Many species catch influenza viruses, yet the strains, risk level, and warning signs vary by animal and by setting.
When people say “flu,” they usually mean seasonal influenza in humans. Animals get influenza too, but it isn’t one single virus that affects each species the same way. Influenza viruses come in many strains, and most are adapted to a host or a set of hosts.
This article explains what “flu” means in animals, which pets and livestock are known to get it, what symptoms tend to show up, and what to do when you suspect it. You’ll finish with a practical checklist you can use before you call your veterinarian.
What “Flu” Means In Animals
Influenza is a contagious respiratory illness caused by influenza viruses. In animals, most “flu” talk centers on influenza A viruses. Many influenza A viruses circulate in wild birds and can adapt to infect other animals. Public health agencies publish background pages that map out which species can carry influenza A and how these viruses circulate.
Two quick clarifiers help owners avoid wrong assumptions:
- Flu is not the same as “a cold.” Many germs cause coughing and sneezing.
- “The flu” is not one thing. A dog flu strain is not the same virus that usually spreads between people.
Can Animals Get Flu? What Owners Should Know
Yes, animals can get influenza. The more useful question is which animals, which strains, and what that means in daily life. Exposure patterns drive most of the real-world risk. Influenza tends to show up when animals share close quarters, share handlers and equipment, or rotate in and out of group settings.
Situations that raise the odds:
- Boarding, shelters, day care, grooming, shows, transport
- New animals added to a group without a quiet settle-in window
- Farm or flock contact with wild birds and shared water sources
Which Animals Get Influenza Most Often
Influenza isn’t limited to one corner of the animal world. Some hosts have long-known influenza strains; others get spillovers during outbreaks. Here’s what pet owners and animal keepers run into most.
Dogs
Canine influenza is a contagious respiratory disease in dogs caused by influenza A viruses. It can spread fast in kennels, shelters, and day care groups. Many exposed dogs get infected, and coughing can linger even after a dog seems brighter. The American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA) publishes a pet-owner page on canine influenza that summarizes strains, symptoms, spread, and vaccination.
Cats
Cats can get influenza in certain contexts, most often tied to avian influenza events where cats have contact with infected birds or raw animal products. In routine household settings, most cat upper respiratory illness is caused by other viruses, yet influenza can enter the picture in outbreak zones or with clear bird exposure.
Horses
Equine influenza is a well-known cause of barn outbreaks. It spreads through coughing, close contact, and shared handling. Sick horses often show sudden fever, a harsh cough, and low energy.
Pigs
Swine influenza circulates in pig populations and can flare in herds. Some swine influenza viruses have infected people with close pig contact, which is one reason public health agencies track influenza in animals.
Birds And Poultry
Avian influenza ranges from low pathogenic strains that may cause mild illness to high-pathogenicity strains that can cause severe disease and rapid losses in poultry. Public updates often use the shorthand “HPAI” for high-pathogenicity avian influenza, a label tied to how the virus behaves in poultry.
USDA APHIS maintains an up-to-date hub for H5N1 HPAI, including response guidance and notes on which species are susceptible: H5N1 HPAI resources and guidance.
How Animals Get Flu In Shared Spaces
Influenza spreads mainly through respiratory droplets and contaminated surfaces. The details change by species, yet the routes are consistent:
- Air and droplets: coughing, barking, sneezing, close contact
- Hands and gear: leashes, crates, feeders, water bowls, brushes, tack
- Shared spaces: runs, stalls, trailers, barns, shelter rooms
Group settings matter because viruses can move from animal to animal before anyone realizes the first one is sick. That’s why a cough that starts after boarding is worth flagging to your vet right away.
Signs That Can Match Influenza
“Flu-like” symptoms overlap with other respiratory illness, so don’t try to label it based on one sign. Watch for a pattern, then track timing and exposures.
Common Respiratory Signs
- Coughing that’s dry, hacking, or persistent
- Sneezing, nasal discharge, watery eyes
- Fever, low energy, reduced appetite
- Fast breathing, noisy breathing, effort to breathe
Clues By Species
Dogs with canine influenza often develop a cough that lasts for weeks. Horses can show sudden fever and a deep cough that spreads through a barn. Birds with high-pathogenicity avian influenza may show sudden deaths or steep drops in egg production.
When Respiratory Illness Turns Urgent
Many mild cases improve with rest and monitoring, yet severe breathing issues need fast care. Use these red flags as a clear trigger to seek urgent help:
- Labored breathing: belly pumping, flared nostrils, open-mouth breathing in cats
- Blue or gray gums or tongue
- Collapse, inability to stand, severe weakness
- Refusing water with signs of dehydration
- Puppies, seniors, pregnant animals, or pets with heart or lung disease who start coughing
How Vets Check For Influenza
Veterinarians combine clinical signs, exposure history, and testing. Many clinics use a respiratory disease panel from a nasal or throat swab that can detect multiple viruses and bacteria. Public health context on cross-species influenza, including which animals can carry influenza A, is summarized on the CDC’s About Influenza A in Animals page.
If your area has an outbreak, testing early in the illness window can be more informative because viral shedding tends to be higher near the start. Your vet will guide timing based on the species and local patterns.
Table Of Flu Risks Across Species
This table condenses how influenza tends to show up across common species. Use it to frame questions and to connect symptoms with exposure patterns.
| Animal | Flu Types Reported | Where Risk Rises |
|---|---|---|
| Dogs | Canine influenza (H3N8, H3N2) | Day care, boarding, shelters, grooming, shows |
| Cats | Occasional influenza A spillover (often tied to avian events) | Outdoor cats, contact with sick or dead birds, raw diets in outbreak zones |
| Horses | Equine influenza (H3N8) | Shows, racing barns, transport, shared tack and handlers |
| Pigs | Swine influenza A viruses | Close housing, transport, commingling of herds |
| Chickens And Other Poultry | Avian influenza (low and high-pathogenicity strains) | Wild bird contact, farm-to-farm spread, live bird markets |
| Ducks And Geese | Avian influenza A reservoir species | Ponds, wetlands, mixed wild and domestic bird exposure |
| Ferrets | Susceptible to some influenza A strains | Close contact with infected hosts |
| Seals And Some Wild Carnivores | Influenza A infections reported in wildlife events | Contact with infected birds or mammals in wildlife die-offs |
Home Care Steps That Help
If your pet is stable and breathing comfortably, home care is about comfort and observation. If your dog is coughing after group contact, the AVMA’s canine influenza overview can help you frame what to tell your clinic.
Rest And Low-Stress Handling
- Limit exercise until coughing ends.
- Keep the room quiet and warm.
- Use a harness if a collar triggers coughing.
Hydration And Appetite
- Offer fresh water often.
- Warm food can boost smell and appetite.
- If a pet won’t eat for a full day, call your vet.
Skip Human Cold And Flu Products
Many human cold and flu medicines can be toxic to pets. Stick to what your veterinarian approves.
Reducing Spread In Homes, Barns, And Kennels
Respiratory viruses travel on hands and objects. A simple routine cuts transmission:
- Separate sick animals from healthy animals when possible.
- Wash hands after handling a coughing pet and after cleaning bowls.
- Use separate bowls, toys, bedding, and litter tools until symptoms end.
- Clean high-touch surfaces daily and follow disinfectant label directions.
If your dog got sick after boarding, tell the facility. That helps them watch for clusters and adjust cleaning and intake rules.
Vaccines And Prevention Choices
Prevention depends on the species and virus. Dogs and horses have influenza vaccines in many regions. Poultry and farm plans rely heavily on biosecurity and guidance from veterinary and regulatory teams.
Dogs
Ask your vet if a canine influenza vaccine fits your dog’s routine, especially if your dog attends day care, boarding, shows, or group training. Vaccines don’t guarantee zero infection, yet they can reduce severity and shedding in many cases.
Horses
Equine influenza prevention combines vaccination with barn habits: short quarantine windows for new horses, not sharing water buckets at shows, and keeping coughing horses away from group aisles.
Backyard Poultry
Reduce contact with wild birds, keep feed and water covered, and avoid sharing birds or crates across flocks. In outbreak zones, follow official movement and reporting guidance.
Can People Catch Flu From Animals
Some animal influenza viruses can infect people in specific situations, most often through close contact with infected animals. Routine pet ownership is not the same exposure level as working in a poultry barn during an avian influenza event or handling sick pigs at a fair. If you develop flu-like symptoms after close animal exposure, tell your healthcare clinician about the exposure so they can match testing to the situation. CDC publishes background material on influenza A in animals that outlines host species and transmission patterns.
What To Tell Your Vet On The Phone
Clinics can triage faster when you share a clean timeline. Before you call, write down:
- When coughing, sneezing, or fever started
- Boarding, day care, shelter visits, shows, transport, barn changes, bird contact
- Breathing at rest: normal, fast, or labored
- Eating and drinking over the last 24 hours
Then ask what isolation window they want before your animal meets others again, and which warning signs should send you to urgent care.
Table For A Simple Decision Checklist
Use this checklist to decide your next step. It’s built for quick scanning when you’re tired and worried.
| What You See | What To Do | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Mild cough, normal breathing, drinking | Rest, separate from other pets, call vet for advice | Early guidance reduces spread and catches worsening signs |
| Cough after boarding or shelter exposure | Call vet, ask about testing and isolation length | Cluster patterns raise odds of canine influenza |
| Fever, low energy, reduced appetite | Book an exam within 24 hours | Fever can signal viral infection or a secondary problem |
| Fast or labored breathing | Go to emergency care | Breathing distress can turn dangerous quickly |
| Bird contact in an outbreak zone | Call vet, limit handling, follow official animal health advice | Avian influenza events can affect multiple species |
| Multiple pets sick in the same home | Separate, clean surfaces daily, call vet | Shared air and objects speed transmission |
References & Sources
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“About Influenza A in Animals.”Explains how influenza A circulates in wild birds and can infect many animal species.
- American Veterinary Medical Association (AVMA).“Canine Influenza.”Summarizes dog flu strains, symptoms, spread, and vaccination considerations for pet owners.
- USDA APHIS.“H5N1 HPAI – Resources & Guidance.”Provides current guidance on H5N1 HPAI and notes on species susceptibility.
