Quick answer
Raspberries may fit only as a tiny occasional amount for guinea pigs. They should not replace the normal diet.
Use a tiny occasional amount only. This should not become a daily food.
Fruit safety check
Raspberries may fit only as a tiny occasional amount for guinea pigs. They should not replace the normal diet.
Raspberries may fit only as a tiny occasional amount for guinea pigs. They should not replace the normal diet.
Use a tiny occasional amount only. This should not become a daily food.
Wash thoroughly and serve plain.
Small berries still add sugar and can soften stool.
Detailed safety guide
Use this page to keep a possible treat from turning into a daily diet mistake, including fresh raspberries. The main concern is raspberries adds sugar quickly, so the safe version is tiny, fresh, and separated from seeds, pits, rinds, desserts, and dried fruit.
Guinea Pigs usually rely on grass hay plus vitamin C produce. That makes raspberries different from a generic human-food answer, especially around low-vitamin treats, sugar, dairy, and animal protein.
Raspberries may fit only as a tiny occasional amount for guinea pigs. They should not replace the normal diet.
Wash thoroughly and serve plain.
Small berries still add sugar and can soften stool.