New York Symptom Guide • Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM • Last updated 2026-06-19
Dog Loss of Appetite in New York
A sudden loss of appetite (inappetence) in dogs is rarely just pickiness. Most dogs who skip a meal are telling you something — pain, nausea, illness, dental disease, or stress. A single skipped meal is usually fine; more than 24 hours of refusing food in an adult dog (or any meal-skipping in a puppy or senior dog) warrants attention.
For New York pet parents specifically: New York dogs sometimes refuse food during seasonal transitions (heat waves, cold snaps, allergy season). Apartment dogs may also have stress-related appetite suppression from construction noise, building changes, or new neighbors. NYC pet parents with shared living spaces should consider environmental stressors before assuming medical illness.
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Licensed in New York · Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM · Last updated 2026-06-20
Why loss of appetite matters in New York
New York's apartment-dominant pet population — 1.1 million dogs and cats in NYC alone — drives a unique veterinary risk profile: separation anxiety in dense apartments, holiday food season GI episodes, winter rock-salt paw burns, and limited in-person vet access in many boroughs.
New York pets face urban-specific triggers: dietary indiscretion from street food (a leading NYC cause of vomiting), hot-pavement paw burns reaching 130°F+ in July-August, rock-salt and ice-melt ingestion in winter, apartment-confined separation anxiety, and holiday-season pancreatitis from rich human food. Upstate winters add cold-weather joint flare-ups and indoor allergen exposure during heating season.
Common causes of loss of appetite in New York dogs
- Pain — dental, joint, abdominal, or other hidden source
- Nausea (vomiting, GI inflammation, motion sickness)
- Recent vaccination or medication
- Stress or anxiety (new environment, new pet, schedule change)
- Dental disease (broken tooth, abscess, severe periodontal disease)
- Foreign body obstruction (urgent)
- Pancreatitis
- Kidney or liver disease
- Cancer
- Tick-borne disease
Red flags — call a vet immediately
- ⚠ Complete refusal of food AND water for more than 24 hours
- ⚠ Refusal of food in a puppy under 6 months
- ⚠ Refusal of food plus vomiting, lethargy, or pale gums
- ⚠ Refusal of food in a diabetic dog (life-threatening hypoglycemia risk)
- ⚠ Refusal of food plus jaundice (yellow gums or eyes)
- ⚠ Refusal of food plus distended abdomen
- ⚠ Sudden complete inappetence in a previously hungry dog
Any of these in your New York dog means stop reading the internet and call a vet or go to an emergency clinic. RexVet can help triage by video if you're not sure — but emergencies need in-person care.
When telehealth works — and when it doesn't
RexVet can triage moderate appetite loss effectively, especially in established chronic-disease patients (cancer recovery, CKD, post-op recovery) where appetite stimulants like Cerenia, mirtazapine, or capromorelin are part of the long-term plan. We can refill these prescriptions and adjust dietary strategy.
Start a $64.99 video visit →In-person care is essential for: completely refusing all food and water more than 24 hours, refusing food with vomiting and lethargy, suspected foreign body, jaundice, or any acute presentation in a puppy or diabetic dog.
What you can do at home for your New York dog
- 1 Warm the food slightly to release aroma (sick dogs eat warm food more readily)
- 2 Try high-value foods: boiled chicken, plain rice, small amounts of low-sodium broth
- 3 Hand-feed or use a different bowl — sometimes location/dish issues are the cause
- 4 Eliminate competing pets at mealtime if relevant
- 5 Track water intake — refusing both food and water is a bigger concern than refusing food alone
- 6 Note any other symptoms (mouth pain, drooling, dropping food, head-shaking)
Talk to a New York-licensed vet from home
RexVet is licensed across all 62 New York counties — $64.99 video visits 24/7.
$64.99 flat — no membership, no subscription, same price 24/7. New York-licensed RexVet veterinarians are on call 24/7 — including overnight and weekend hours when most NYC clinics are closed.
Book a vet visit — $64.99Loss of Appetite in New York dogs
Frequently asked questions
When should I worry about my New York dog won't eat?
Red flags that mean call a vet immediately: Complete refusal of food AND water for more than 24 hours; Refusal of food in a puppy under 6 months; Refusal of food plus vomiting, lethargy, or pale gums. New York-specific factor: New York dogs sometimes refuse food during seasonal transitions (heat waves, cold snaps, allergy season).
Is there an online vet licensed in New York for dog loss of appetite?
Yes — RexVet is a New York-licensed veterinary practice. New York-licensed RexVet veterinarians are on call 24/7 — including overnight and weekend hours when most NYC clinics are closed. Our New York-licensed veterinarians can examine your dog by video and either treat the issue, prescribe medication, or refer to in-person care if needed. Visits are $64.99 flat.
Can a RexVet online vet treat loss of appetite in my dog?
For many cases, yes. RexVet can triage moderate appetite loss effectively, especially in established chronic-disease patients (cancer recovery, CKD, post-op recovery) where appetite stimulants like Cerenia, mirtazapine, or capromorelin are part of the long-term plan. We can refill these prescriptions and adjust dietary strategy. A $64.99 video visit gets you a licensed New York vet who can recommend home care, prescribe medications via RexVetRx (in-house pharmacy with same-day delivery in major New York ZIPs), or tell you when in-person care is required.
When does my New York dog need to be seen in person instead of online?
In-person care is essential for: completely refusing all food and water more than 24 hours, refusing food with vomiting and lethargy, suspected foreign body, jaundice, or any acute presentation in a puppy or diabetic dog. If your dog needs in-person care, New York has multiple emergency clinics — but RexVet can help triage by video first so you don't waste a trip if it's not needed.
Does New York's environment affect why my dog has loss of appetite?
New York dogs sometimes refuse food during seasonal transitions (heat waves, cold snaps, allergy season). Apartment dogs may also have stress-related appetite suppression from construction noise, building changes, or new neighbors. NYC pet parents with shared living spaces should consider environmental stressors before assuming medical illness.
What can I do at home for my dog's loss of appetite in New York?
Until you can speak with a vet: Warm the food slightly to release aroma (sick dogs eat warm food more readily); Try high-value foods: boiled chicken, plain rice, small amounts of low-sodium broth; Hand-feed or use a different bowl — sometimes location/dish issues are the cause. Never give human medications to your dog without veterinary guidance.
Can I get a prescription for my New York dog from an online vet?
Yes. RexVet veterinarians are licensed in New York and can prescribe medications, prescription diets, and Rx refills via $64.99 video visits. Prescriptions are filled through RexVet's in-house pharmacy (RexVetRx) with same-day delivery in most New York ZIP codes, or transferred to any local pharmacy.
How fast can I see a New York-licensed vet on RexVet?
Most New York pet parents are connected to a licensed veterinarian within minutes of booking, 24/7. There are no membership fees, no monthly subscriptions, and no surge pricing on evenings, weekends, or holidays — every visit is $64.99 flat.
Loss of Appetite in New York cities
See city-specific guidance for your area:
Other dog symptoms in New York
Loss of Appetite in other states RexVet serves
Medical review by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM
Chief Executive Officer & Lead Veterinarian, RexVet. Licensed in Florida, New York, and Virginia.
This page is an educational reference and does not replace veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian about your individual pet's symptoms.