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Ending toxicity testing on animals.

Globally, toxicity testing is one of the least visible and most disturbing use of animals in laboratories. Every year, millions of animals around the world are exposed to toxic substances to see what harm will occur. Their suffering is extreme — for results that rarely yield any human benefit.

Our campaign shines a light on what toxicity testing really involves — to accelerate the global transition to modern technologies that protect human health without harming animals.

A lone, terrified monkey restrained in a green device by their neck and waist. They are unable to move and their eyes are wide with fear.

Suffering on a global scale.

Every year, millions of animals — including pigs, rats, rabbits, dogs and monkeys — are used in toxicity testing worldwide.

Animals are deliberately exposed to substances to see what harm they cause, at what dose, and to which parts of the body. These tests underpin the approval of medicines, chemicals and other products, and remain embedded in regulatory systems globally.

Before new drugs can be tested in people, regulators typically require data from two species — usually a rodent and a non-rodent such as a dog or primate — a system few people ever see and one that comes at a profound cost to animals.

Inside toxicity testing labs.

Animals used in toxicity tests can be subjected to invasive procedures and prolonged confinement and stress, sometimes over months or years. But the impact of this system doesn’t end with them — it extends to the people involved and to the reliability of the results it produces. Here’s a glimpse into what happens inside toxicity testing labs.

A white rat is being gripped in a lab worker's hand, as a tube is forced down their throat into their stomach.

Oral dosing (gavage)

Animals are restrained as a long tube is forced down their throats and the test substances are injected directly into their stomachs.

A close up of a monkey with a gas mask strapped to their face. Their hands are gripping the bars of the restraint device they're trapped in.

Forced inhalation

Animals are immobilised in restraint devices with a mask strapped to their faces — or inside plastic tubes inserted into an inhalation tower —and forced to breathe in test drugs and chemicals.

A lonely beagle lays on the hard floor of a lab cage. They have sad eyes, and are wearing the thick cone collar and cumbersome 'continuous infusion' jacket.

Continuous infusion

Test substances are continuously injected directly into the bloodstream of animals.

A close up of the back of a pig. Their back is shaved, with eight rectangles of skin and flesh cut out of it where test substances are being applied.

Dermal toxicity

Test substances are applied to open wounds — rectangles of skin and flesh that are surgically cut out of the backs of pigs. These wounds are immensely painful.

A white rabbit is completely restrained in a clear plastic device in a lab as a substance is injected into their ear. They have no room to move.

Restraint and immobilisation

Fully conscious rabbits and rats are squeezed into narrow restraint containers that have been designed and manufactured for the purposes of toxicity testing.

Three primates huddled together in a cage. Their arms are around one another and their eyes show concern and confusion.

Laboratory housing and confinement

Animals in laboratories spend their lives in confinement; usually denied space, exercise and meaningful enrichment.

A tiny primate hand holding the finger of a human hand.

Human suffering

Technicians carry the emotional burden of harming animals as part of their daily work. Studies show that this “caring–killing paradox” can lead to moral distress, PTSD-like symptoms and depression. 

Flawed science

90% of new drugs that pass animal tests fail in human trials. Relying on animals has sent medical research down costly, misleading paths, delaying real breakthroughs that could have come from humane and human-relevant research.

These procedures are not incidental to the process — they are fundamental to how toxicity testing is conducted. The suffering of animals is unavoidable. Pain relief is normally withheld because it might interfere with test results.

The case for change.

Beyond the ethical concerns, the reliability of animal toxicity testing is increasingly being challenged.

Animals are not surrogates for humans. Differences in genetics, metabolism, immune systems and physiology mean they often respond to substances in ways that simply don’t reflect human biology. As a result, animal data frequently fails to predict what will happen in people.

This disconnect is reflected in drug development itself: more than 90% of drugs that appear safe and effective in animal studies fail in human trials — often because they prove ineffective or unsafe.

Despite this, animal testing remains embedded in regulatory systems that have yet to fully catch up with modern science.

But change is underway.

Human-relevant technologies — including organoids, organs-on-chips and advanced computational models — are already transforming how safety can be assessed. These methods are often faster, cheaper and more accurate.

While animal testing for cosmetics is banned in many parts of the world, testing pharmaceuticals and chemicals on animals is still widespread. However, governments in the UK, European Union and United States are now advancing policies to reduce and replace animal testing with more accurate, human-based approaches.

A safety system built on human biology has the potential to better protect people — while preventing immense suffering for animals.

A close up of a white rat laying on the floor of a small clear box in a lab. They have a catheter in their tail so that test substances can be repeated infused.
A screenshot of the mobile view of the toxicity.inc campaign website homepage.

Through TOXICITY.inc, Animals International has brought together organisations across multiple countries to reveal the reality of toxicity testing and to push for the global transition to modern, human-relevant non-animal testing methods.

Help end toxicity testing
A beautiful macaque stares wistfully upward against a blurred green outdoor backgorund.

Bringing these hidden practices into the public eye — and into policy conversations — will help accelerate the shift towards the adoption of testing methods that protect people without harming animals.