How to Keep an Indoor Cat Healthy and Happy
Slug: 608-how-to-keep-indoor-cat-healthy-happyPillar: Pet Care > Cat CareKeyword: how to keep indoor cat healthyExcerpt: Indoor cats live longer but need more from their owners. Here's exactly how to keep your indoor cat physically healthy and mentally stimulated.
Indoor cats live longer — but they need more from you
The average indoor cat lives 12–18 years. An outdoor cat lives around 5–7 years. But indoor life comes with trade-offs. Without the physical and mental stimulation of the outdoors, indoor cats are more prone to obesity, boredom, dental disease, and stress-related behaviour problems. All of these are preventable.
Feeding: less than you think, better than you're giving
Obesity is the number one health problem in indoor cats. Cats evolved as hunters who eat multiple small meals — not a full bowl left out all day. Free-feeding almost always leads to overeating. Portion-controlled feeding twice a day is the better approach.
Wet food matters more than many owners realise. Cats have a low thirst drive and evolved to get most of their water from prey. A dry-food-only diet means many cats live in mild chronic dehydration, contributing to kidney disease — the leading cause of death in older cats. Adding wet food even once a day makes a real difference to long-term kidney health.
Play: it's not optional
Two 10–15 minute play sessions a day is the general recommendation from veterinary behaviourists. The key is using interactive toys that mimic prey movement: wand toys, feather teasers, and laser pointers (always end a laser session with a physical toy so the cat can catch something). A £10 feather wand is genuinely one of the best investments you can make for your cat's wellbeing.
Puzzle feeders and food-dispensing toys slow eating, provide mental stimulation, and satisfy the hunting drive all at once.
Environmental enrichment: think vertical
Cats are natural climbers, and height equals security for them. A cat tree positioned near a window provides both climbing opportunity and feline television. Window bird feeders that suction to glass are an inexpensive way to create ongoing entertainment.
Scratching posts are essential. Scratching is how cats maintain claws, mark territory, and stretch. Position one near where your cat sleeps — cats often scratch when they wake up.
Vet care: annual, not when things go wrong
Indoor cats should have annual wellness exams. Cats hide illness extremely well — by the time a cat seems unwell, many conditions are already advanced. Annual blood panels are valuable for cats over seven, catching kidney disease, hyperthyroidism, and diabetes early. Dental health is the most commonly neglected area; the majority of cats over three have some degree of dental disease.
Litter: more boxes, better placement
One litter box per cat, plus one extra. Cats avoid dirty litter boxes — a single box gets dirty fast. Inappropriate elimination is the most common cat behaviour complaint, and in most cases, a cleaner or better-positioned litter box fixes it. Position litter boxes in quiet corners with an escape route, away from food and water.
FAQ
How do I know if my indoor cat is bored?Signs include excessive sleeping (more than 16 hours a day), destructive behaviour, overeating, repetitive meowing, or excessive grooming.
Should I get a second cat to keep my indoor cat company?Not necessarily. Some cats thrive with company; others are territorial and find a second cat stressful. Introduce slowly over several weeks if you do.
How often should an indoor cat visit the vet?Once a year for cats under 7, twice a year for cats over 7.
What's the best food for an indoor cat?A combination of high-quality wet food and portion-controlled dry food. Look for foods where the first ingredient is a named protein.
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