Reptiles

Can Leopard Geckos Eat Butterworms? Safety, Portions & Risks

QUICK ANSWER
Leopard geckos can eat butterworms, but only as an occasional treat, not a staple. Butterworms are high in fat (29% dry matter) and can cause obesity and appetite addiction if fed too often. Limit them to once per week at most, and never more than 2 to 3 worms per session.

Butterworms are the candy of the leopard gecko world. Geckos love them, eat them eagerly, and will often refuse other insects after repeated butterworm exposure. For a full overview of all reptile care species we cover, browse our complete silo.

That preference is the problem: leopard gecko nutrition requires balanced feeders, and butterworms are too fat-dense to anchor any diet.

Used correctly, once per week as a treat or appetite stimulant, butterworms fill a useful role. Used carelessly, they create obese geckos with fatty liver disease and a stubborn refusal to eat anything else. See the complete leopard gecko care species guide for the full diet framework.

CAUTION — WITH CAUTION
Butterworms for Leopard Geckos
✓ SAFE PARTS
Whole body
✗ TOXIC PARTS
None, but high fat content is the hazard
Prep: No preparation needed, offer live directly Freq: Once per week maximum Amount: 2 to 3 worms per session for adults

Butterworm Nutrition: High Fat, Decent Calcium, Poor Staple

Butterworms are the larvae of the Chilean moth Chilecomadia moorei. They carry 29% fat on a dry-matter basis, which is roughly four times the fat content of dubia roaches and more than double that of mealworms.

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The redeeming quality is their calcium content. Butterworms have a calcium-to-phosphorus ratio near 1:1, which is far better than most feeder insects and means they need less dusting than crickets or mealworms to deliver a net calcium benefit.

Butterworm vs. Common Leopard Gecko Feeders (Dry Matter)
Feeder Protein % Fat % Ca:P Ratio
Butterworm 16 29 ~1:1
Dubia roach 23 7 ~1:3
Cricket 21 7 ~1:9
Mealworm 20 13 ~1:3
Waxworm 16 22 ~1:7

Dubia roaches are the ideal lean counterpart to butterworms in a rotation. Our dubia roaches for leopard geckos guide covers the 23% protein, 7% fat profile that makes them the best staple feeder.

CARE TIP
Because butterworms already have a favorable calcium ratio, you can dust them lightly or skip the calcium dust entirely for the occasional treat feeding. This makes them useful when you want to deliver a treat without overloading on supplements.

The Addiction Risk: Why Geckos Reject Other Food After Butterworms

Butterworms have a distinctive scent and high fat content that leopard geckos find intensely rewarding. After several consecutive butterworm feedings, many geckos enter a hunger strike when offered anything less palatable.

This is called prey imprinting or food fixation, and it is one of the most common problems in leopard gecko husbandry. A gecko that refuses all insects except butterworms is at nutritional risk, because butterworms alone cannot provide a complete diet.

  • Rotation prevents fixation: vary feeders weekly so the gecko never forms a single-prey preference
  • Never offer butterworms consecutively: back-to-back sessions build preference faster than anything else
  • Breaking a hunger strike: withhold food for 5 to 7 days, then offer staple insects before resorting to butterworms as a reset tool
  • Juveniles are more susceptible: young geckos imprint more easily, so introduce butterworms only after staple feeding is well established

Waxworms cause the same food-fixation problem at slightly lower fat levels. Our waxworms for leopard geckos guide compares both high-fat treats and explains when each is appropriate.

WARNING
A gecko that has eaten only butterworms for more than 2 weeks is at risk of fatty liver disease. Symptoms include lethargy, loss of color, and swollen abdomen. This condition requires veterinary intervention and is difficult to reverse once established.

Safe Portion Size and Frequency

Adult leopard geckos should receive no more than 2 to 3 butterworms per treat session. For juveniles under 4 months, limit to 1 to 2 worms and only after the primary insect meal has been offered and accepted.

One session per week is the maximum frequency that keeps butterworms in treat territory. At that rate the gecko gets the palatability boost and calcium benefit without accumulating excess fat reserves.

Crickets are the leanest staple to pair with butterworm treat sessions. Our crickets for leopard geckos guide covers the feeding schedule that keeps weekly fat averages low.

When Butterworms Are Actually Useful

Despite the cautions, there are specific situations where butterworms earn their place. Keepers who understand the risks can use them strategically rather than casually.

Their high palatability makes them the go-to tool when a gecko is recovering from illness, coming out of a shed, or has been refusing food for more than a week. The fat density also supports geckos that are underweight and need rapid caloric supplementation.

  • Post-illness recovery: calorie-dense and eaten readily when appetite is suppressed
  • Underweight geckos: short-term supplementation to rebuild fat reserves in the tail
  • Appetite stimulation: one butterworm can trigger feeding response in a fasting gecko
  • Pre-brumation loading: brief increase before winter cooling to build fat reserves
NOTE
Butterworms cannot be gut-loaded effectively. They are in larval diapause when sold and do not actively feed. What you see is what you get nutritionally, which is why gut-loading your staple insects matters so much more.

Storing Butterworms at Home

Butterworms arrive in bran substrate and keep best in the refrigerator at 50 to 55°F. Cold temperatures slow their metabolic rate and prevent them from maturing into moths.

At room temperature they mature within days and become unsuitable as feeders.

Do not freeze them. Freezing kills butterworms and destroys the nutritional value.

Refrigerated butterworms typically stay viable for 3 to 4 months in the original bran container.

Mealworms store well in the refrigerator at similar temperatures and make a practical pairing with butterworms for home feeder management. Our mealworms for leopard geckos guide covers the cold-storage protocol and fat-content comparison with butterworms.

Superworms are a larger treat option for adult geckos that want more size variety. Our superworms for leopard geckos guide covers the mandible warning and 1-2x weekly frequency guidance.

Leopard geckos are strict insectivores, but some keepers ask about other foods. Our fruit for leopard geckos guide explains why plant matter offers no nutritional benefit for this species, and our vegetables for leopard geckos guide covers the same conclusion from the herbivore side.

Once per week is the maximum. More frequent feeding builds a fat preference that causes geckos to refuse healthier staple insects. Reserve them as treats or appetite stimulants only.
Yes, in very small amounts. Offer 1 to 2 worms maximum, only after the primary insect meal has been accepted. Do not introduce them until the juvenile is already eating staple feeders consistently.
Not necessarily. Butterworms have a calcium-to-phosphorus ratio near 1:1, which is far better than most feeders. Light dusting is optional, but skipping it on this specific feeder is acceptable.
Stop offering butterworms entirely for 2 to 3 weeks. Offer staple insects every 2 to 3 days and wait. Most geckos break the hunger strike within 7 to 10 days when no alternative is available.
Refrigerate at 50 to 55°F in the original bran container. Do not freeze. Properly refrigerated butterworms stay viable for 3 to 4 months. Remove any dead worms promptly to prevent mold.

The important distinction is simple: leopard geckos need insect variety and portion control, not produce or vertebrate prey.

SOURCES & REFERENCES
1.
Proximate Composition of Feeder Insects for Captive Reptiles
Zoo Biology, 2012 Journal

2.
Hepatic Lipidosis in Captive Reptiles
Journal of Herpetological Medicine and Surgery, 2016 Journal

3.
Leopard Gecko Nutrition and Common Feeding Errors
Merck Veterinary Manual, 2023 Expert