Out of regular rice and wondering if the jasmine rice in your pantry is dog-safe? Good news: dogs can eat jasmine rice, and it works just as well as plain white rice in the classic bland diet vets recommend for upset stomachs.
Is jasmine rice good for dogs?
Jasmine rice is a long-grain white rice with a soft texture and mild flavor. Nutritionally it's nearly identical to standard white rice: easily digestible carbohydrates, a little protein, very little fat. That digestibility is exactly why it earns a place in a recovery meal — it gives an inflamed gut something easy to process.
The classic bland diet recipe
- Cook jasmine rice plain — water only. No salt, butter, broth with onion or garlic, or seasoning of any kind.
- Pair it 2:1 with a lean protein — boiled skinless chicken breast or plain cooked salmon (here's how to cook salmon for dogs safely).
- Serve small, frequent meals for 2–3 days, then transition back to regular food gradually.
How much jasmine rice can dogs eat?
- Small dogs: 2–4 tablespoons per meal
- Medium dogs: ¼ to ½ cup per meal
- Large dogs: ½ to 1 cup per meal
Rice is calorie-dense, so as an everyday topper keep it to 10% or less of the daily ration — especially for less active or overweight dogs.
When rice helps — and when it doesn't
A bland rice meal is great for a one-off upset stomach: the dog who raided the trash or had an abrupt food change. But if loose stool keeps coming back every few weeks, rice is a band-aid, not a fix. Recurring digestive issues usually trace back to the gut microbiome — the balance of bacteria that govern digestion and even skin health. That's where a daily liquid probiotic for dogs earns its keep, and why we wrote a full guide on what the research actually shows about probiotics for dogs.
Recurring gut trouble paired with constant itching or yeasty ears? Check our guide to what to feed a dog with a yeast infection — in those cases, heavy carbs like rice can actually work against you, since yeast feeds on sugars.
Jasmine rice vs. brown rice for dogs
Brown rice keeps its bran, so it has more fiber and nutrients — good for healthy dogs — but that same fiber makes it harder to digest, which defeats the purpose during stomach upsets. Rule of thumb: jasmine or white rice when recovering, brown rice for everyday variety.
Informational only — not veterinary advice. If vomiting or diarrhea lasts more than 48 hours, includes blood, or comes with lethargy, see your vet promptly.