Tomato is one of the clearest examples of a plant where one part is safe and another part is truly dangerous. The ripe red fruit poses no toxicity concern.
Every green part of the same plant, including leaves, vines, stems, and unripe fruit, contains alkaloids that cause neurological and digestive harm in rabbits.
Keepers who grow their own tomatoes need to be particularly careful. A rabbit that accesses a garden with tomato plants could easily eat leaves or unripe fruit before you notice.
Knowing the distinction before that happens matters. Understanding small mammal feeding safety means recognizing which plant parts cross from treat into toxin.
Tomato Nutrition: Low Sugar, High Lycopene
Ripe tomatoes contain 2.6g of sugar per 100g, making them one of the lower-sugar fruit options for rabbits. Botanically a fruit, tomatoes lack the intense sweetness of strawberries or grapes, which means the gut disruption risk from sugar is lower than with most treats.
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Spinach is another caution food for rabbits, though its concern is oxalate accumulation rather than alkaloid toxicity, which our piece on spinach oxalate limits for rabbits explains with rotation frequency limits.
Our complete rabbit care guide covers the broader diet context that occasional tomato treats fit into alongside hay and leafy greens.
The notable compound in ripe tomato is lycopene, an antioxidant at 2.5mg per 100g that contributes to the red color. At treat-sized portions this is nutritionally incidental for rabbits, but it's a data point worth knowing.
The high water content of 94% supports hydration without the sugar load of watermelon.
- Sugar per 100g: 2.6g. low, similar to celery territory
- Water content: 94%. high, keep portions small to avoid gut dilution
- Fiber per 100g: 1.2g. moderate, helps balance water content
- Lycopene per 100g: 2.5mg. antioxidant present in ripe red fruit
- Potassium per 100g: 237mg. useful mineral at any serving size
Which Parts of the Tomato Are Toxic?
The toxic compounds in tomato plants concentrate in the green, chlorophyll-containing tissues. Solanine is the primary alkaloid, and it's present throughout the stem, leaves, and vines at levels that can cause acute toxicity in small animals.
Carrot tops are an underrated low-sugar leafy green that work well in the daily rotation alongside the occasional tomato treat, as our article on carrot tops and treat portions for rabbits covers.
Strawberries at 4.9g of sugar per 100g are a lower-acid fruit treat that pairs well with tomato's role as an occasional addition, and our guide on strawberry frequency for rabbits covers portion rules.
Unripe green tomatoes also contain significant solanine. As the tomato ripens and turns red, the solanine content drops dramatically.
Fully ripe red tomato has very low solanine levels in the fruit flesh, which is why the ripe fruit is safe while unripe tomato is not.
| Part | Safe? | Reason |
|---|---|---|
| Ripe red flesh | Yes. treat | Low solanine, safe in small portions |
| Ripe tomato skin | Yes | Same as flesh. wash thoroughly |
| Ripe tomato seeds | Yes | No toxic compounds in mature seeds |
| Green calyx (top) | No | Contains solanine. remove before serving |
| Unripe green tomato | No | High solanine content |
| Leaves and stems | No | Toxic. solanine and tomatine throughout |
| Vines | No | Toxic. same as leaves and stems |
How to Prepare Tomatoes for Rabbits
Cherry tomatoes are the easiest format for rabbit portions because their small size naturally controls the amount you serve. One cherry tomato halved is an appropriate single serving for most medium-sized rabbits.
Celery at 1.3g of sugar per 100g and very low acid is one of the safest vegetable companions to serve on the same day as tomato, as our guide on celery string safety for rabbits explains.
Building the daily green around romaine keeps total acid and water load in balance on tomato days, and our guide on safe daily lettuce varieties for rabbits explains the best options for everyday feeding.
The green star-shaped calyx at the top of the tomato must come off completely. Even a small piece of green calyx contains solanine at levels worth avoiding.
Cut it off with a knife rather than just pulling it, to ensure you remove the full green section cleanly.
How Much Tomato Per Serving?
One to two cherry tomato-sized pieces per serving keeps the water and acid load within safe limits. Tomatoes are mildly acidic, and while this doesn't cause toxicity, large amounts of acidic food can irritate the gut lining in sensitive rabbits over time.
Watermelon has a similar high water content to tomato, so avoid combining large amounts of both on the same day, as our piece on watermelon portions and water load for rabbits explains.
Apple slices also have their own seed toxicity concern, similar in principle to tomato leaf alkaloids, which our guide on apple seed removal for rabbits covers in detail.
Once or twice per week is appropriate frequency. Tomato sits at a lower sugar level than most fruit treats, but the high water content means you don't want to feed it alongside other high-moisture foods on the same day.
- Dwarf breeds (under 2kg): half a cherry tomato, once per week
- Medium breeds (2-4kg): one whole cherry tomato or equivalent cube, 1-2x per week
- Large breeds (4kg+): two cherry tomatoes or equivalent, up to twice per week
Signs of Tomato Toxicity or Overfeeding
Symptoms of solanine poisoning from leaves or unripe fruit appear within 1-3 hours of ingestion. They differ from sugar overfeeding symptoms and are more serious.
If you keep guinea pigs alongside rabbits, our guide on tomato safety for guinea pigs covers how the rules differ, particularly around vitamin C content.
Guinea pigs can also eat ripe tomato in small amounts, but their dietary vitamin C requirement changes how tomato fits into their diet, which our rabbit vs guinea pig comparison covers.
Grapes also raise toxicity questions in other species, and our article on grape caution portions for rabbits covers the current evidence alongside the high sugar content concern.
Weakness, dilated pupils, and drooling together indicate alkaloid toxicity rather than digestive upset.
Overfeeding ripe tomato without any toxic parts causes a milder picture: soft cecotropes and loose stools from the water load, resolving within 24-48 hours on hay-only feeding.
- Drooling or wet chin: possible sign of solanine toxicity. call vet
- Dilated pupils: alkaloid poisoning sign. emergency vet visit
- Weakness or stumbling: neurological effect of solanine. emergency
- Soft cecotropes: from overfeeding ripe fruit. resolve with 24hr hay-only
- Reduced appetite: after large portions. monitor and provide hay only
Banana at 12g of sugar per 100g is at the opposite end of the treat spectrum from tomato, and our piece on banana portion limits for rabbits covers the starch fermentation risk alongside serving sizes.
Hamsters have their own set of food safety rules that differ from rabbit guidelines, which our hamster care guide covers for keepers who own both species.