Do Pigs Ever Eat Humans? Debunking the Myth with Science and Facts

When it comes to wild and farm animals, few myths stir as much curiosity—and fear—as the idea: Do pigs eat humans? While it sounds like something from a gory horror story, the truth is simple and reassuring—pigs absolutely do not eat humans. In this article, we break down the facts, science, and real-life behaviors to set the record straight.


Understanding the Context

Why Do People Think Pigs Eat Humans?

The origin of this myth likely stems from pigs’ opportunistic feeding habits and their somewhat unpredictable behavior. Wild pigs (also known as feral pigs, wild boars, or suids in older texts) are omnivores, meaning they eat plants, insects, small animals—and occasionally scavenge when food is scarce. Their curious, aggressive, and sometimes violent foraging behaviors in the wild can create disturbing imagery, especially when they charge or nip during company. But this is not predation.

In media and folklore, pigs are occasionally misrepresented, sometimes exaggerated in fictional stories—think anthropomorphized “man-eating pigs”—fueling misconceptions.


Key Insights

The Biological Truth: Pigs Are Omnivores, Not Carnivores

Pigs are herbivore-adjacent omnivores with diverse diets in both the wild and on farms. Their natural diet includes:

  • Grasses, roots, fruits, and tubers
  • Insects, worms, and small vertebrates
  • Carrion and decaying plant matter

While they can and do consume animal matter when available—especially insects and small animals—they do not actively hunt or eat larger mammals, including humans.

Key biological point: Pigs lack the powerful jaws, strong digestive systems, and predatory instincts seen in carnivores like wolves or big cats. Their skull structure and digestive system are adapted for plant-based metabolism, not rending flesh.

Final Thoughts


Real-World Behavior: Do Wild Pigs Attack Humans?

Wild pigs, such as the Eurasian wild boar or American feral pigs, are generally wary of humans. Attacks on people are extremely rare and typically result from:

  • Fear-induced aggression (you startling or cornering a pig)
  • Protection of young or territory
  • Escalation from habituated behavior (feeding intentionally encourages boldness)

Studies show that habituated pigs near human settlements may lose natural fear, increasing interaction risks—but this still does not mean they hunt or eat humans.

In fact, documented cases of pigs intentionally attacking and killing humans are exceedingly rare and often linked to unusual circumstances (e.g., feeding, injury, or aggression toward offspring—not predation).


What About Farmed Pigs?

On industrial farms, pigs are carefully managed and not prone to attacking. When handled properly, they exhibit no interest in humans as food. The notion that farm pigs might become cannibalistic is mostly folklore. In reality, trampled piglet deaths (often called “piglet cannibalism”) stem from stress, crowding, or malnutrition—not cannibalism driven by hunger.