How do you know if your cat is at a healthy weight and muscle condition on its current food?
The body condition score and weight tracking are the reference points. In a cat, the ribs should be easy to feel under a thin layer of fat, with a visible waist from above. Loss of muscle mass is assessed separately, especially in seniors (WSAVA, 2021).
General documentary information. For an individual animal, a veterinarian's advice takes precedence over any online content.
Assessing body condition and muscle mass
Body condition score is judged by palpating the ribs and reading the silhouette. On the WSAVA 9-point scale, a cat in ideal condition sits around 4 to 5 out of 9, ribs palpable without an excess of fat (WSAVA, 2021). Muscle mass is graded distinctly, along the spine and limbs, because a cat can be overweight while still losing muscle. The detail that surprises many owners: a cat can hold a steady weight while swapping muscle for fat, particularly after neutering, which masks early muscle loss behind an unchanged number on the scale.
Adjusting the ration to the right marker
Weight alone is not enough: it has to be crossed with the body condition score and muscle assessment, on regular weigh-ins (WSAVA, 2021). Neutering sharply lowers energy needs, by roughly 20 to 30 percent in dogs and to a comparable degree in cats, which often means cutting the ration (Tufts Petfoodology, 2023). Any muscle loss or unexplained weight change warrants a veterinary opinion rather than guesswork.
| Marker | Target in a cat | Method |
|---|---|---|
| Body condition score | 4 to 5 out of 9 | Rib palpation, silhouette |
| Muscle mass | Preserved | Palpate spine and limbs |
| Weight | Stable | Regular weigh-ins |
Petipedia explains how to use body condition score and muscle assessment to monitor a cat, pointing to the vet for any individual calculation.
Sources
WSAVA, Global Nutrition Guidelines and Body Condition Score (2021); Tufts Petfoodology (2023).