CanBeardedDragonsEat.com

Food safety notes, portions, and practical checks

🦎 Quick, calm, and safety-first

Can bearded dragons eat that?

This site is built for fast answers and sensible context: what’s generally safe, what to limit, and what to avoid. It’s not a substitute for a reptile vet—think of it as a checklist you can use before you feed something new.

Portion guidance Age-based notes Risk flags Simple ingredient checks

Food Checker (simple starter)

Type a food and get a quick “usually ok / limit / avoid” note. This is intentionally conservative and meant for quick sorting. For anything unusual, scroll to the guidelines and references.

Result will appear here

Tip: try a few spellings (e.g., “rocket” = arugula).
Quick reminder: foods can be “okay” but still cause trouble if portions are too big, the dragon is too young, or husbandry (UVB, temps, hydration) is off.

Feeding Guidelines (practical)

Think in categories: staple greens, occasional vegetables, occasional fruit, appropriate insects, and “avoid” items.

  • Greens: A big part of the adult diet. Rotate options for variety.
  • Insects: Important protein source (especially juveniles). Offer appropriately sized feeders.
  • Fruit: Treat-level. Too much sugar can upset digestion.
  • Supplements: Many keepers use calcium and vitamins—but dosing depends on age and setup (ask a reptile vet).
  • Husbandry matters: UVB quality, basking temps, and hydration affect digestion and nutrient use.

When in doubt, choose simpler foods and smaller portions, and introduce new items slowly.

Common Foods (examples)

Usually OK (rotate)

  • Collard / mustard / turnip greens
  • Squash (butternut, acorn), bell pepper (small amounts)
  • Dubia roaches, crickets (proper size)

Limit / Treat

  • Fruit (berries, mango): small portions, not daily
  • Mealworms: can be heavy; use carefully, especially for young dragons
  • Spinach: often listed as “limit” due to binding concerns

Avoid

  • Avocado
  • Rhubarb
  • Fireflies / lightning bugs (toxic)

Safe handling

  • Wash produce; avoid pesticides when possible
  • Remove seeds/pits from fruits; cut to bite-size
  • Don’t feed wild-caught insects (pesticide risk)

FAQ

How do I know if a new food is causing problems?

Introduce one new food at a time and keep portions small. If you notice diarrhea, reduced appetite, bloating, or unusual lethargy after introducing something, stop that item and return to a simpler, known-safe diet.

Is “organic” required?

Not required, but minimizing pesticide exposure is a reasonable goal. Washing produce well helps. If you’re unsure about a specific item, start with small portions and observe.

Why do people talk about UVB when discussing food?

UVB exposure plays a role in how bearded dragons process calcium. Feeding and supplementation advice can change depending on the UVB setup, basking temps, and the dragon’s age. For a precise plan, a reptile vet is your best source.

What’s the safest way to choose feeder insect size?

A common rule-of-thumb is to avoid feeders wider than the space between the dragon’s eyes. This reduces choking/impaction risk. If you’re unsure, choose smaller feeders.

About this site (E-E-A-T notes)

CanBeardedDragonsEat.com is a simple reference page for everyday feeding questions. The aim is to be clear about uncertainty: some foods are widely accepted, others are debated or depend on context (age, portion, husbandry).

Experience: Content is written from a keeper’s perspective with a focus on practical habits that reduce avoidable mistakes.
Expertise: When there’s a “why” behind the advice (toxicity, choking/impaction risk, sugar load), we state it plainly.
Trust: We include references and encourage veterinary consultation for symptoms or special cases.

References & starting points

Note: References above are starting points. If you want, you can replace them with your preferred sources and add direct links.

Contact

Want a specific food added to the checker list? Send it here (no login needed).