underlying issue.
Some options can help in specific situations. Others do very little. Some are unsafe.
This guide explains what actually works, what does not, and how to make safe decisions for your horse.
Quick Answer
Calming drugs and supplements can help in certain situations, but most do not truly reduce anxiety. Prescription sedatives reduce awareness and movement rather than calming the mind, while supplements have variable and often mild effects. Safe, long-term results come from management, training, and environment, not medication alone.
Decision Snapshot
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One-off stressful event → vet-guided sedation may be appropriate
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Mild ongoing anxiety → management and training first
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Considering supplements → expect mild effects only
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Unsafe behaviour or unknown products → avoid and seek veterinary advice
Why Horses Need “Calming” in the First Place
Calming products are commonly used for:
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transport and trailer loading
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competitions and events
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veterinary or farrier procedures
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training young or reactive horses
What vets actually see
Most behavioural issues are not random.
They are linked to:
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environment
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feeding
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handling
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lack of exposure or training
Key point
If the cause is not addressed, calming products will not solve the problem.
Prescription Sedatives: What They Really Do
Veterinary sedatives are sometimes necessary.
Common example:
Acepromazine
What it does:
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reduces alertness
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reduces movement
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lowers responsiveness
What it does NOT do:
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reduce fear
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improve understanding
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train behaviour
What vets actually worry about
A sedated horse can still be fearful, just less able to react normally.
Risks of Sedation
Common concerns:
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low blood pressure
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altered coordination
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increased risk of injury
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unpredictable reactions
Specific issue:
Acepromazine can cause penile prolapse in geldings and stallions.
Important rule
Never ride a sedated horse.
Legal and Competition Considerations
Most sedatives are prohibited in competition.
This includes:
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pre-event administration
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residual drug presence
What matters
Using sedation without understanding withdrawal times can lead to disqualification.
Calming Supplements: Do They Work?
Supplements are widely used but often misunderstood.
Common ingredients:
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magnesium
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L-tryptophan
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thiamine (vitamin B1)
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herbal compounds such as valerian or chamomile
What the evidence suggests
Some ingredients, particularly L-tryptophan, may have mild effects in certain horses.
What vets actually see
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variable response
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subtle changes at best
-
no effect in many cases
Key limitation
The supplement industry is poorly regulated, and dosages are often unclear.
What Supplements Can and Cannot Do
They may:
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slightly reduce reactivity
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support marginal behavioural improvement
They do not:
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fix fear-based behaviour
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replace training
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reliably control anxiety
Practical takeaway
Think of supplements as supportive, not primary solutions.
Pheromones: Do They Work in Horses?
Pheromone products are marketed as calming tools.
In theory:
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mimic natural calming signals
In reality:
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research in horses shows little to no consistent benefit
Clinical conclusion
Pheromones are unlikely to produce meaningful results in most horses.
Dangerous and Unsafe Alternatives
Some owners consider human medications or unapproved substances.
This is unsafe.
Risks include:
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incorrect dosing
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toxicity
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neurological effects
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unknown withdrawal times
Clear rule
Never use human psychiatric or sedative drugs in horses without veterinary direction.
What Actually Works for Calming Horses
This is the most important section.
1. Diet and Feeding
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high-fiber diets support calmer behaviour
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consistent forage reduces stress
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avoid excessive starch and sugar
2. Environment
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regular turnout
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social interaction
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predictable routine
3. Training and Behaviour
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gradual desensitisation
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repeated exposure to stressors
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consistent handling
What vets actually see
Horses improve most when:
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their environment is stable
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their routine is predictable
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they are trained appropriately
Severity Framework
Low Concern
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mild nervous behaviour
→ management and routine adjustment
Moderate Concern
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repeat anxiety in specific situations
→ training and environmental changes
High Concern
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unsafe behaviour under stress
→ veterinary assessment and structured training
Critical
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dangerous behaviour risking injury
→ immediate professional intervention required
When to Consider Medication
Medication may be appropriate:
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for short-term procedures
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for transport in high-risk horses
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under veterinary supervision
Key principle
Medication should support management, not replace it.
What To Do Right Now
If your horse is anxious:
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identify the trigger
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assess feeding and environment
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improve routine and turnout
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implement training strategies
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consider supplements only as support
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consult a veterinarian for sedation if needed
Do not:
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rely on supplements alone
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use unknown products
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ignore behavioural causes
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medicate without guidance
The rule to remember
Calm behaviour comes from management and training, not a product.
Common Mistakes
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expecting supplements to fix behaviour
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overusing sedation
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ignoring diet and environment
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inconsistent training
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using unregulated or unsafe products
FAQs
Do calming supplements work for horses?
Sometimes, but effects are usually mild and inconsistent.
Is sedation the same as calming?
No. Sedation reduces awareness but does not remove fear.
Can I ride a horse after giving sedatives?
No. This is unsafe.
What is the best long-term solution for anxiety?
Training, environment, and routine.
Are pheromones effective?
There is little evidence they work in horses.
Final Thoughts
There is no single product that reliably calms horses.
The horses that become calm and manageable are those that are:
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well managed
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correctly fed
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properly trained
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consistently handled
Medications and supplements may help in specific situations, but they are not the foundation.
The foundation is understanding the horse.
If you are unsure whether your horse needs training, management changes, or safe medical support, ASK A VET™ can help guide you with practical advice tailored to your situation.