A plain-language guide to how NexGard works, what it protects against, honest answers about side effects, who should avoid it, and the veterinarian insights that rarely come up at the appointment desk. Evidence-based. Always in your corner.
NexGard (afoxolaner) is one of the most widely prescribed flea and tick medications in the United States. Approved by the FDA in September 2013, it belongs to a class of drugs called isoxazolines and works by disrupting the nervous systems of fleas and ticks, causing their rapid paralysis and death. Most dogs tolerate it well, but there are real and important caveats that do not always come up in a rushed veterinary appointment — especially regarding neurological risks, which dog populations need extra caution, and how the medication actually works at the biological level. This guide covers what the veterinary literature and FDA actually say, in plain language.
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What is NexGard and how does it work? NexGard contains afoxolaner, an isoxazoline drug that kills fleas and ticks by blocking GABA-gated chloride channels in their nervous systems, causing paralysis and death. Parasites must bite your dog to be affected.Afoxolaner is a non-competitive antagonist of insect GABA receptors. It binds to chloride channels in nerve and muscle cells of parasites, blocking the neurotransmitter signal that allows controlled muscle movement. Affected fleas and ticks experience uncontrolled nervous system hyperexcitation, then paralysis, then death. The selectivity of afoxolaner for invertebrate GABA receptors over mammalian GABA receptors is what makes it significantly less toxic to dogs than to the parasites it targets. The implication is important: NexGard is not a repellent. Parasites must bite your dog and begin feeding before they absorb enough afoxolaner to be killed. This means a brief window exists between a tick biting and being killed during which disease transmission is theoretically possible — the FDA and product labeling acknowledge this explicitly.
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What exactly does NexGard protect against? NexGard kills adult fleas and controls five tick species: black-legged tick, American dog tick, lone star tick, brown dog tick, and longhorned tick. It also helps prevent Lyme disease by killing the ticks that carry it.According to the FDA-approved label on DailyMed, NexGard is indicated for the treatment and prevention of flea infestations (Ctenocephalides felis) and the treatment and control of five tick species: Ixodes scapularis (black-legged tick), Dermacentor variabilis (American dog tick), Amblyomma americanum (lone star tick), Rhipicephalus sanguineus (brown dog tick), and Haemaphysalis longicornis (longhorned tick). It is also indicated for the prevention of Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease) infections by killing the black-legged ticks that carry it. NexGard alone does not prevent heartworm, roundworm, or hookworm — those require NexGard PLUS or a separate heartworm preventive. Laboratory studies confirmed more than 97% effectiveness against American dog ticks and more than 94% effectiveness against black-legged ticks at 48 hours post-infestation.
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How quickly does NexGard start killing fleas and ticks? NexGard begins killing fleas within 4 hours of the first dose and reaches more than 99% effectiveness at 8 hours. It kills ticks within 24–48 hours of their biting and is effective for a full 30 days.The FDA’s Freedom of Information Summary for NexGard (NADA 141-406) reports that in well-controlled laboratory studies, NexGard began killing fleas four hours after initial administration and demonstrated more than 99% effectiveness at eight hours. Against ticks, laboratory studies showed more than 97% effectiveness at 48 hours post-infestation for American dog ticks and more than 94% for black-legged ticks for a full 30 days. Importantly, NexGard demonstrated 100% effectiveness against adult fleas 24 hours post-infestation for 35 days. The medication reaches peak blood concentration (Tmax) within 2 to 12 hours of administration. Blood levels remain protective for the full 30-day treatment period due to afoxolaner’s relatively long mean half-life of 7.7 to 17.8 days.
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What are the most common side effects, and how frequently do they actually occur? The most frequently reported side effects are vomiting, itching, lethargy, and diarrhea — typically mild and temporary. Veterinary Partner (VIN) reports that nausea/vomiting occurs in approximately 4% of dogs and diarrhea in approximately 3%.In the pivotal US field study cited in the FDA approval documents — 615 treated dogs across 333 households over 90 days — no serious adverse reactions were observed. Post-approval adverse event reports submitted to the FDA (listed in decreasing order of frequency on Drugs.com) include: vomiting, pruritus (itching), lethargy, diarrhea (with and without blood), anorexia, seizure, hyperactivity/restlessness, panting, erythema (skin redness), ataxia, dermatitis, allergic reactions (hives, swelling), and tremors. Veterinary Partner notes that most dogs experiencing initial vomiting do not repeat it with subsequent doses. If vomiting occurs within two hours of administration, the product label recommends re-dosing. If it occurs after two hours, re-dosing is not necessary as absorption is likely complete.
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What is the FDA’s official position on the neurological risks of NexGard? The FDA has issued a formal alert that isoxazoline products including NexGard have been associated with neurologic adverse reactions — muscle tremors, ataxia, and seizures — in some dogs, including those with no prior seizure history. FDA considers these products safe and effective for most dogs.The FDA’s published Fact Sheet for Pet Owners and Veterinarians about isoxazoline products states directly: “Isoxazoline products have been associated with neurologic adverse reactions, including muscle tremors, ataxia, and seizures in some dogs and cats. Although most dogs and cats haven’t had neurologic adverse reactions, seizures may occur in animals without a prior history.” The FDA also states: “The FDA considers products in the isoxazoline class to be safe and effective for dogs and cats but is providing this information so that pet owners and veterinarians can take it into consideration when choosing flea and tick products.” This dual message — real risk, overall safety — is clinically important. Research into the precise association between isoxazolines and seizures in dogs is ongoing as of the most recent publications.
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Which dogs should not take NexGard or should take it with extra caution? Dogs with a history of seizures or neurological disorders should use NexGard with caution or seek alternatives. NexGard has not been evaluated for safety in breeding, pregnant, or lactating dogs.The NexGard product label explicitly states: “Use with caution in dogs with a history of seizures or neurologic disorders.” In the original US field study, three dogs with known seizure histories were enrolled; two of the three experienced seizures during the 90-day period. Additionally, the official label notes: “The safe use of NexGard in breeding, pregnant or lactating dogs has not been evaluated.” This is a research gap, not a confirmed risk, but it means veterinarians generally avoid prescribing NexGard to pregnant or nursing dogs until more data are available. Dogs weighing less than four pounds or under eight weeks of age are not candidates for NexGard regardless of health status. Dogs with known allergic reactions to afoxolaner should not receive the product.
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Is NexGard safe for herding breeds like Collies that have the MDR1 gene mutation? Yes — peer-reviewed research published in PMC confirms that afoxolaner is well tolerated by dogs with the MDR1 mutation, even at doses nearly four times the recommended therapeutic dose.Dogs with the MDR1 (ABCB1) gene mutation — including Collies, Shetland Sheepdogs, Australian Shepherds, and related herding breeds — have reduced function of the P-glycoprotein drug transporter, making them sensitive to some drugs that cross the blood-brain barrier. A 2022 peer-reviewed study published in PMC (Drag, Tielemans, and Mitchell) evaluated afoxolaner safety in homozygous MDR1-deficient Collie dogs and demonstrated a high level of safety at 3.8 times the maximum recommended therapeutic dose. The study confirmed that afoxolaner, as a small, lipophilic, unionized compound that crosses cell membranes via passive diffusion, is well tolerated even by MDR1-deficient dogs. PetMD also confirms: “Dogs with the MDR1 mutation are not at increased risk for adverse effects.”
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How is NexGard PLUS different from regular NexGard, and who is it for? NexGard PLUS adds moxidectin (for heartworm prevention) and pyrantel (for roundworms and hookworms) to the standard afoxolaner formula — making it a single monthly chew that covers fleas, five tick species, heartworm, and intestinal worms.FDA approved NexGard PLUS (afoxolaner, moxidectin, and pyrantel chewable tablets) as a combination parasite preventive for dogs. The DailyMed label for NexGard PLUS confirms it is indicated for: flea prevention, five tick species, prevention of Borrelia burgdorferi (Lyme disease) infections, prevention of heartworm disease caused by Dirofilaria immitis, and treatment and control of adult hookworms and roundworms. The minimum dose provides 2.5 mg/kg afoxolaner, 12 mcg/kg moxidectin, and 5.0 mg/kg pyrantel. Important note: NexGard PLUS is not effective against adult heartworms already present in the dog — dogs must be tested for existing heartworm infection before starting. The Companion Animal Parasite Council (CAPC) recommends year-round broad-spectrum parasite control, making NexGard PLUS a practical choice for dogs in high-risk regions.
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Can NexGard be given with other medications like vaccines, antibiotics, or steroids? Yes — the FDA-reviewed field study found no adverse reactions when NexGard was given alongside vaccines, antibiotics, steroids, NSAIDs, anesthetics, and antihistamines. No known drug interactions have been identified.The NexGard label states explicitly: “In a well-controlled field study, NexGard was used concomitantly with other medications, such as vaccines, anthelmintics, antibiotics (including topicals), steroids, NSAIDs, anesthetics, and antihistamines. No adverse reactions were observed from the concomitant use of NexGard with other medications.” Veterinary Partner (VIN) also confirms: “There are no known drug interactions with afoxolaner.” Despite this, best practice remains telling your veterinarian about every supplement, medication, or treatment your dog receives — including flea collar use, topical treatments, or over-the-counter products — before any new prescription is started. GoodRx notes that veterinarians may still want to review a dog’s complete medication list before prescribing NexGard.
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Does NexGard need to be given year-round, and does it matter if my dog misses a dose? Year-round monthly dosing is strongly recommended. If a dose is missed, give it as soon as possible and resume the monthly schedule. Gaps in treatment leave your dog unprotected and can allow flea infestations to re-establish.The CAPC recommends year-round flea and tick prevention, even in colder climates, because fleas can survive indoors year-round and ticks become active whenever temperatures exceed freezing. NexGard’s efficacy period is exactly 30 days — effectiveness begins to decline after this window, leaving a gap in protection. According to the DailyMed label: “If a dose is missed, administer NexGard and resume a monthly dosing schedule.” For heartworm prevention with NexGard PLUS specifically, the label notes: “Treatment with fewer than six monthly doses after the last exposure to mosquitoes has not been evaluated and may not provide complete heartworm prevention.” This underscores why consistent monthly dosing is medically critical, not merely a manufacturer recommendation.
Sources: FDA DailyMed NexGard label (dailymed.nlm.nih.gov; afoxolaner min dose 2.5 mg/kg; Tmax 2–12 hr; 5 tick species; fleas start killing 4 hr; >99% at 8 hr; 100% at 24 hr; field study 615 dogs 333 households 90 days; no serious adverse reactions); FDA FOI Summary NADA 141-406 (>97% D. variabilis; >94% I. scapularis; >93% R. sanguineus at 48 hr 30 days; >97% A. americanum at 72 hr); FDA Fact Sheet isoxazoline adverse events fda.gov (neurologic adverse reactions; muscle tremors, ataxia, seizures; some without prior history; FDA considers safe and effective for majority); Veterinary Partner VIN (vomiting ~4%; diarrhea ~3%; no known drug interactions; re-dose if vomiting within 2 hr); NIH/PMC Drag Tielemans Mitchell 2022 PMC9543253 (MDR1 collie safety 3.8× max dose; well tolerated; passive diffusion); DailyMed NexGard PLUS (afoxolaner + moxidectin + pyrantel; 5 tick species + fleas + heartworm + roundworm + hookworm; tested for heartworm before starting; not effective adult D. immitis; safe in MDR1 dogs per PetMD); FDA Fact Sheet (seizures dogs without prior history; recommend discuss with vet); Drugs.com adverse events by frequency; GoodRx NexGard DVM-reviewed Aug 2025
Every insight below is sourced from FDA-approved product labeling, peer-reviewed research, or clinically reviewed veterinary references. These are not opinions — they are facts that matter when choosing, monitoring, or discussing parasite prevention with your veterinarian. NexGard is a prescription-only medication and should only be started under veterinary supervision.
📋 Remove any attached tick promptly — early removal reduces disease risk
🌐 FDA label: dailymed.nlm.nih.gov (NexGard afoxolaner)
🌐 Online: fda.gov/reportanimalae
🌐 Boehringer Ingelheim: 1-888-637-4251 or nexgardforpets.com
📋 Dogs over 121 lbs: combination of appropriate chewables per vet instruction
🌐 Verify pharmacies: nabp.pharmacy (National Association of Boards of Pharmacy)
🌐 MDR1 drug list: vcpl.vetmed.wsu.edu
🌐 PMC research: pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC9543253/
📋 Dogs under 4 lbs have no NexGard dose option — discuss alternatives with your vet
📋 Nursing dogs: ask your vet about program timing relative to whelping
🌐 CAPC prevalence maps: capcvet.org
🌐 American Heartworm Society guidelines: heartwormsociety.org
📞 Pet Poison Helpline: 1-855-764-7661 (fee may apply)
📞 Human accidental ingestion: Poison Control 1-800-222-1222
🌐 NWS status updates: usda.gov/topics/animals/new-world-screwworm
🌐 EUA Fact Sheet: fda.gov/media/191166/download
📋 Progress monitoring (skin scrapings) is usually part of mange treatment protocol
🌐 VIN Veterinary Partner: veterinarypartner.vin.com (afoxolaner overview)
📞 Emergency vet finder: aaha.org/find-a-hospital or pets.webmd.com/find-a-vet
📞 Report to FDA: 1-888-FDA-VETS • fda.gov/reportanimalae
Sources: FDA DailyMed NexGard label dailymed.nlm.nih.gov (GABA receptor mechanism; 4 sizes 11.3/28.3/68/136 mg; Tmax 2-12 hr; re-dose if vomiting within 2 hr; stored ≤30°C; no known drug interactions; concomitant meds field study; not a repellent; parasites must bite; prescription only federal law; 8 wk/4 lb minimum; pregnancy not evaluated; secure storage); FDA DailyMed NexGard PLUS (heartworm test required; not effective adult D. immitis; 6 doses after last mosquito exposure; moxidectin mechanism; pyrantel mechanism); FDA FOI Summary NADA 141-406 (>97% D. variabilis; >94% I. scapularis; 100% flea 24 hr 35 days; 81.1% flea at 12 hr day 28; disease risk cannot be excluded per labeling); FDA Fact Sheet isoxazoline fda.gov (neurologic adverse reactions; tremors, ataxia, seizures; dogs without prior history; safe and effective majority); FDA EUA NexGard NWS dogs fda.gov/media/191166/download (February 2026; NWS not detected US Feb 18 2026; border/travel risk; wound care essential); NIH/PMC Drag Tielemans Mitchell 2022 PMC9543253 (MDR1 collies 3.8× max dose; passive diffusion; well tolerated); Drugs.com NexGard adverse events by frequency; Veterinary Partner VIN (vomiting ~4%; diarrhea ~3%; no drug interactions; no MDR1 breed-specific risk; re-dose vomiting under 2 hr rule); PetMD (off-label demodectic sarcoptic mange ear mites; MDR1 no increased risk; Beugnet et al. 2016 Parasite demodicosis); GoodRx DVM-reviewed Aug 2025; Vetster Nov 2025 (MDR1 safe at labeled dose; liver processed; pregnancy not evaluated); Boehringer Ingelheim NexGard PLUS announcement (CAPC year-round broad-spectrum recommendation; heartworm prevalence increasing)
All doses are once monthly. NexGard is available in four color-coded chewable sizes. Dogs over 121 lbs receive a combination of chewables as directed by their veterinarian. Your veterinarian prescribes the correct size based on your dog’s exact weight. Never split chewables — NexGard is not available in scored tablets.
| Dog Weight | Afoxolaner Dose | Chewable Size | Monthly Interval | With/Without Food? |
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| 4 – 10 lbs | 11.3 mg | Smallest (orange) | Every 30 days | Either |
| 10.1 – 24 lbs | 28.3 mg | Small (blue) | Every 30 days | Either |
| 24.1 – 60 lbs | 68 mg | Medium (green) | Every 30 days | Either |
| 60.1 – 121 lbs | 136 mg | Large (red) | Every 30 days | Either |
| Over 121 lbs | Combination | Multiple per vet | Every 30 days | Either |
| Under 8 weeks | Do NOT use | Not approved | N/A | N/A |
| Under 4 lbs | Do NOT use | Not approved | N/A | N/A |
Sources: FDA DailyMed NexGard label dailymed.nlm.nih.gov (4 sizes 11.3/28.3/68/136 mg afoxolaner; color-coded packages; with or without food; min 8 weeks/4 lbs; combination for dogs over 121 lbs per vet). All dosing decisions must be made by a licensed veterinarian.
- Any seizure or convulsive episode — even a brief one. Stop NexGard and do not give another dose without speaking to your veterinarian. Report the event to Boehringer Ingelheim (1-888-637-4251) and the FDA (1-888-FDA-VETS).
- Loss of coordination, stumbling, or inability to walk normally (ataxia) — these are neurological symptoms that require immediate veterinary evaluation. Do not wait to see if they resolve on their own.
- Facial swelling, hives, or difficulty breathing — signs of an allergic reaction that can escalate quickly and require emergency treatment.
- Severe or prolonged vomiting or diarrhea with blood — mild single-episode vomiting is listed as a common side effect, but persistent or bloody gastrointestinal symptoms warrant veterinary attention the same day.
The evidence says yes, at the recommended dose. A 2022 peer-reviewed study published in PMC (Drag, Tielemans, and Mitchell) demonstrated that afoxolaner — the active ingredient in NexGard — is safe in homozygous MDR1-deficient Collie dogs at nearly four times the maximum recommended therapeutic dose. This is reassuring because MDR1 dogs are at higher risk from drugs that rely on P-glycoprotein transport across the blood-brain barrier. Afoxolaner crosses membranes via passive diffusion, bypassing the P-glycoprotein pathway and making MDR1 sensitivity largely irrelevant for this specific drug. PetMD confirms: “Dogs with the MDR1 mutation are not at increased risk for adverse effects.” That said, always disclose your dog’s breed and any known MDR1 status to your veterinarian before starting any new prescription medication, since MDR1 sensitivity matters significantly for other commonly prescribed drugs.
Not necessarily. NexGard is not a repellent — it does not prevent ticks from climbing onto or attaching to your dog. Ticks must begin feeding to absorb afoxolaner. The FDA’s approved label explicitly states: “Parasites need to start feeding on the host to become exposed to afoxolaner.” A tick found on a dog on NexGard that is already dead or dying is evidence the product is working. A living, engorged tick found more than 48 hours after attachment may indicate the tick attached after the 30-day treatment window expired. Always check the date of the last dose. If you find a tick within 48 hours of it attaching, its death is likely imminent. If you find a tick that has been feeding for more than 48 hours and is alive, this warrants a call to your veterinarian to discuss the potential need for tick-borne disease testing. Always remove ticks promptly and correctly — grasp close to the skin, pull upward steadily, and do not twist or crush.
If your dog is already on a separate monthly heartworm preventive (like Heartgard, Interceptor, or Sentinel), you can continue giving both NexGard and your existing heartworm product simultaneously. The field study for NexGard included concomitant use with anthelmintics (including those used for heartworm) with no adverse interactions. NexGard PLUS is a convenience product — it combines fleas, ticks, heartworm, roundworm, and hookworm protection into a single chew. Whether it makes more clinical sense to switch to NexGard PLUS or continue separate products depends on your dog’s full parasite risk profile, medication history, and your veterinarian’s recommendation. If your dog is currently heartworm-positive, you cannot start NexGard PLUS until the dog has been treated with an adulticide — the preventive component only prevents new infections, it does not kill adult heartworms already present.
The NexGard label does not list liver or kidney disease as a specific contraindication. However, afoxolaner is metabolized primarily by the liver and eliminated mainly through bile (biliary excretion) with some renal involvement. Vetster notes: “Afoxolaner is processed by the liver, but no specific risks are listed for pets with liver or kidney disease. If your dog has a chronic illness, check with a veterinarian before starting any new medication.” This is genuinely your veterinarian’s call to make based on your dog’s specific blood work, degree of organ impairment, and overall clinical picture. For senior dogs with mild organ changes, NexGard may still be appropriate. For dogs with significant liver or kidney failure, the risk-benefit calculation requires direct veterinary evaluation. Never assume a product is safe for a dog with a chronic illness without explicit veterinarian approval.
NexGard’s label covers five tick species: black-legged tick (Ixodes scapularis, primary Lyme carrier), American dog tick (Dermacentor variabilis, Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever carrier), lone star tick (Amblyomma americanum, ehrlichiosis and STARI carrier), brown dog tick (Rhipicephalus sanguineus, ehrlichiosis and RMSF carrier), and longhorned tick (Haemaphysalis longicornis, a relatively newer invasive species in the U.S.). Veterinary Partner notes that afoxolaner has demonstrated efficacy against additional tick species not on the official label, though these are not part of the formal approval. The most important limitation to remember: NexGard kills ticks after they begin feeding — it is not a contact repellent. For Lyme disease prevention specifically, the killing window (within 24–48 hours of biting) is shorter than the typical 36–48-hour transmission time for Lyme, making it an effective preventive tool in most exposures. However, no product eliminates all disease transmission risk to zero.
NexGard can be given with or without food, per the FDA-approved label. Giving it with food may reduce the chance of vomiting in dogs with sensitive stomachs. The pharmacokinetics show that afoxolaner and moxidectin (in NexGard PLUS) are actually absorbed more rapidly in the fasted state, reaching peak concentration slightly earlier, but the overall area under the curve — meaning total drug exposure over time — is similar whether given with food or without. For practical purposes, giving NexGard as a treat with or after mealtime is perfectly appropriate and may improve palatability acceptance in dogs that are pickier. The key instruction from the label: observe your dog for a few minutes after giving the chew to confirm the complete dose was consumed and not dropped or partially eaten. If part of the dose is lost, contact your vet about whether re-dosing is appropriate.
Sources: NIH/PMC Drag Tielemans Mitchell 2022 PMC9543253 (MDR1 3.8× max dose; passive diffusion; well tolerated; no serious adverse effects); PetMD (MDR1 no increased risk); FDA DailyMed NexGard label (parasites must bite to be exposed; not a repellent; with or without food; pharmacokinetics fed/fasted; concomitant anthelmintic field study); Vetster Nov 2025 (liver processed; no specific risk listed for liver/kidney disease; check with vet for chronic illness); Veterinary Partner VIN (extra tick species off-label efficacy; biliary excretion; renal elimination; no known drug interactions); DailyMed NexGard PLUS (not effective adult D. immitis; fasted Tmax 2-3 hr; fed Tmax slightly longer; AUC similar fed/fasted); FDA FOI NADA 141-406 (disease risk from parasites not excluded per labeling)
- Your dog’s complete seizure and neurological history. Even a single episode of unexplained tremors, fainting, or strange behavior in the past is worth disclosing. The FDA has formally flagged neurological risks for isoxazoline products including NexGard, and your vet needs full history to make the right call for your specific dog.
- Your dog’s breed and any known MDR1 genetic status. If your dog is a Collie, Shetland Sheepdog, Australian Shepherd, or another herding breed, mention it. While research shows NexGard is safe in MDR1-affected dogs, the disclosure ensures your vet has the full picture for all prescriptions.
- Whether your dog may be pregnant, nursing, or used for breeding. The safety of NexGard has not been evaluated in these populations. Your vet may recommend alternative parasite control protocols during these periods.
- The heartworm status of your dog if you are considering NexGard PLUS. A heartworm antigen test is required before starting any heartworm preventive, including NexGard PLUS. Do not skip this step — giving a preventive to a heartworm-positive dog carries real clinical risk.
- Every other medication, supplement, or treatment your dog currently receives. While no drug interactions with afoxolaner are currently documented, full disclosure allows your vet to monitor appropriately and update their guidance if new interactions are identified in the future.
- Assuming NexGard keeps ticks away — it does not. NexGard is not a repellent. Ticks will still attach to your dog and begin feeding. They die within hours to days of biting, but they must bite first. Tick checks after outdoor time remain important even when your dog is on NexGard.
- Skipping doses “in winter” because fleas and ticks seem less active. The Companion Animal Parasite Council recommends year-round monthly prevention because fleas survive indoors year-round and ticks can be active whenever temperatures are above freezing. Many tick-borne disease exposures happen in late fall and early spring when people let their guard down.
- Purchasing NexGard without a prescription from unofficial online sources. NexGard is a federally restricted prescription drug. Purchasing it from any source that does not require a valid veterinary prescription means receiving a product outside legal channels that may be counterfeit, improperly stored, or expired. Only buy from licensed veterinary pharmacies with a valid Rx.
© BestiePaws.com — This guide is independently researched and written for educational purposes only. We are not affiliated with, compensated by, or endorsed by Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health, the FDA, or any veterinary organization. NexGard is a registered trademark of Boehringer Ingelheim Animal Health France, used under license. All drug information is sourced from official FDA labeling, peer-reviewed research, and clinically reviewed veterinary references as of March 2026. Veterinary drug information changes — always confirm current prescribing information with your licensed veterinarian. This content is not veterinary advice and does not replace a professional veterinary examination. 📞 Report adverse events: 1-888-FDA-VETS • Boehringer Ingelheim: 1-888-637-4251 • ASPCA Poison Control: 1-888-426-4435 • Emergency vet: aaha.org/find-a-hospital
Primary sources: FDA DailyMed NexGard afoxolaner label dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/drugInfo.cfm?setid=a668d223 (full prescribing information; efficacy data; adverse events; storage; dosing; concomitant meds; approved tick species; Lyme disease prevention; puppies 8 wk/4 lb minimum; pregnancy not evaluated); FDA DailyMed NexGard PLUS label dailymed.nlm.nih.gov/drugInfo.cfm?setid=1eb7bc46 (afoxolaner + moxidectin + pyrantel; heartworm test before starting; not effective adult D. immitis; 6 months after last mosquito exposure; MDR1 safety; pharmacokinetics fed/fasted); FDA FOI Summary NADA 141-406 animaldrugsatfda.fda.gov (flea kill 4 hr start; >99% at 8 hr; 100% flea 24 hr; >97% D. variabilis; >94% I. scapularis; >93% R. sanguineus; >97% A. americanum; Lyme prevention studies; margin of safety 8-9 wk puppies 1×/3×/5× dose); FDA Fact Sheet isoxazoline products fda.gov/animal-veterinary (neurologic adverse reactions; tremors ataxia seizures; dogs without prior history; safe effective majority; petowners may report); FDA EUA NexGard NWS dogs fda.gov/media/191166/download rev 02/2026 (NWS dogs EUA; February 18 2026 NWS not in US; border travel risk; wound care); NIH/PMC Drag Tielemans Mitchell 2022 PMC9543253 (MDR1 collie safety 3.8× max dose; passive diffusion mechanism; no serious adverse effects); Drugs.com NexGard adverse events frequency ranking (updated 2026-03-01); Veterinary Partner VIN veterinarypartner.vin.com (vomiting ~4%; diarrhea ~3%; re-dose under 2 hr; no drug interactions; biliary excretion; extra tick species); PetMD petmd.com (off-label demodectic sarcoptic mange ear mites; MDR1 no increased risk; Beugnet 2016 Parasite; esafoxolaner for cats separate); GoodRx DVM-reviewed Aug 2025 (Sarah Wooten DVM CVJ); Vetster Nov 2025 (liver processing; MDR1 safe at labeled dose; pregnancy not evaluated; seizure risk)