How Much Water Should a Cat Drink Per Day?
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This content was created with AI assistance and is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice.
Most healthy adult cats need about 50-60 ml of water per kilogram of body weight per day – roughly 200-250 ml total for a typical 4 kg cat, counting both drinking water and moisture from food.
How Much Water Cats Actually Need
According to Royal Canin Academy, a cat requires about 50 ml of water per kilogram of body weight daily, which works out to roughly 200-250 ml a day for a 4-5 kg cat. Cats.com puts the figure slightly higher, around 60 ml per kilogram – so a 4 kg cat would need close to 240 ml. Both sources agree on the same rough range, and both count total fluid intake, not just what your cat drinks from a bowl.
Why Wet Food Changes the Math
This total includes moisture from food, and that matters a lot depending on diet. Dry kibble contains very little moisture (roughly 10% or less), while wet food is around 70-80% water. A cat eating only dry food has to make up the difference by drinking noticeably more from a bowl or fountain, while a cat on a mostly wet-food diet may drink very little and still be getting enough total fluid.
Signs Your Cat Isn’t Drinking Enough
A simple check vets use is the skin-tent test: gently lift the skin between your cat’s shoulder blades and let go. In a well-hydrated cat it should snap back almost instantly. According to Cats.com, if it takes longer than about half a second to flatten back out, that’s a sign of dehydration. Other signs include sunken eyes, lethargy, reduced appetite, and a faster-than-normal heart rate.
When To See A Vet Immediately
Both Royal Canin Academy and Cats.com point to the same upper threshold: a cat drinking more than about 100 ml per kilogram of body weight a day is drinking excessively, which can signal an underlying illness (kidney disease and diabetes are common causes) and is worth a vet visit rather than something to just monitor. The same applies in the other direction – clear dehydration signs (the skin-tent test failing, sunken eyes, lethargy) alongside reduced drinking should also prompt a same-day vet call, not a wait-and-see approach.
How To Get Your Cat To Drink More
- Add a second or third water bowl in different rooms – some cats simply won’t walk far for water.
- Try a pet water fountain – many cats prefer moving water over a still bowl.
- Mix in more wet food, or add a splash of water to dry kibble.
- Keep bowls away from food and litter – cats often avoid drinking near either.
Key Takeaways
- Most cats need roughly 50-60 ml of water per kg of body weight a day, food moisture included.
- Dry-food-only cats need to drink noticeably more than wet-food cats to hit the same total.
- Drinking more than about 100 ml/kg a day is excessive and worth a vet visit.
- The skin-tent test is a quick way to check hydration at home.
FAQ
Does wet food count toward my cat’s water intake?
Yes – wet food is roughly 70-80% water, so a cat eating mostly wet food gets a large share of its daily fluid needs from meals alone, not just from drinking.
My cat suddenly started drinking a lot more than usual – is that normal?
A sudden, sustained increase in drinking is not something to ignore. It’s one of the more common early signs vets associate with conditions like kidney disease or diabetes, so it’s worth a vet check rather than assuming it will pass.