Is My Cat Fat?
A genuinely useful guide to figuring out whether your cat is overweight — without the dry vet-speak. Three hands-on tests, the body condition score, and a frank admission of where the line really is.
If you've found this page, you're probably looking at your cat right now and wondering. The cat is staring back at you, judgement-free. The cat does not care. You care. That's a good thing — owners who notice their cats are getting heavy are the ones who can do something about it.
1. Why this question matters.
Roughly 60% of pet cats in the United States are overweight, according to the Association for Pet Obesity Prevention. That number has been rising for two decades. Most owners with overweight cats either don't realise, or have come to think of their cat's body shape as normal because they see it every day.
This isn't a moral failing — cats are professional grifters who can extract three meals out of one human family — but it is a health issue. Overweight cats face significantly higher risks of:
- Diabetes mellitus — overweight cats are roughly four times more likely to develop it
- Joint disease and arthritis — particularly in hips, knees, and elbows
- Liver disease — fatty liver disease can develop quickly if an obese cat stops eating
- Lower urinary tract issues — including bladder stones and infections
- Reduced lifespan — studies suggest 1–2 years shorter, on average
So: it matters. But it's also fixable. A cat that's mildly overweight can usually be brought back to a healthy weight in 6–12 months with no drama. The hard part is noticing.
2. The three tests you can do at home.
Veterinarians use a clinical method called body condition scoring to assess fat levels. The good news: most of it can be done in your living room, with your hands and your eyes. Forget the scale for a minute — shape matters more than weight.
Here are the three tests, in order of reliability. Run all three. If your cat fails all three, the answer is yes.
Run your hands gently along your cat's sides, from behind the front legs to the hips. You're feeling for the ribs through the fur and skin.
What you should feel: a slight bumpy texture, like running your fingers across the back of your hand with a light blanket over it. Not pronounced ridges. Not nothing.
Mild concern: You have to press to find them, like feeling through a thick sweater.
Fail: You can't really feel ribs at all without pushing. Or there are no ribs because your hand has been swallowed.
Stand directly above your standing cat and look straight down. You're checking the outline of their body from above.
A healthy cat has a visible waist — a slight inward curve between the ribcage and the hips. Imagine looking down at a peanut shape (rib end, narrower middle, hip end), not a tube or a watermelon.
Mild concern: The waist is barely visible — your cat is more of a tube.
Fail: No waist. Or the waist is wider than the chest. Or you cannot see the cat's outline because it has merged with the floor.
Look at your cat from the side, while they're standing. The belly should not hang down lower than the ribcage. There should be a slight upward curve — what veterinarians call a tuck — from the bottom of the ribs to the hind legs.
Important caveat: many older or formerly-overweight cats have a primordial pouch — a flap of loose skin that hangs from the belly. This is normal. It swings when they walk. It is not the same as fat.
Mild concern: Belly is parallel to the ground, no tuck.
Fail: Belly hangs lower than the ribcage. Belly drags on stairs.
3. The 9-point body condition score.
Veterinarians don't just say "fat" or "not fat" — they use a 9-point scale called the Body Condition Score (BCS). It's the gold standard, used in clinics worldwide. Here's the whole scale, translated from clinical-speak:
Most overweight cats land somewhere between 6 and 8. The good news is that getting from 7 down to 5 is genuinely achievable in less than a year, with no extreme measures.
4. Your cat's breed matters a lot.
Before declaring your cat overweight, find out what they're supposed to weigh. The range is enormous:
- Singapura — 4 to 8 pounds (1.8–3.6 kg)
- Siamese — 6 to 10 pounds (2.7–4.5 kg)
- Russian Blue — 7 to 12 pounds (3.2–5.4 kg)
- Domestic Shorthair (most "regular" cats) — 8 to 12 pounds (3.6–5.4 kg)
- British Shorthair — 9 to 18 pounds (4–8 kg) — naturally stocky
- Ragdoll — 10 to 20 pounds (4.5–9 kg) — large but soft
- Norwegian Forest Cat — 12 to 22 pounds (5.4–10 kg)
- Maine Coon — 13 to 18 pounds typical, up to 25 (5.9–11+ kg)
An 18-pound Maine Coon may be perfectly lean. An 18-pound Siamese is in serious trouble. Body condition score works across breeds; weight alone does not.
5. Fluffy or fat? How to settle it.
The eternal question for owners of long-haired cats. The good news is that the rib test cuts straight through. Fluff doesn't change what you feel under your hands — it only changes what you see.
If your cat looks like a furry boulder but you can easily feel ribs through a thin fat layer when you press lightly: you have a floof. Your cat just photographs heavy. This is one of the great injustices in feline life.
If your cat looks like a furry boulder and you can't find ribs without searching: you have a chonk. The fluff is hiding the situation, but the situation is real.
Get your cat wet (in your imagination, please) and you'll have your answer. Or just feel.
6. The actual numbers.
If you must have a scale-and-numbers answer, here are the rough rules of thumb. Always check breed first.
For a typical domestic shorthair adult cat:
- Underweight: below 7 pounds (3.2 kg)
- Healthy range: 8 to 12 pounds (3.6–5.4 kg)
- Overweight: 12 to 14 pounds (5.4–6.4 kg)
- Obese: over 14 pounds (6.4 kg)
You can weigh your cat at home: weigh yourself, weigh yourself holding the cat, subtract. The cat will be unimpressed, but it works.
Track the trajectory more than the absolute number. A cat that's been 13 pounds steadily for years and is otherwise healthy is in different territory than a cat that was 10 pounds last spring and is now 13.
7. If your cat is overweight: now what?
The first instinct of most owners is to put the cat on a strict diet immediately. Don't. Sudden, sharp calorie restriction in cats can trigger a dangerous condition called hepatic lipidosis (fatty liver disease) within days. Cats are weird. They need to lose weight slowly.
The basics, in order of importance:
- Talk to your vet first. A blood test rules out medical causes (hypothyroidism, diabetes, fluid retention) and gives you a target weight to aim at.
- Measure food. Most overfeeding happens because owners eyeball portions or "free-feed". Use an actual measuring cup or kitchen scale.
- Switch to a high-protein, lower-carb diet. Cats are obligate carnivores; a lot of dry food is closer to cereal than meat. Wet food, in measured portions, is often the simplest fix.
- Slow the eating. Puzzle feeders, snuffle mats, and food balls turn meals from 30-second binges into 15-minute activities. Cats burn more calories foraging than sitting still.
- Encourage movement. Wand toys, laser pointers, climbing trees. Five minutes twice a day is meaningful.
- Aim for slow loss. 0.5–1% of body weight per week is the safe range. A 14-pound cat should lose 1.5–2 pounds over six months, not in a month.
Indoor cats with limited stimulation often eat from boredom rather than hunger. Sometimes the answer is more play, not less food.
8. When to actually see a vet.
This guide is informational. It is not veterinary advice, and the internet does not know your cat. See a vet if:
- Your cat scores 7 or higher on the body condition score
- Your cat has gained or lost more than a pound in a few months without an obvious reason
- Your cat is also drinking or urinating more than usual
- Your cat's appetite has dramatically changed in either direction
- Your cat is breathing heavily after mild exertion
- You're not sure, and they need a check-up anyway