Panacur Dewormer Horse Paste 10%, 100mg
$14.99

Price: $14.99
(as of Oct 17, 2025 19:01:05 UTC – Details)
Panacur (fenbendazole) Paste 10 percent is indicated for the control of large strongyles (Strongylus edentatus S. equinus S. vulgaris) encysted early third stage (hyobiotic) late third stage and fourth stage cyathostome larvae small strongyles pinworms (Oxyuris equi) ascarids (Parascaris equorum) and arteritis caused by fourth stage larvae of Strongylus vulgaris in horses.Panacur (fenbendazole) Paste 10 percent is approved for use concomitantly with an approved form of trichlorfon. Thichlorfon is approved for the treatment of stomach bots (Gasterohilus spp.) in horses. Refer to the manufacturer’s label for directions for use and cautions for trichlorfon.
Is Discontinued By Manufacturer : No
Product Dimensions : 9 x 1.5 x 2 inches; 0.01 ounces
Item model number : PANACUR PASTE
Date First Available : August 1, 2004
Manufacturer : Lambriar Vet
ASIN : B0015DUBZA
Best Sellers Rank: #5,094 in Pet Supplies (See Top 100 in Pet Supplies) #15 in Horse Care Dewormers
Customer Reviews: 4.8 4.8 out of 5 stars 1,402 ratings var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });
Horse Dewormer
Flavored with artificial apple cinnamon liquid
For Use in Animals Only
Horse Dewormer
Flavored with artificial apple cinnamon liquid
Customers say
Customers find this dewormer effective, noting it works better than Strongid and is the best choice for puppies and dogs. The product is easy to administer and provides good value, with one customer mentioning it’s affordable between vet visits. They appreciate its safety, with one noting it’s safe for outdoor cats, and its versatility, with one mentioning it’s an excellent addition to chicken care routines. The taste receives mixed reactions from customers.

Dan –
Works Great for Chickens with Proper Dosage
This dewormer has been an excellent addition to my chicken care routine. Even though itâs marketed for horses, many poultry keepers (like myself) use it in smaller doses for chickens, and it works very effectively. The paste is easy to measure out, which makes dosing more manageable when you only need a small amount for each bird.I like that it comes in a sturdy syringe-style tube, which makes it simple to apply without a mess. The paste itself has a thick consistency, so it doesnât drip everywhere, and you can control exactly how much comes out. Iâve found that when given correctly, it clears up internal parasites and keeps my flock healthy and active.
Maria Gina –
Shipped fast
Very good. Widely applicable. A bit more expensive but it shipped a lot faster.
drhome –
Good quality
Easy to pump and no issues giving it, appears taste is good
Joy Marie –
It Worked When Others Didn’t
The 1st medication I used for my horse surprisingly failed. This one finally worked. My horse is happy again.
Mike –
Great for tortoises
Worked good in worming my tortoises very economical. Also bought a gram scale to measure the medicine. Put a small piece of lettuce on the gram scale and tare the scale to zero then weigh out the proper amount of worming paste on the lettuce. Take the lettuce with the worming paste off the scale fold it over like a taco and directly feed it to your tortoise. Make sure to weigh the tortoise and calculate the amount of grams needed. About the size of a tic tac for a 20 pound desert tortoise. It will take about three doses with each dose spaced 10 days apart to be effective.
No one –
For cats? Dogs? Same medicine but no script.
I know this is against instructions and not recommended but I had 3 cats passing giardia back and forth. I took in a 2 week old sick kitten who had it. I took her to the vet. 30$ visit, 30$ test, 30$ medicine. $90.00Shared litter box, she passed it to the other 2 cats. She was cured but then got reinfected. I was on fixed income and could not pay for all 3 cats vet visit, tests and meds. The vets office said Iâd need to bring each cat, $30 each. test each cat $30 more before I could get panacur for them. SSI paid me $860 a month so $270 for these cats for one treatment round was not possible for me at that time.Cat panacur requires a prescription but horse panacur does not. I bought this and made the very careful calculations and measurements to bring the weight from horse to kitten. It was difficult to administer and 7 years later the sick kitten is still angry at my boyfriend who did the catch and squirt in mouth duty. (She wonât let him near her to this day) because of the shared litter box and every cat having different cure times they each at least once were cured and then got re infected. I think the kitten had 3 rounds. In total we were not free of green leaky diarrhea and cat gas for 3 months. I canât imagine how much it would have cost to go through the vet for each cat each time.Less than 20$ did several rounds of treatment on 2 adult and one baby cat. It is white pasty & gross. The cats hated it. But it likely saved the kittens life & cured the grown cats. I never noticed a negative side effect from this medicine on any of the three.In no way do I think what I did was a good idea. It is risky. I tried a similar approach with flea medicine and one of my cats got so ill I was terrified Iâd poisoned her. (I thought it was successful with horse panacur and tried to save money by purchasing dog flea drops for 40 Lb dog and cutting it down to my cats weight.) horrible mistake. One cat took it fine but the other cat…. (once the giardia infected stray kitten) She reacted very bad…The poor girl was terrified. She looked like she was hallucinating. Huge pupils… She cried and shook and streamed drool in my lap. She was so afraid and refused to leave me. She even pooped herself a couple times as I held her. Afterwards I read horror stories online of people killing their pets doing this with flea drops. That experience made me realize itâs not worth the risk to save money. But at that time with the giardia outbreak I felt I had no choice. I had to help her. I had to help all of them and I was too poor to help them the right way. So I used this product in an off label manner. It worked. They were cured and had no bad reaction that I could see. But if you can afford the right way, please do it the safe, correct veterinarian route.
mptoledo –
Yep
My horse thinks this tasted pretty good. It is a watery paste, so becareful when using it, as it will squirt all over.
Kindle Customer –
Good product …
I bought it to treat canine tapeworm and it worked. However, be forewarned that horse dosage is different from canine recommended dosage (in terms of the percentage of the “active ingredient” included) so you will have to adjust the amount. Hint: canines (while much smaller than horses) require a higher dosage percentage-wise of the active ingredient to treat and effectively kill their intestinal worms. If you can confidently work all of that out then it works fine but due to this, did not turn out to be as cost-effective as I first thought. It is a paste (which I liked) and the delivery method is measurable and thrifty. However, next time I’ll buy the product targeted for canines.