Your pigs are eating well, but they're losing weight. They're scratching constantly. Their skin looks rough and crusty. Something is wrong, and parasites are likely the answer.
Ivomec for pigs is a broad-spectrum antiparasitic treatment built around the active ingredient ivermectin. It targets both internal worms and external parasites with a single dose. For pig farmers managing everything from small homestead herds to large commercial operations, it's one of the most relied-upon tools in swine health management.
This guide covers everything it treats, how it works, exact dosages by pig type, side effects, safety rules, and what resistance means for your herd.
The Parasites Ivomec for Pigs Actually Targets
Knowing what you're treating helps you treat it better. Parasites affecting pigs fall into two categories.
Internal Parasites
Ascaris suum (Large Roundworm)
The most widespread gut worm in US pig herds. Larvae damage the liver, leaving "milk spot" lesions visible at slaughter. Signs include poor feed conversion, a pot-bellied appearance in young pigs, and coughing during the lung-migration phase.
Oesophagostomum spp. (Nodular Worms)
Creates nodules in the intestinal wall. Watch for loose stools, reduced appetite, and unexplained weight loss, which can easily be mistaken for a nutritional issue.
Metastrongylus spp. (Lungworms)
Spread through earthworms. Common in outdoor and pasture systems. Signs are a persistent cough, labored breathing, and low energy. If your pigs are outside, lungworm risk is real.
Strongyloides ransomi (Threadworms)
Dangerous for suckling piglets. Passed through the sow's colostrum. Infected piglets develop severe watery diarrhea, weakness, and in bad cases, death. Treating the sow pre-farrowing is the key preventive step.
Trichuris suis (Whipworm)
Lives in the colon. Heavy infections cause bloody diarrhea, straining, and rectal prolapse, especially in growers.
Stephanurus dentatus (Kidney Worm)
More common in southern US states and outdoor systems. Causes liver and kidney damage, reduced growth, and carcass condemnation at slaughter.
External Parasites
Sarcoptic Mange (Sarcoptes scabiei var. suis)
The most economically damaging ectoparasite in swine production. The mite burrows under the skin. Early signs: pigs rubbing their ears on pen walls, small red bumps on the belly and inner thighs, restless behavior at night. Advanced signs: thick, crusty, wrinkled skin, constant scratching, and poor growth.
Pig Lice (Haematopinus suis)
The only louse species on pigs; it sucks blood. Look for gray-brown insects on the neck, ears, and flanks. Heavy infestations cause anemia, pale gums, irritability, and reduced performance in young animals.
How Ivomec Works
Ivermectin binds to glutamate-gated chloride channels (GluCl) structures found in parasite nerve and muscle cells, but not in mammals. Binding forces these channels open, flooding the parasite's cells with chloride ions. The parasite becomes paralyzed. It can't feed, move, or reproduce. It dies.
A secondary effect involves GABA receptors, further suppressing nerve transmission in the parasite.
The safety margin for pigs exists because mammals lack GluCl channels entirely, and a protein called P-glycoprotein prevents ivermectin from crossing into the brain at therapeutic doses.
"It kills parasites selectively and is safe for your pigs when the dose is correct."
Ivomec for Pigs Dosage

Always weigh your pigs before dosing. Estimating weight causes dosing errors. Your veterinarian must provide a prescription and confirm the correct product for your animals.
Universal Dose Rate
Adult Sows
- Dose: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Route: Subcutaneous injection (neck, behind the ear)
- Timing: 1–2 weeks before farrowing
- Why: Reduces worm burden and clears mange before piglets are born. Prevents environmental transmission at the most vulnerable stage.
Boars
- Dose: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Route: Subcutaneous injection
- Frequency: Every 6 months, or per vet-directed monitoring
Note: Boars spread parasites to sows and the wider herd. Don't overlook them.
Weaners and Growers
- Dose: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Route: Subcutaneous injection or oral in-feed premix
- Timing: At entry to the growing unit
Note: In mange-heavy herds, a second treatment at 10–14 days is strongly recommended.
Finisher Pigs
- Dose: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Route: Subcutaneous injection or in-feed
- Critical: Observe the 18-day meat withdrawal period from the last injection before slaughter. Verify this against your specific product label, which varies by brand and formulation.
Replacement Gilts
- Dose: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Route: Subcutaneous injection
- Timing: On arrival (quarantine treatment), again 10–14 days later, then pre-farrowing
- Reason: New animals entering your herd are the #1 route of mange and worm introduction.
Suckling Piglets
- Most injectable products are not licensed for very young or lightweight piglets
- For Strongyloides control, treating the sow pre-farrowing is the primary strategy
- Always get veterinary guidance before treating neonates directly
Manage Requires Two Treatments
Ivermectin does not kill mange eggs. The first treatment kills live mites. The second, given 10–14 days later, kills mites that hatched after the first dose. Skipping the second treatment is the number one reason mange comes back.
In-Feed (Oral) Dosage
- Dose rate: 300 mcg/kg BW
- Administered over 7 consecutive days via medicated feed
- Works well for large groups where individual handling isn't practical
- Accurate group weight estimation is essential; every pig in the group must reach a therapeutic dose
- Always follow your vet's mixing and administration instructions
Injection Technique
- Inject subcutaneously in the neck, behind the ear
- Never inject intravenously this can be fatal
- Maximum volume per injection site: follow the product label (typically 10–20 mL for large animals)
- Use clean needles; change between animals where disease transmission is a concern
Side Effects
Most pigs tolerate Ivomec well at the correct dose.
| Category | Side Effect |
|---|---|
| Common and Mild | Temporary swelling or firm lump at the injection site (typically resolves in 1–2 weeks) |
| Brief discomfort immediately after injection | |
| Less Common | Mild lethargy for 24–48 hours |
| Temporary reduced appetite | |
| Occasional excess salivation with oral forms | |
| Signs of Overdose — Call Your Vet Immediately | Stumbling or loss of coordination (ataxia) |
| Tremors or muscle twitching | |
| Dilated pupils | |
| Unable to rise, prolonged recumbency | |
| Slow or labored breathing |
There is no antidote for ivermectin overdose. Treatment is supportive care only. Accurate weighing is not optional; it's what prevents this.
Safety Rules
For Your Pigs
- Never inject intravenously
- Do not use in pigs producing milk for human consumption unless the product is licensed for this
- Do not combine with other macrocyclic lactones (doramectin, eprinomectin) without veterinary direction
- Treat sick or debilitated pigs with extra caution, as a compromised blood-brain barrier raises toxicity risk
- Keep written treatment records: product name, batch number, date, dose, and withdrawal period end date
Withdrawal Period
- Injectable: minimum 18 days before slaughter
- Injection site tissue may retain residues longer than muscle or fat. This matters for carcass processing
- Non-compliance is a federal food safety violation
For You: Human Safety
- Wear gloves when handling and injecting
- Avoid eye and mucous membrane contact
- Wash your hands thoroughly after use
- Accidental self-injection: seek immediate medical attention; bring the product label
- Veterinary ivermectin is not safe for humans. This is a firm, non-negotiable warning
Environmental Responsibility
- Ivermectin is highly toxic to dung beetles and aquatic invertebrates
- Don't spread manure from treated pigs near waterways or wildlife areas during the active residue period
- Dispose of unused product per EPA and local regulations
Building a Parasite Control Program That Actually Works
One treatment is not a strategy.
Here's a practical framework.
Breeding Herd
Treat all sows 1–2 weeks pre-farrowing. Treat boars every 6 months. Treat incoming animals on arrival and after quarantine before joining the main herd.
Growing Pigs
Treat at entry to the nursery or growing unit. In high-pressure outdoor systems, a second treatment during the grow-out period may be needed.
Monitor, Don't Just Treat
Use fecal egg counts to confirm parasite burdens before treating. Blanket routine treatment without monitoring accelerates the development of resistance.
Resistance Is Real
Ivermectin resistance in pig nematodes is an increasing problem in the US and globally. Avoid underdosing. Rotate anthelmintic drug classes under veterinary guidance. Test your herd's response to treatment periodically with a fecal egg count reduction test (FECRT).
Frequently Asked Questions
Q: What is Ivomec used for in pigs?
A: Ivomec treats internal worms like roundworms and lungworms, and external parasites like mange mites and lice. It protects pig health and improves growth and farm productivity.
Q: How much ivermectin should I give my pig?
A: The standard dose is 300 mcg per kilogram of body weight. Always weigh your pig first. Consult your veterinarian before administering any treatment.
Conclusion
Parasites quietly drain your herd's health and your operation's profitability. Ivomec for pigs addresses that problem at both levels, treating what's living inside and what's living on the outside, with a single, well-understood active ingredient.
Used correctly, the right dose, right timing, right route, strict withdrawal compliance, it remains one of the most effective antiparasitic tools available to pig farmers today. Pair it with proper hygiene, quarantine protocols for new stock, regular monitoring, and a veterinary-guided herd health plan, and you've built a parasite program that protects your animals year-round.
See the signs early. Weigh accurately. Treat properly. And always work with your veterinarian.
References
- FDA Center for Veterinary Medicine — Approved Animal Drug Products: animaldrugsatfda.fda.gov
- USDA APHIS — Swine Health Programs: aphis.usda.gov
- NADIS — National Animal Disease Information Service: nadis.org.uk
- AHDB Pork — Pig health and biosecurity: ahdb.org.uk
Medical Disclaimer
This article is for educational purposes only. It does not replace veterinary advice. Always consult a licensed veterinarian before treating your animals. Never use veterinary ivermectin on humans.