Alstro flowers can make some cats drool or vomit, yet they aren’t the kidney-damaging lilies veterinarians treat as an emergency.
“Alstro” usually means Alstroemeria, a long-lasting florist favorite often sold as Peruvian lily. The word “lily” is the problem: true lilies can put a cat in the hospital fast. So if your cat just chewed a bouquet, you need two answers—what plant it was, and what to do next.
This guide keeps it practical. You’ll learn how Alstroemeria affects cats, the signs that mean “call now,” and how to keep flowers in the house with less stress.
What alstro flowers are and why the name scares cat owners
Alstroemeria is not the same as the true lilies most vets warn cat families about. The life-threatening group is mainly Lilium (Easter, tiger, Asiatic, Oriental lilies) plus daylilies (Hemerocallis). Those are linked with kidney injury in cats after surprisingly small exposures.
Alstroemeria sits in a milder category. Many cats that nibble it get a short spell of stomach upset. Some get mouth irritation from plant sap. A few develop itchy skin after rubbing on the stems and then grooming.
Names on tags that usually mean Alstroemeria
Florists and grocery stores may label it as Peruvian lily, lily of the Incas, princess lily, alstro, alstromeria, or alstroemeria. If your bouquet came with a card listing stems, take a photo of that list too.
How cats react after chewing alstro flowers
Most cases look like irritation, not a dangerous organ problem. Still, cats are small and dehydration can sneak up on them. Treat the first few hours as observation time.
Common signs
- Drooling, lip smacking, pawing at the mouth
- Gagging or a single vomit episode
- Loose stool
- Skipping a meal
Red flags that need same-day veterinary help
- Vomiting that keeps repeating
- Blood in vomit or stool
- Marked lethargy, wobbliness, collapse
- Refusing water, dry gums, sunken eyes
- Any doubt about whether a true lily was in the bouquet
What to do right after your cat chews a bouquet
When it happens, aim for two things: stop further exposure and gather clean details for a clinic.
Remove access and save a sample
Move the arrangement to a closed room. Pick up fallen petals and leaves. If you can, place one chewed stem in a bag. It helps with plant ID.
One more detail people miss: bouquet water. If flowers sat for a day, the vase water can contain plant juices and pollen. Cats that drink from vases can get stomach upset even without chewing petals. Dump the water, rinse the vase, and refill it in a sink your cat can’t access.
Wipe off pollen and plant sap
If you see yellow or orange dust on fur, wipe it with a damp cloth, rinse the cloth, then wipe again. Plain water is enough. Skip scented wipes.
Don’t induce vomiting at home
Home vomiting tricks can injure cats and complicate treatment. Offer fresh water. If your cat seems distressed or keeps vomiting, call a clinic right away.
Are Alstro Flowers Toxic to Cats? What vets mean by “mild”
Yes, alstro flowers can be toxic in the sense that they can cause unpleasant signs. In many homes, the outcome is a brief stomach upset that settles with monitoring. The case changes if the bouquet may have included a true lily, because that exposure can lead to kidney injury even when the cat looks normal at first.
To keep the rules straight, the ASPCA explains that Peruvian lilies may cause vomiting or diarrhea, while true lilies are tied to organ injury. ASPCA guidance on which lilies are toxic to pets is an easy reference when you’re sorting bouquet names.
Alstro and lily look-alikes: Fast cues for safer decisions
A bouquet can contain more than one “lily.” If you didn’t buy it yourself, don’t assume the label covers each stem. Ask the giver or the florist what’s inside, and scan the blooms for heavy pollen and large trumpet shapes.
The table below compares common bouquet stems people mix up.
True lilies are sneaky because cats don’t need to swallow a whole petal. A quick bite, licking pollen from fur, or sipping vase water that collected pollen can be enough to trigger poisoning. If you spot a true lily in a home, the safest move is removal, even if it’s “only for a day.”
Alstroemeria doesn’t carry that same kidney pattern, yet it can still irritate. Cats that already have sensitive stomachs, inflammatory bowel disease, or a history of hairball vomiting may react more strongly, simply because their baseline is touchier.
| Stem name people use | Cat risk level | Typical signs |
|---|---|---|
| Alstroemeria / Peruvian lily | Low to moderate | Drool, gag, vomit, mild diarrhea |
| Easter lily (Lilium) | High | Vomiting early, then thirst, less urine, lethargy |
| Asiatic or Oriental lily (Lilium) | High | Vomiting, fast decline without care |
| Daylily (Hemerocallis) | High | Similar to true lilies; kidney injury risk |
| Peace lily | Moderate | Mouth pain, drooling, pawing at mouth |
| Calla lily | Moderate | Mouth irritation, gagging, less appetite |
| Tulip (bulb exposure) | Moderate | Drool, vomiting, diarrhea |
| Chrysanthemum | Moderate | Vomiting, drooling, skin irritation |
What a veterinary visit may include if a true lily can’t be ruled out
Clinics treat “unknown lily” calls with caution, because kidney injury can start before you see dramatic signs. Plans vary, yet many include some mix of exam, lab work, and fluids.
- Exam and history: timing, plant type, vomiting, hydration.
- Decontamination: a vet may induce vomiting or give activated charcoal when timing fits.
- Blood and urine tests: used to check kidney values if true lily exposure is possible.
- Fluids: under-the-skin fluids for mild cases, IV fluids when kidney risk is a concern.
Veterinary toxicology references describe true lily nephrotoxicity in cats and the risk of acute renal failure without treatment. Merck Veterinary Manual notes on poisonous plants and true lily nephrotoxicity explains why vets act quickly even when the cat “seems OK.”
Home monitoring that catches problems early
If a clinic confirms Alstroemeria exposure and your cat is stable, home monitoring can be enough. Keep it simple and track trends for the next 24 hours.
If your cat vomits once and then acts normal, you may still want to offer extra water and a quiet spot to rest. Cats lose fluid quickly. A simple check is the gum test: gums should feel slick, not tacky. Also watch the litter box. A normal urine clump is a reassuring sign.
When vomiting repeats, dehydration is the concern, not the mess. Signs include sticky gums, faster breathing at rest, or hiding and refusing interaction. If you notice those, call a clinic instead of waiting for the next meal.
What to track
- How many times your cat vomits, and when
- Water intake and gum moisture
- Normal urination and stool in the litter box
- Energy level and interest in food
Call a clinic if vomiting returns after a quiet stretch, diarrhea turns watery, your cat stops urinating, or your cat becomes unusually quiet and withdrawn.
Flower habits that cut down plant chewing
You don’t need to swear off flowers forever. You do need a plan that matches your cat’s habits.
Placement rules that work in real homes
- Keep bouquets in a room with a closed door.
- Use taller vases with narrow openings.
- Trim dangling leaves that hang over the edge.
- Clean fallen petals the same day.
Redirect the urge to chew
If your cat seeks out greens, offer a pot of cat grass away from bouquets. For many cats, that scratches the itch and keeps florist stems less tempting.
Safer bouquet picks for cat homes
No flower is “risk-free” for a cat that eats most things, yet some cut flowers are more manageable than true lilies. Use the table below when ordering arrangements.
| Safer cut-flower pick | Why it’s a better swap | House tip |
|---|---|---|
| Roses (thorns removed) | No true lily kidney risk | Clip thorns before display |
| Gerbera daisy | Low scent, many cats ignore it | Keep leaves out of reach |
| Orchid | Often ignored by cats | Place on a high shelf |
| Sunflower | Large, sturdy head; less pollen dusting | Vacuum fallen bits |
| Zinnia | Bright blooms without true lily kidney risk | Keep petals off floors |
| Wax flower | Small blooms, less chewable mass | Use a tall vase |
| Snapdragon | Common filler stem in bouquets | Watch the first hour |
A bouquet safety checklist you can repeat each time
- Check the stem list. If it includes Easter, tiger, Asiatic, Oriental, or daylily, keep it out of the house.
- Scan for large trumpet blooms and heavy pollen.
- Place the vase behind a closed door, at least for the first day.
- Clean loose petals daily and wipe pollen smudges on surfaces.
- If chewing happens, save a stem, take photos, and call a clinic with clear timing.
Alstro flowers can still cause a rough stomach day for a curious cat. The good news is that Alstroemeria is not the same risk as true lilies. If you can confirm the plant, watch for dehydration, and act fast when there’s any doubt about true lily exposure, you’re doing the right things.
References & Sources
- ASPCA.“Which Lilies Are Toxic to Pets?”Distinguishes Peruvian lilies that may cause stomach upset from true lilies linked with organ injury in cats.
- Merck Veterinary Manual.“Houseplants and Ornamentals Toxic to Animals.”Describes poisonous plants and notes that true lilies can cause nephrotoxicity and acute renal failure in cats.