Pale, white, blue, bright red, yellow gums — or black spots on the tongue? Upload a photo for instant AI triage — detect anemia, bloat, shock, jaundice, toxin exposure, or tell benign lentigo from melanoma. ⚠️ If gums are pale/blue AND your dog is weak, collapsed, or breathing hard — skip this tool and go to an ER immediately.
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Educational AI pattern recognition only. Not a veterinary diagnosis. Always consult a licensed veterinarian for health concerns.
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Lip lifted, close-up

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Either lift your dog's upper lip to expose the gums above the canine teeth, OR photograph the tongue during panting or a yawn. Use natural daylight, no flash. Both gum and tongue give reliable color readings.

Our AI examines gum color — pink, pale, white, blue, purple, yellow, bright red, or black — and identifies patterns that signal anemia, hypoxia, jaundice, toxin exposure, or other medical conditions.

Receive a detailed report with the likely meaning, urgency level, and whether you should go to an ER now, schedule a vet visit this week, or just monitor at home.
Dog gums AND tongues are among the fastest ways to read a medical emergency at home. A healthy dog has bubblegum-pink gums and tongue, with capillary refill under 2 seconds. Any significant color change is a triage signal. Here's what each color means — plus the special case of black spots on the tongue (often benign in Labradors, Goldens, GSDs). Also try our dog dental photo analysis tool or dog vomit photo analysis tool or dog urine photo analysis tool.
Healthy dog gums are bubblegum pink or salmon pink, moist, and refill quickly when pressed. Press your finger gently on the gum for 2 seconds; the spot turns white, then should return to pink in under 2 seconds — this is capillary refill time (CRT). Natural variation: some breeds (Chow Chow, German Shepherd, Golden Retriever, Dalmatian, Newfoundland) have partially or fully pigmented black gums that are completely normal — this is lentigo or breed-typical melanin, not a medical issue. If your dog's gums have ALWAYS had black pigment since puppyhood, that's their baseline. Check a pigment-free area (usually near the canine teeth, inside the cheek, or on the tongue) to see true color. Take a photo of your dog's healthy gums once so you have a baseline to compare to in an emergency — this 5-second habit has saved countless dogs.


Pale pink, white, or ghostly gums signal that blood or oxygen isn't reaching the tissues — this is almost always a medical emergency. The top causes in dogs: (1) Internal bleeding — ruptured splenic mass or hemangiosarcoma (especially older large-breed dogs), trauma, rat poison ingestion, GI ulcers; the dog may "act normal" for 1-3 hours before collapsing. (2) Shock — from blood loss, severe allergy/anaphylaxis, sepsis, heat stroke. (3) Severe anemia — immune-mediated hemolytic anemia (IMHA), tick-borne disease (Babesia, Ehrlichia), heavy parasite load (hookworm in puppies), kidney failure. (4) Heart failure with poor output — often combined with coughing, exercise intolerance. (5) Severe dehydration — usually less whitening than the above. Any of these combined with weakness, fast or labored breathing, cold paws, or a distended belly = ER NOW, not tomorrow. Even a dog who seems alert can collapse within hours if the cause is bleeding or shock. A "looks fine but gums are pale" dog needs the same urgency as one who is visibly distressed.
Blue, purple, or gray-blue gums (cyanosis) always mean the tissues aren't getting enough oxygen. Top causes in dogs: (1) Bloat / GDV (gastric dilatation-volvulus) — deep-chested breeds (Great Dane, Weimaraner, German Shepherd, Standard Poodle, Setters); rapidly swelling belly, unproductive retching, restlessness, drooling; fatal in under 2 hours without surgery. (2) Heart failure — congestive, decompensated, or acute. (3) Lung disease — pneumonia, pulmonary edema, aspiration of food or water, lung tumors. (4) Airway obstruction or choking — collapsed trachea, foreign object, tumor. (5) Late-stage heat stroke — gums can progress from bright red to blue as oxygen delivery fails. (6) Acetaminophen (Tylenol) poisoning — destroys hemoglobin's ability to carry oxygen. (7) Carbon monoxide poisoning — gums can be BRIGHT red early, then progress to blue. Blue gums = go to the nearest ER within 30 minutes. Call from the car. Do not wait. Carry small dogs; restrict large dogs from activity.


Gums that are brighter, redder, or more intense than your dog's normal pink suggest one of: (1) Heatstroke — most common cause; paired with heavy panting, drooling, confusion, hot ears; emergency cooling with damp towels and ER visit. (2) Carbon monoxide poisoning — classically "cherry red"; think faulty furnace, car exhaust, smoke inhalation. (3) Toxin ingestion — some rat poisons, antifreeze, acetaminophen, certain mushrooms. (4) Sepsis / systemic infection — widespread inflammation causes vasodilation. (5) Hypertension or heart disease. (6) Severe gingivitis / periodontal disease — but this typically shows as a RED RIM along the tooth line rather than the whole gum being red; also associated with bad breath, tartar, reluctance to eat hard food. (7) After intense exercise — temporary; gums should return to normal pink within 10-15 minutes of rest. Bright red + panting or confusion = ER. Bright red + bad breath + tartar = dental cleaning needed soon. Bright red only after hard play = normal and transient.
Yellow or yellow-tinged gums in dogs indicate jaundice — a buildup of bilirubin, usually from one of three problem categories: (1) Pre-hepatic (red blood cell destruction) — immune-mediated hemolytic anemia (IMHA), tick-borne disease (Babesia), onion or garlic toxicity, zinc poisoning (from coins or cage bolts), snake envenomation. Blood cells burst faster than the liver can clear their pigment. (2) Hepatic (liver disease) — hepatitis, liver toxin exposure (xylitol, aflatoxin, blue-green algae, mushrooms, sago palm, many meds), chronic liver disease, liver cancer. (3) Post-hepatic (bile duct obstruction) — gallstones, pancreatitis causing bile duct swelling, pancreatic or duodenal tumors. Yellow gums + yellow skin or eyes + decreased appetite + vomiting + darker-than-usual urine = urgent vet visit within 24 hours, and typically same-day if the dog is also lethargic or not eating. Jaundice rarely appears alone — check the whites of the eyes and the skin on the belly for yellowing too. Early liver disease is much more treatable than advanced.


Black areas on a dog's gums are often normal pigmentation (lentigo) — but a sudden change can indicate melanoma, a serious oral cancer. HOW TO TELL: Lentigo (benign): flat, smooth, uniform black areas; symmetric; painless; develops slowly over months or years; common in Chow Chow, German Shepherd, Golden Retriever, Dalmatian, Newfoundland, and many older dogs regardless of breed. Has been there for a long time — you can't pinpoint when it appeared. Melanoma (malignant): new or rapidly changing dark spot; raised or bumpy; may have irregular borders; one-sided rather than symmetric; may bleed or ulcerate; often on the gum, lip, palate, or tongue; most common in small older dogs and breeds with heavy oral pigmentation. Bad breath may accompany. Other causes of sudden black: necrotic tissue from severe infection (foul smell), bruising from trauma (usually a single localized area with known history), or certain medications. Any NEW, RAISED, or BLEEDING dark spot on gums warrants a vet exam within a week for biopsy. Oral melanoma is aggressive but treatable if caught early.
Bleeding dog gums have 3 main patterns — the pattern points to the cause. (1) Red, swollen gumline that bleeds when chewing or during tooth-brushing — classic gingivitis or periodontal disease. Usually combined with bad breath, visible tartar, reluctance to chew hard food, pawing at the mouth. Treat with professional dental cleaning under anesthesia, daily home brushing with dog toothpaste (never human — it contains xylitol which is toxic), dental chews (VOHC-approved), and sometimes short-course antibiotics. (2) Localized bleeding after trauma — stick splinter, bone fragment, sharp toy, chew wound. Remove visible objects if easy; rinse gently; apply pressure with gauze; see a vet if bleeding lasts more than 10 minutes or you suspect a deeper wound. (3) Spontaneous bleeding WITHOUT trauma — a medical emergency. Causes include: rat poison (anticoagulant rodenticide) ingestion, immune-mediated thrombocytopenia (ITP), certain cancers (hemangiosarcoma, lymphoma), severe liver disease, and tick-borne coagulation disorders. Red flags: bleeding from multiple sites (gums + nose + in urine/stool + bruises appearing on belly), very pale gums combined with bleeding, or any known exposure to rodenticides. These cases go to ER immediately.


Black spots on a dog's tongue are extremely common and, in most cases, completely normal. The key question is: has it been there a long time (benign) or is it NEW (needs a vet look)? NORMAL black spots — benign LENTIGO (hyperpigmentation): flat, uniform, painless, stable over months/years. Found in many breeds including Labrador Retriever, Golden Retriever, German Shepherd, Dalmatian, Newfoundland, Rottweiler, Belgian Malinois, Airedale, Cocker Spaniel, and many mixed breeds. Often appears in puppyhood or develops slowly through adulthood. SPECIAL BREED PIGMENTATION — certain breeds have a FULL blue-black tongue as a NORMAL trait from birth, NOT cyanosis: Chow Chow (famous for this), Chinese Shar-Pei, and mixed breeds with Chow/Shar-Pei ancestry. A Chow Chow with a blue tongue is healthy. CONCERNING (new/changing) black spots: (1) A NEW dark spot that appeared in weeks rather than months/years. (2) RAISED or lumpy rather than flat. (3) GROWING noticeably. (4) IRREGULAR borders. (5) BLEEDING or ulcerated. (6) Accompanied by bad breath, drooling, or food-dropping. Oral melanoma in dogs is an aggressive cancer — any new or changing pigmented mass needs biopsy within a week. Black spots on the tongue in a Labrador who has always had them = lentigo, no action. A Labrador whose new black spot appeared last month and is getting bigger = biopsy. On the "superstition" question: black spots on dog tongues are sometimes said to mean Chow ancestry or "a sign of a smart/loyal dog" — these are folklore, not genetics; any breed with melanin deposition can have them.
Upload a photo now — gums OR tongue. Our AI assesses color and severity — and tells you if it's an ER emergency, a same-day vet visit, or benign lentigo to monitor. ⚠️ If your dog has pale/white/blue gums AND is weak, collapsed, or breathing hard — skip the tool and go to an ER immediately.
Check Dog Gums & Tongue Now →Yipara provides AI-generated preliminary, educational pattern recognition for informational purposes only. This tool is NOT a veterinary diagnosis and is NOT a substitute for professional veterinary advice, examination, or treatment. The AI analysis has inherent limitations and may produce inaccurate results. Always consult a qualified, licensed veterinarian with any questions regarding your pet's health. Never disregard professional veterinary advice or delay seeking it because of information provided by this tool. If your pet is experiencing a health emergency, contact your veterinarian or emergency animal hospital immediately. By using this service, you acknowledge and agree to these terms.

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