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Symptom Guide • Reviewed by Dr. Tiffany Delacruz, DVM

Coughing in Labradors

Coughing is the forceful expulsion of air to clear something from the airway. In dogs and cats, a cough can mean kennel cough, asthma, heart disease, lung disease, foreign material in the airway, or simply mild throat irritation — the cause matters more than the cough itself.

Large breed Lifespan: 10-12 years
Important: This page is an educational reference. If your pet shows any red-flag symptoms below, treat it as urgent and talk to a licensed veterinarian or visit an emergency clinic immediately. Telehealth is not a substitute for in-person care in emergencies.

About Labradors

Outgoing, energetic, food-driven, and America's most popular dog for decades. Large, athletic, prone to weight gain.

Health predispositions in Labradors

  • Hip and elbow dysplasia
  • Environmental and food allergies
  • Ear infections (especially after swimming)
  • Obesity-related conditions
  • Bloat (gastric dilatation-volvulus)
  • Progressive retinal atrophy

Predispositions don't mean your individual Labrador Retriever will develop any of these conditions. They just mean these are seen more often in the breed than in the general dog population.

Common causes of coughing

These are common causes across all breeds, including Labradors:

  • Kennel cough (canine infectious tracheobronchitis)
  • Feline asthma (in cats)
  • Heartworm disease
  • Heart disease (chronic mitral valve disease in dogs)
  • Allergies
  • Foreign body in the airway
  • Bacterial or viral respiratory infection
  • Tracheal collapse (small breed dogs)
  • Lung tumors or pneumonia
  • Heart failure with pulmonary edema

Red flags — call a vet immediately

  • Coughing up blood
  • Coughing with blue or gray gums (oxygen deprivation)
  • Coughing with rapid breathing or open-mouth breathing in cats
  • Coughing with collapse
  • Honking goose-like cough with respiratory distress (severe tracheal collapse)
  • Coughing with severe lethargy or refusing to lie down

Any of these in your Labrador Retriever 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

Telehealth works

A RexVet video visit is appropriate for: mild dry cough in an otherwise normal pet, suspected kennel cough after a boarding stay, follow-up of an established respiratory diagnosis, and helping you decide whether your pet needs to be seen.

Start a $64.99 video visit →
Go in-person

Go to an in-person vet for: coughing up blood, breathing difficulty, blue/gray gums, severe lethargy, suspected pneumonia, or any cough in a cat (cat coughing is uncommon and usually means asthma or something serious — they need in-person workup including X-rays).

What you can do at home for your Labrador Retriever

  1. 1 Note the type of cough: dry, productive, honking, or wet
  2. 2 Note when it happens — after activity, at rest, at night
  3. 3 Video the cough to show your vet (recordings are very helpful)
  4. 4 Avoid pulling on the collar (use a harness for walks)
  5. 5 Keep the air humidified and avoid smoke or aerosols

Not sure if it's serious?

Talk to a licensed RexVet veterinarian by secure video. For $64.99, you'll get a real opinion on your Labrador Retriever's coughing — and same-day prescriptions through RexVetRx if needed.

Book a vet visit — $64.99

Coughing in Labradors

Frequently asked questions

Is coughing normal in Labradors?

Isolated, mild coughing can happen in any dog including Labradors. What matters is the pattern and severity. Labradors have some breed-specific predispositions — hip and elbow dysplasia and environmental and food allergies are common — so it's worth running anything persistent past a licensed vet.

When should I worry about my Labrador Retriever's coughing?

Red flags to call a vet immediately: Coughing up blood; Coughing with blue or gray gums (oxygen deprivation); Coughing with rapid breathing or open-mouth breathing in cats. If your Labrador Retriever shows any of these, treat it as urgent — don't wait.

Can a RexVet online vet help with coughing in my Labrador Retriever?

Yes for many cases. A RexVet video visit is appropriate for: mild dry cough in an otherwise normal pet, suspected kennel cough after a boarding stay, follow-up of an established respiratory diagnosis, and helping you decide whether your pet needs to be seen. A RexVet video visit costs $64.99 and a licensed vet can prescribe medications, suggest in-home care, or tell you when in-person care is required.

What can I do at home for my Labrador Retriever's coughing?

Until you can speak with a vet: Note the type of cough: dry, productive, honking, or wet; Note when it happens — after activity, at rest, at night; Video the cough to show your vet (recordings are very helpful). Never give human medications to your pet without veterinary guidance.

Are Labradors more likely to get coughing?

Labradors have some breed-specific health predispositions — including Hip and elbow dysplasia, Environmental and food allergies, Ear infections (especially after swimming) — that may make certain symptoms more common. A licensed vet can tell you whether what you're seeing is breed-related or something else.

When does my Labrador Retriever need to be seen in person instead of online?

Go to an in-person vet for: coughing up blood, breathing difficulty, blue/gray gums, severe lethargy, suspected pneumonia, or any cough in a cat (cat coughing is uncommon and usually means asthma or something serious — they need in-person workup including X-rays).

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.