Reptiles

Can Bearded Dragons Eat Broccoli? Oxalates, Calcium & Serving Tips

QUICK ANSWER
Bearded dragons can eat broccoli in small amounts occasionally, but its goitrogens and moderate oxalates make it unsuitable as a staple green. Offer a few small florets once or twice per month. Both florets and stems are safe when raw and chopped small.

Broccoli appears on many bearded dragon safe food lists, but the key detail most keepers miss is the goitrogen content. These naturally occurring compounds interfere with thyroid function when consumed regularly. For a full overview of all reptile care species we cover, browse our complete silo.

The reptile health community consistently places broccoli in the "feed sparingly" category for this reason.

Small amounts infrequently are not a problem. Weekly or daily broccoli is where the risk builds up over time.

CAUTION — WITH CAUTION
Broccoli for Bearded Dragons
✓ SAFE PARTS
raw florets, stems (chopped fine)
✗ TOXIC PARTS
none acutely toxic, but goitrogens in large/frequent amounts suppress thyroid function
Prep: Wash thoroughly. Chop florets into small pieces and stems into thin slices no wider than the gap between dragon's eyes. Raw only, never cooked. Freq: Once or twice per month, small amounts only Amount: 2-3 small floret pieces per feeding

Broccoli Nutrition: Good Calcium but Goitrogen Content Limits Frequency

Broccoli has truly useful nutrition. The calcium content of 47mg per 100g and a favorable calcium-to-phosphorus ratio of roughly 1.6:1 make it look like a promising green.

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The vitamin C content (89mg per 100g) is also high.

The goitrogen problem is what limits broccoli despite these positives. Goitrogens block iodine uptake in the thyroid gland, reducing thyroid hormone production over time with repeated exposure.

Broccoli Nutritional Profile (per 100g raw)
Nutrient Amount Relevance to Beardies
Calcium 47mg Good. favorable Ca:P ratio
Phosphorus 66mg Moderate, Ca:P ratio 0.7:1
Vitamin C 89.2mg High. useful antioxidant
Vitamin K 101.6mcg High. supports bone metabolism
Oxalates ~19mg Low-moderate
Goitrogens Present Thyroid interference with regular feeding
Fiber 2.6g Good for digestive health

The oxalate level at approximately 19mg per 100g is much lower than spinach (970mg) and not a primary concern at the frequencies recommended here. The goitrogen issue dominates the caution rating. Our spinach for bearded dragons guide covers why the oxalate concern there dwarfs the goitrogen concern here for the strictest feeding limits.

WARNING
Never feed broccoli as a staple green. Regular goitrogen exposure suppresses thyroid hormone production, which affects metabolism, energy levels, skin health, and overall organ function in bearded dragons. Rotate broccoli in no more than once or twice per month.

Can Bearded Dragons Eat Broccoli Stems?

Yes. Broccoli stems are safe and contain similar nutrition to the florets. The texture is firmer, so stems need to be chopped into thinner slices than florets before offering.

Some dragons prefer the florets and ignore stems. Others eat both equally.

Offer whichever part the dragon accepts, in the same small amounts.

  • Broccoli florets: safe, chop into small pieces, good texture variety
  • Broccoli stems: safe, slice thin, chew-friendly when cut small
  • Broccoli leaves: safe in small amounts, similar goitrogen content
  • Cooked broccoli: not appropriate, bearded dragons eat raw vegetables
  • Frozen broccoli: thaw and drain fully, same portion rules apply

Celery shares a similar "safe but low value" classification to broccoli but for different reasons. Our celery for bearded dragons guide covers the fibrous string problem and high water content that make it a poor staple choice.

How to Prepare Broccoli for Bearded Dragons

Raw broccoli florets need chopping to a size that prevents choking. A full floret head is too large for most bearded dragons to manage.

Break it into individual tiny trees and then halve or quarter those.

Stems need thin slicing. A thick stem chunk is both a choking hazard and difficult to chew through for a reptile jaw.

The bearded dragon tank setup guide is the right starting point for understanding how temperature gradients affect metabolism, which in turn determines how well the thyroid system functions alongside the diet you build.

How Often Can Bearded Dragons Eat Broccoli?

Once or twice per month keeps goitrogen exposure safely low. At this frequency, the thyroid is not meaningfully affected and the dragon gets the nutritional benefits without the cumulative risk.

Broccoli should always be a mix-in, not the primary vegetable. A salad of collard greens or mustard greens with a few broccoli pieces is the right approach.

  • Adults (18+ months): 2-3 small pieces, once or twice per month
  • Juveniles (under 18 months): very rarely if at all, staple greens are far more important
  • Dragons with thyroid issues: eliminate broccoli entirely until resolved
  • Dragons eating other goitrogenic foods (kale, cabbage): reduce broccoli frequency further to avoid compounding goitrogen load

Safe fruit options that pair well alongside broccoli in a monthly treat rotation include strawberries for bearded dragons and blueberries for bearded dragons, both of which have no goitrogen concerns. Carrots are a nutritionally superior regular vegetable, and our carrots for bearded dragons guide explains twice-weekly use. Grapes are a fruit treat covered by our grapes for bearded dragons guide. Lettuce varieties are compared in our lettuce for bearded dragons guide. High-water fruit treats include watermelon for bearded dragons. Bananas are a high-sugar treat covered in our bananas for bearded dragons guide. Apples are a safe treat when seeds are removed, covered in our apples for bearded dragons guide. Tomatoes require care, covered in our tomatoes for bearded dragons guide.

CARE TIP
Other brassica vegetables like kale, cabbage, and bok choy also contain goitrogens. If your dragon's salad already includes kale regularly, skip broccoli entirely that week. Track your goitrogenic vegetable rotation the same way you track fruit treat frequency.

Signs of Broccoli Overfeeding or Thyroid Impact

Short-term overfeeding of broccoli may cause no obvious signs. The thyroid impact from goitrogens is slow and shows up after weeks or months of regular feeding.

If your dragon has been eating broccoli or other brassicas frequently and shows these signs, reduce or eliminate goitrogenic vegetables for 4-6 weeks and reassess.

  • Persistent lethargy: reduced thyroid output lowers metabolic rate
  • Poor shedding: thyroid hormones regulate skin turnover in reptiles
  • Weight gain without increased feeding: metabolic slowdown from thyroid suppression
  • Reduced basking behavior: low metabolism makes thermoregulation less active
No. Daily broccoli delivers a continuous goitrogen load that suppresses thyroid function over time. Once or twice per month in small amounts is the safe frequency.
Broccoli should not be a staple. Despite good calcium levels, the goitrogen content makes frequent feeding risky. Use collard greens, mustard greens, or dandelion greens as staples instead.
Yes, broccoli stems are safe when sliced thin. They have the same nutritional profile and goitrogen content as the florets, so the same frequency limits apply.
Cooking reduces goitrogens by around 30-50%, but cooked vegetables are not appropriate for bearded dragons. Feed broccoli raw and simply limit frequency to manage the goitrogen load safely.
Juvenile dragons should eat very little broccoli. Their diet is 70-80% insect protein during the growth phase. The occasional small piece of floret once a month is acceptable but unnecessary.
SOURCES & REFERENCES
1.
Goitrogenic compounds in vegetables and their effects on thyroid function in reptiles
Journal of Exotic Pet Medicine, 2017 Journal

2.
USDA FoodData Central: Broccoli, raw
USDA Agricultural Research Service, 2024 Government

3.
Nutritional disorders of captive reptiles
Mader's Reptile and Amphibian Medicine and Surgery, 3rd ed., 2019 Expert