Pet Nutrition

How Much Food to Feed a Cat Calculator

Estimate your cat's daily calorie needs and convert them to cups of dry food or cans of wet food. Works for any cat weight, age, and activity level.

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Quick values: 6, 8, 10, 12, 15, 18
Food Information
Quick values: 90, 200, 350, 400, 450, 500
Default result
235-287 kcal/day
Your cat needs roughly 261 kcal per day, which is about 0.65 cups of your selected food.
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This calculator provides general feeding estimates based on standard veterinary formulas and is for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice. Consult your veterinarian before making significant dietary changes, especially for cats with medical conditions, unusual weight changes, or special life stages such as pregnancy or lactation.
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Figuring out how much to feed a cat is one of the most common questions cat owners ask, and the answer depends on more than just weight. A cat's resting energy needs scale with body size, but factors like age, neuter status, indoor versus outdoor lifestyle, and the calorie density of the food itself can shift the daily target by 30 to 50 percent. For example, a typical 10 lb neutered indoor adult cat needs roughly 180 to 220 calories per day, which translates to about half a cup of a 400 kcal/cup dry food or two 3 oz cans of pate.

This calculator uses the standard veterinary formula RER = 70 × (weight in kg)^0.75, then multiplies by a lifestyle factor to estimate daily maintenance calories. It then divides by the calorie density you enter to give a portion in cups or cans. You can use any cat weight from a 2 lb kitten to a 20 lb large breed, and any food density from 250 kcal/cup wet food to 500 kcal/cup high-energy dry kibble. A 12 lb active adult eating a 380 kcal/cup food, for instance, lands near 5/8 cup per day.

How it works: Enter your cat's weight, life stage, activity level, and the calorie density of the food (printed on the bag or can). The tool calculates resting energy requirement, applies a lifestyle multiplier, and converts the daily calorie total into practical serving sizes.

This calculator provides estimates only. Always consult your veterinarian for cats with health conditions, unusual weight changes, or special dietary needs.

Cat Feeding Guide: How Much Food Does Your Cat Really Need?

Cat feeding amounts vary widely based on weight, age, neuter status, and food calorie density. Use the tables and methodology below to interpret the calculator's output and adjust portions over time based on body condition.

Typical daily calorie needs by cat weight (neutered adult, indoor moderate)

Cat weightWeight (kg)Daily caloriesDry food (400 kcal/cup)Wet food (95 kcal/can)
6 lb2.7 kg140 kcal0.35 cup1.5 cans
8 lb3.6 kg170 kcal0.43 cup1.8 cans
10 lb4.5 kg200 kcal0.50 cup2.1 cans
12 lb5.4 kg230 kcal0.58 cup2.4 cans
15 lb6.8 kg270 kcal0.68 cup2.8 cans
18 lb8.2 kg310 kcal0.78 cup3.3 cans

Life-stage and activity multipliers applied to RER

Life stage / activityMultiplierExample for 10 lb catNotes
Kitten under 1 year2.5x RER~415 kcal/dayHigher protein and fat needs
Adult intact1.4x RER~230 kcal/dayHigher than neutered
Adult neutered indoor1.2x RER~200 kcal/dayMost common scenario
Senior (11+)1.1x RER~180 kcal/dayAdjust for kidney/dental health
Weight loss program0.8x RER~135 kcal/daySupervise with vet
Lactating queen3.0x RER~495 kcal/dayFree-feed if possible

Why calorie needs vary so much

Two cats of identical weight can have daily needs that differ by 100 calories or more. Neutered cats need roughly 20-25% fewer calories than intact cats because of metabolic changes after surgery. Indoor-only cats burn 10-20% fewer calories than outdoor hunters. Age matters too: kittens under 6 months may need 2 to 3 times the adult maintenance calories per pound, while seniors over 11 often need 10-15% less. A common rule of thumb is that if your cat's ribs are easily felt but not visible, and you can see a slight waist from above, the current portion is working.

Dry food vs. wet food math

Calorie density is the single most important variable when converting calories to cups or cans. Dry kibble typically ranges from 300 to 500 kcal per cup, while a standard 3 oz can of pate wet food contains 70 to 120 kcal. That means a 10 lb cat needing 200 kcal/day might eat half a cup of dry food, or roughly 2 to 2.5 small cans of wet food. As a rule of thumb, one 5.5 oz can of wet food (around 175 kcal) is roughly equivalent to a third of a cup of average dry food.

How to read the label

Pet food labels list metabolizable energy (ME) as kcal/cup, kcal/can, or kcal/kg. Always use the kcal/cup or kcal/can value, not the kcal/kg value, unless you're weighing portions on a kitchen scale. If the label only shows kcal/kg, divide by 1000 and multiply by the gram weight of one cup (typically 100-120 g for dry kibble). A useful guideline: if a brand doesn't publish calorie density clearly, assume 400 kcal/cup for dry and 90 kcal per 3 oz can for wet, and recheck after one month of feeding.

Meal frequency and timing

Most adult cats do well on two meals per day, spaced 10 to 12 hours apart, while kittens under 6 months typically need 3 to 4 small meals daily. Free-feeding dry food is convenient but leads to overeating in roughly 50% of indoor cats, contributing to the 60% feline obesity rate reported by veterinary surveys. A practical rule of thumb: if you're feeding less than a quarter cup per meal, switch to a slow-feeder bowl or puzzle feeder to extend eating time and prevent gulping, which causes regurgitation in about 1 in 5 cats.

Adjusting for body condition

Use a body condition score (BCS) chart on a 1-9 scale. A score of 5 is ideal; each point above 5 represents roughly 10% over ideal weight. If your cat scores 7 (palpable fat layer, hard to feel ribs), reduce daily calories by 15-20% and recheck in 4 weeks. If your cat scores 3 (ribs and spine visible), increase by 10-15% and consider a vet visit to rule out hyperthyroidism or other causes. Weigh your cat monthly on a baby scale; healthy weight change is no more than 1-2% of body weight per week.

Special situations: kittens, pregnancy, illness

Kittens 2 to 4 months old need about 250 kcal per kg body weight daily and should be free-fed kitten formula. Pregnant queens increase intake by 25-50% in the last 3 weeks of gestation. Lactating cats may need 2 to 4 times maintenance calories at peak lactation around week 4. Cats with chronic kidney disease, diabetes, or hyperthyroidism need prescription diets and vet-supervised portioning. A common rule: if your cat is losing or gaining more than 0.5 lb per month without an intentional plan, schedule a veterinary check rather than just adjusting food.

Treats, milk, and table scraps

Treats should make up no more than 10% of daily calories. For a 200 kcal/day cat, that's 20 kcal—roughly 2 to 3 small commercial cat treats or a teaspoon of plain cooked chicken. Cow's milk causes diarrhea in about 70% of adult cats due to lactose intolerance, so skip it. Tuna packed in water (not oil) is fine occasionally but lacks taurine and shouldn't replace meals. A simple rule of thumb: subtract treat calories from the daily main-meal portion to avoid silently adding 15-20% extra calories per week.

How This Calculator Works: Methodology & Parameter Explanations

Core formula: RER = 70 × (weight_kg)^0.75; Daily kcal = RER × stage_multiplier × activity_multiplier; Daily portion = Daily kcal ÷ food_calorie_density

Parameter explanations

InputWhat it meansImpact on results
Cat weight (lb)Your cat's current body weight in pounds, converted internally to kilograms (kg = lb / 2.2046) for the RER formula.Weight enters the formula as a 0.75 power, so doubling weight increases calorie needs by about 68%, not 100%. A 5 lb cat needs ~125 kcal/day; a 15 lb cat ~270 kcal/day.
Life stageCaptures metabolic differences from kitten through senior, including reproductive states. Selects a multiplier from 0.8x (weight loss) to 3.0x (lactating).Largest single driver after weight. Switching from 'adult neutered' (1.2x) to 'kitten' (2.5x) more than doubles daily calories for the same cat.
Activity levelReflects how much energy your cat burns through play, exploration, and outdoor activity. Ranges from 0.9x (sedentary) to 1.25x (outdoor active).Smaller effect than life stage but meaningful: a sedentary cat needs ~28% fewer calories than an outdoor active cat at the same weight and life stage.
Food calorie densityThe kcal per cup (dry) or per can (wet) printed on the food label. Does not change calorie needs—only converts calories into portion size.Inverse relationship: doubling calorie density halves the cup or can portion. A 400 kcal/cup food yields half the portion of a 200 kcal/cup food for the same daily calorie target.

Assumptions

The RER formula 70 × (kg)^0.75 is the standard veterinary equation; individual cats can vary ±20% from this estimate.

The example numbers in our tables (10 lb cat, 400 kcal/cup) are illustrative defaults only—the calculator works for any cat weight from 1 to 30 lb and any food density from 50 to 700 kcal/serving.

Multipliers are simplified averages; medical conditions like hyperthyroidism, diabetes, or kidney disease require veterinary guidance and may override these defaults.

Calorie density is assumed to be metabolizable energy (ME) as labeled per cup or can, not per kg of food.

Portion sizes assume the same food is used all day; mixed feeding splits the daily calories 50/50 between dry and wet by default.

Parameter meanings

InputWhat it meansImpact on results
Cat weight (lb)Body weight, converted to kg for RER calculationScales daily calories by weight^0.75; bigger cats need more but not linearly
Life stageKitten, adult, senior, pregnant, lactating, or weight lossApplies multiplier from 0.8x to 3.0x — largest non-weight driver
Activity levelSedentary to outdoor activeAdjusts calories ±10-25% from indoor moderate baseline
Food calorie densitykcal per cup or per can on the labelDetermines portion size; inversely proportional to cups/cans served
Food typeDry, wet, or mixed feedingChanges display units (cups vs. cans) and splits portions if mixed

Frequently Asked Questions

How much food should I feed a 10 lb cat?
A typical 10 lb neutered indoor adult cat needs about 180 to 220 kcal per day. With a standard dry food at 400 kcal/cup, that's roughly half a cup daily, split into two meals of a quarter cup each. With wet food at 90 kcal per 3 oz can, plan on about 2 to 2.5 cans per day. These numbers shift if your cat is very active (add 10-25%) or on a weight-loss plan (subtract 15-20%). Always recheck portions monthly by feeling your cat's ribs and observing the waist from above.
Can I use this calculator for any cat weight, not just 10 lb?
Yes. The calculator works for cats from 1 lb (small kittens) to 30 lb (large breeds like Maine Coons or overweight cats). The 10 lb example in our intro and tables is just a common reference point. Internally the tool converts your entered weight to kilograms and applies the RER formula 70 × (kg)^0.75, so the math scales correctly across the full range. Just enter your cat's actual weight, life stage, activity level, and food density, and the portion size will adjust automatically without any hard-coded assumptions about size.
Does this work for kittens?
Yes—select 'Kitten (under 1 year)' for the life stage. Kittens have much higher energy needs, roughly 2.5x their resting energy requirement, because they're growing rapidly and burning calories on play. A 4 lb kitten might need around 200 kcal per day, similar to a full-grown 10 lb adult. Kittens under 6 months should be fed 3 to 4 times daily rather than 2, and should generally have kitten-formulated food until 12 months. For very young kittens under 8 weeks, follow your breeder's or shelter's milk-replacer protocol instead of using this calculator.
This calculator provides general feeding estimates based on standard veterinary formulas and is for informational purposes only. It is not a substitute for professional veterinary advice. Consult your veterinarian before making significant dietary changes, especially for cats with medical conditions, unusual weight changes, or special life stages such as pregnancy or lactation.