Dogs and cats can share intestinal worms through feces and fleas, so deworming, flea control, and fast waste cleanup lower the odds of spread.
Living with both a dog and a cat is usually smooth until one of them starts scooting, vomiting, or dropping soft stool. Then the question hits fast: if the dog has worms, is the cat next?
The honest answer is that dogs and cats can pass some parasites back and forth, but it doesn’t happen by magic. Worms spread through specific routes: swallowed eggs from poop, larvae picked up from contaminated soil, or tapeworm packets delivered by fleas. Once you know the routes, you can break them.
This article walks through what can transfer, what can’t, the clues to watch for, and the home habits that cut risk in a multi-pet house.
Can Dogs Give Worms To Cats? Shared Worm Risks In Multi-Pet Homes
Yes, a dog can be the source of worms a cat ends up carrying, but the transfer is indirect. In most cases, the dog sheds eggs or larvae in stool, the area gets contaminated, and the cat ingests the infective stage while grooming paws or hunting. Tapeworms are a separate story: fleas act like a delivery service, and both pets can end up infected if fleas are present.
Two details matter more than people expect:
- Time matters. Many worm eggs aren’t infective the moment they leave the body. They often need days in the yard or litter-adjacent spots before they can start a new infection.
- Access matters. Indoor cats with clean litter habits and no fleas face lower exposure than cats that roam, share outdoor spaces, or wrestle with a dog that tracks dirt inside.
How Worms Move From Dog To Cat
Think of worm spread as a chain. A link has to connect for the next link to happen. If you remove one link, you stop the chain.
Feces-to-mouth exposure
This is the big one for roundworms and some hookworms. Eggs shed in stool can stick to grass, soil, shoes, and paws. Cats pick them up while walking through a contaminated spot, then swallow them during grooming.
Fleas as the middle step
Tapeworms that infect pets most often use fleas as an intermediate host. A pet swallows a flea during grooming, and that starts the tapeworm infection. If one pet has fleas, the other is close behind unless flea control is tight.
Predation and scavenging
Outdoor cats can pick up parasites by eating prey that carries larval stages. Dogs can do a version of this by scavenging, then shedding eggs that contaminate the yard. This route is less “dog gives cat worms” and more “both pets share the same exposure loop.”
What usually does not happen
Direct “touching” rarely spreads worms. Petting, sharing a couch, or drinking from the same bowl isn’t the usual route for intestinal worms. The risk rises when stool, litter, soil, or fleas enter the picture.
Worm Types Most Likely To Overlap Between Dogs And Cats
Dogs and cats have their own parasite species, but there’s overlap in a practical sense: the same yard, the same fleas, and the same hygiene gaps can feed infections in both animals. Below are the main ones pet owners run into.
Roundworms
Roundworms are common in puppies and kittens, and they spread through eggs passed in stool. Cats can be infected with cat roundworms, and dogs with dog roundworms, yet cross-exposure still matters because eggs from either species can contaminate shared areas. A pet may swallow infective eggs while grooming, then carry adult worms that shed more eggs.
If you want a clear medical overview of roundworms in dogs and cats, the Merck Veterinary Manual’s roundworms reference breaks down life cycle, diagnosis, and treatment in plain clinical terms.
Hookworms
Hookworm larvae can penetrate skin or be swallowed, depending on species and setting. Dogs and cats can carry hookworms, and shared outdoor areas can become a source if stool isn’t removed. Hookworms are also known for skin effects in people in certain exposure settings, which is one more reason to treat them seriously.
For a science-forward summary of zoonotic hookworm species and their life cycles, see the CDC DPDx page on zoonotic hookworm.
Tapeworms
Tapeworms often show up as rice-like segments near the pet’s rear end or in bedding. The shared risk is fleas. If the dog has tapeworms, it usually points to fleas somewhere in the home or yard. Cats can get infected the same way even if you never see fleas on them, since cats groom and swallow fleas fast.
Whipworms
Whipworms are more common in dogs than cats. Cross-infection is less common than with roundworms or fleas-driven tapeworms. Still, shared outdoor contamination can keep a dog reinfected, and chronic dog shedding can keep the yard “hot,” which is a hygiene problem for the household as a whole.
Giardia and other non-worm parasites
People often say “worms” when they mean any intestinal parasite. Giardia is a common cause of soft stool and can spread through contaminated water or fecal exposure. Treatment and sanitation steps overlap with worm control: prompt stool pickup, clean bowls, and routine fecal checks.
Signs That Make Owners Suspect Worms
Some pets carry worms with mild signs, and others feel rough fast. A single sign doesn’t confirm worms, but clusters of signs raise the odds.
Common signs in dogs
- Soft stool or diarrhea that comes and goes
- Vomiting, sometimes with visible worms
- Pot-bellied look in puppies
- Weight loss with normal appetite
- Scooting or licking the rear end (tapeworm segments can trigger this)
Common signs in cats
- Vomiting (cats may vomit worms with roundworm infection)
- Dull coat or weight loss
- Diarrhea or soft stool, sometimes with mucus
- “Rice grain” segments around the tail or on bedding (tapeworm clue)
When signs call for fast veterinary care
Seek care quickly if you see repeated vomiting, black/tarry stool, pale gums, severe lethargy, or a kitten/puppy that stops eating. Young pets can dehydrate fast, and heavy parasite loads can be dangerous.
How Vets Confirm Worms And Why Guessing Backfires
Worm control works best when the target is clear. Dewormers don’t all kill the same parasites, and some “worms” aren’t worms at all. That’s why clinics lean on fecal testing.
Fecal float and antigen tests
A fecal exam looks for eggs or parasite antigens. It can identify roundworms, hookworms, whipworms, and some protozoa. Results guide the right medication and follow-up timing.
Why one negative test can still miss
Egg shedding can be intermittent, and early infections may not shed yet. Vets may repeat testing, treat based on risk, or pair stool testing with prevention plans.
Human health angle in plain terms
Some pet roundworms can infect people through accidental ingestion of eggs from contaminated hands or soil. That risk is highest for kids who play on the ground, then put hands near the mouth. The CDC overview of toxocariasis explains how roundworm eggs from dogs and cats can lead to illness in people and why hygiene matters.
For household safety, the goal is simple: keep pets dewormed, remove stool quickly, and keep hands clean after yard work, litter duty, or dog-walk cleanup.
| Parasite Type | How It Can Pass From Dog To Cat | Home Step That Cuts Risk |
|---|---|---|
| Roundworms | Cat swallows infective eggs from contaminated yard, shoes, paws, or shared spaces | Pick up dog stool promptly; keep litter area separate from dog access |
| Hookworms | Larvae in soil contact paws/skin, then get swallowed during grooming; some species can infect through skin | Remove stool fast; keep pets off muddy, high-traffic “potty” patches |
| Tapeworms (flea-linked) | Both pets swallow infected fleas while grooming | Year-round flea control for both pets, plus home cleaning during outbreaks |
| Whipworms (mostly dogs) | Dog reinfects yard; cat exposure is less common but shared contamination raises household risk | Routine fecal tests for the dog; limit access to known soiled spots |
| Giardia (not a worm) | Shared water bowls, contaminated paws, or fecal exposure in shared areas | Wash bowls; wipe paws after yard time; disinfect soiled floors |
| Coccidia (not a worm) | Ingestion of oocysts from fecal contamination, often in young pets | Sanitize litter boxes and puppy areas; treat all at-risk pets per vet plan |
| “Mystery” segments | Often tapeworm segments, sometimes mistaken for rice or dried debris | Bag a sample or photo for the clinic; start flea control right away |
What To Do If Your Dog Has Worms And You Own A Cat
When one pet is diagnosed, treat the situation like a household project, not a single-pet issue. The goal is to stop reinfection cycles.
Step 1: Treat the diagnosed pet as directed
Finish the full course and follow recheck timing. Many worms need a repeat dose in a set window to kill newly matured stages. Skipping the second dose is a common reason worms “come back.”
Step 2: Ask the clinic about treating the other pet
In a shared home, vets often recommend treating both pets, especially for roundworms, hookworms, or fleas-linked tapeworms. The right drug and dose differ by species and weight, so use pet-labeled medication from your veterinarian.
Step 3: Lock down stool cleanup
Pick up dog stool daily, then dispose of it in a sealed bag. Clean the spot with water if needed, and keep the cat away from that area for a bit. In litter boxes, scoop daily and keep boxes away from dog access.
Step 4: Treat fleas like the main suspect when tapeworms show up
Tapeworm treatment without flea control is a loop that keeps spinning. Treat both pets for fleas and clean bedding, rugs, and resting spots on the same week.
Step 5: Clean smart, not harsh
Wash pet bedding on hot cycles when possible. Vacuum floors and rugs often during treatment windows. For hard floors, use a pet-safe disinfectant that targets fecal messes, and rinse if the product label calls for it.
Prevention Habits That Work In Real Homes
Prevention isn’t one dramatic move. It’s a few routines that stop eggs, larvae, and fleas from finding a new host.
Run year-round parasite prevention through your vet
Many monthly preventives cover common intestinal worms and help reduce egg shedding. Your veterinarian will match products to your pets’ ages, weights, and risk level.
Use routine fecal testing as an early warning system
Fecal testing catches parasites before they cause a rough bout of diarrhea or spread around the home. Puppies and kittens often need more frequent checks than adult pets.
Keep the litter box out of the dog’s reach
Dogs raid litter boxes, and that turns cat stool into a direct exposure route. Use baby gates, covered boxes, or a dedicated cat room setup.
Don’t let “yard corners” become permanent potty zones
Repeated stool in one spot raises contamination and makes reinfection more likely. Rotate potty areas when you can, and remove stool daily.
Hand hygiene where it counts
Wash hands after picking up stool, after litter duty, and after outdoor play. This protects people and stops egg transfer onto food, toys, and cat perches.
If you want a pet-owner focused set of parasite risk tips and prevention habits, the CAPC “Pets, Parasites and People” brochure lays out practical steps for families.
| Routine | How Often | Notes For Dog + Cat Homes |
|---|---|---|
| Scoop litter boxes | Daily | Reduces egg buildup; keep boxes behind a gate so the dog can’t snack |
| Pick up dog stool | Daily | Stops eggs from maturing in soil; bag and trash promptly |
| Wash pet bedding | Weekly during treatment | Use hot water when fabric allows; dry fully before reuse |
| Vacuum rugs and resting areas | 2–4 times weekly during fleas/worms | Helps during flea cycles; empty vacuum canister outside |
| Flea prevention on both pets | Monthly or per label | Stops tapeworm loops; treat both pets even if only one shows fleas |
| Fecal testing | Per vet schedule | More frequent for puppies/kittens; bring fresh samples in sealed bags |
| Paw wipe after muddy yard time | As needed | Reduces tracked-in dirt that can carry eggs; keep wipes near the door |
When Worm Risk Stays High Even After Treatment
If you treated both pets and signs return, one of these patterns is often at play:
- Reinfection from the same spot. A yard area with repeated stool can keep feeding exposure.
- Fleas never got controlled. Tapeworms keep returning if fleas persist.
- Wrong target. Soft stool can be food-related, bacterial, or protozoal, and the dewormer won’t fix it.
- Timing missed. Many parasite life cycles require a second dose window. If that window was missed, adult worms can reappear.
A quick recheck at the clinic, plus a fresh fecal sample, usually clears up which pattern you’re dealing with.
Practical Takeaways For A Calm, Worm-Resistant Home
If you only do five things, make them these:
- Pick up dog stool daily.
- Scoop litter daily and block dog access.
- Keep both pets on flea prevention if tapeworms show up.
- Use vet-directed deworming with the full follow-up dose timing.
- Run fecal tests on a schedule that fits your pets’ ages and lifestyle.
That combo cuts the main transmission routes without turning your home into a disinfectant lab.
References & Sources
- Merck Veterinary Manual.“Roundworms in Small Animals.”Clinical overview of roundworm species, diagnosis, and treatment in dogs and cats.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“About Toxocariasis.”Explains how roundworm eggs from dogs and cats can infect people and how exposure happens.
- Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (CDC).“CDC DPDx: Zoonotic Hookworm.”Details hookworm species linked to pets and the basic life cycle relevant to household exposure.
- Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC).“Pets, Parasites and People.”Family-focused prevention steps for reducing parasite risk through pet care and hygiene.
