Cat Water Intake Calculator
How Much Water Does My Cat Need?
Enter your cat’s weight and what you’re feeding them. We’ll show how much total water they need, how much comes from food, and exactly how much should be in the bowl each day.
How Much Water Should a Cat Drink Per Day?
Two quick inputs — weight and diet type. We’ll work out the total daily water need and tell you how much should actually be going in the bowl, accounting for what comes from food.
Drinking thresholds for your cat
The total daily water requirement is set at 60 ml per kg of body weight per day — the consensus figure from the Merck Veterinary Manual (44–66 ml/kg), Royal Canin Academy (50 ml/kg minimum), and Cats.com/ExpertCatCare (50–60 ml/kg). For cats with CKD or very active cats, this is adjusted upward.
The food moisture calculation subtracts what’s already in the food. Dry food is approximately 10% moisture; wet food is approximately 80%. The remaining gap is what needs to come from the water bowl.

Cat Water Intake Chart — How Much Should a Cat Drink by Weight?
A complete reference table showing daily water requirements for cats of every common weight, split by diet type, with the threshold figures your vet uses to assess whether your cat is drinking too much.
Daily Water Needs — by Weight and Diet Type
60 ml/kg/day formula| Cat weight | Total water/day | Dry food only (bowl) | Mixed diet (bowl) | Wet food only (bowl) | Too much (vet) |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 2 kg / 4.4 lb | 120 ml | 114 ml | 66 ml | 24 ml | 200+ ml |
| 3 kg / 6.6 lb | 180 ml | 171 ml | 99 ml | 36 ml | 300+ ml |
| 4 kg / 8.8 lb ★ | 240 ml | 228 ml | 132 ml | 48 ml | 400+ ml |
| 4.5 kg / 10 lb | 270 ml | 257 ml | 149 ml | 54 ml | 450+ ml |
| 5 kg / 11 lb | 300 ml | 285 ml | 165 ml | 60 ml | 500+ ml |
| 5.5 kg / 12 lb | 330 ml | 314 ml | 182 ml | 66 ml | 550+ ml |
| 6 kg / 13.2 lb | 360 ml | 342 ml | 198 ml | 72 ml | 600+ ml |
| 7 kg / 15.4 lb | 420 ml | 399 ml | 231 ml | 84 ml | 700+ ml |
Why wet food is the easiest hydration solution
What excessive drinking actually signals
How Much Water Does a Cat Need Per Day?
The short answer: about 60 ml of water for every kilogram of body weight, every day. For the average 4 kg cat, that’s 240 ml total — roughly a cup. But here’s the part most people miss: a big chunk of that water doesn’t come from the bowl at all.
The 60 ml/kg/day figure comes from the veterinary consensus used by the Merck Veterinary Manual, Royal Canin Academy, and multiple peer-reviewed sources. It covers total water intake — meaning water from all sources combined, including moisture in food.
This is where diet makes an enormous difference. Wet food is approximately 75 to 80% water. Dry food is approximately 10%. A cat eating wet food gets most of their daily water requirement delivered in every meal, without going near the bowl. A cat on dry-only food gets almost nothing from their food and must make up the entire deficit by drinking.
How much should a 4 kg cat drink? On a dry-only diet, a 4 kg cat needs to drink approximately 228 ml of water from their bowl each day — nearly a full cup. On a wet-only diet, the same cat only needs to drink about 48 ml, because food provides the rest. On a mixed diet it’s somewhere in between, usually around 100 to 150 ml from the bowl depending on the ratio.
This is why it looks like wet food cats barely drink — they don’t need to. And it’s why dry food cats who seem healthy may still be in a state of chronic low-level dehydration that slowly stresses their kidneys over time.
Why Cats Often Don’t Drink Enough — and How to Fix It
Cats are descended from desert-dwelling ancestors who got almost all their moisture from prey. They have a weak thirst drive as a result — they don’t feel thirst the way dogs or humans do, even when they’re dehydrated. This is a genuine biological quirk that affects every domestic cat.
Studies show that cats eating dry food often consume only 50% of the water their body needs. They don’t feel thirsty enough to compensate. This chronic partial dehydration doesn’t cause acute illness, but over years it contributes to kidney stress — which is why kidney disease is the leading cause of death in domestic cats.
When a Cat Drinks Too Much Water — What It Signals
While getting cats to drink more is the common concern, a sudden increase in drinking can be more worrying than too little. Excessive thirst (polydipsia) is one of the earliest and most reliable signs of several serious health conditions — and it’s worth taking seriously.
Cat Water Intake — Questions and Answers
Answers to the most common questions about how much water cats need, what different diet types mean for drinking, when to worry, and how to help a cat drink more.
A healthy cat needs approximately 60 ml of total water per kg of body weight per day. This covers all water — from food and from the bowl combined. For common cat weights:
- 3 kg (6.6 lb) cat — about 180 ml total water per day
- 4 kg (8.8 lb) cat — about 240 ml total water per day
- 5 kg (11 lb) cat — about 300 ml total water per day
How much of that comes from the bowl depends entirely on diet. A cat on wet food only needs about 40 to 50 ml from the bowl — the food provides the rest. A cat on dry food only needs nearly the full amount from the bowl.
A 4 kg cat needs approximately 240 ml of total daily water. How much of that comes from drinking depends on diet:
- Dry food only: needs to drink about 228 ml from the bowl each day
- Mixed diet (half wet, half dry): needs about 130 ml from the bowl
- Wet food only: needs only about 48 ml from the bowl — the food provides the rest
Polydipsia (excessive thirst) in a 4 kg cat on a dry diet is drinking more than 400 ml per day. If you notice a significant and sustained increase in how much your cat drinks, contact your vet.
A 5 kg cat needs approximately 300 ml of total daily water. From the bowl specifically:
- Dry food only: about 285 ml from the bowl per day
- Mixed diet: about 165 ml from the bowl per day
- Wet food only: about 60 ml from the bowl per day
Drinking more than 500 ml per day from the bowl (on a dry diet) would be in the polydipsia range for a 5 kg cat and worth reporting to a vet.
Yes — dramatically. This is the single biggest factor determining how much water a cat needs from their bowl.
Wet food contains approximately 75 to 80% water. Dry food contains approximately 10%. On a wet-only diet, a cat essentially has water delivered with every meal and barely needs to drink at all. On a dry-only diet, the cat must source almost all of their daily water requirement from the bowl independently.
This biological mismatch — cats have a naturally weak thirst drive, yet their most common diet requires heavy independent drinking — is a significant contributor to kidney disease prevalence in domestic cats. Switching even one meal per day from dry to wet makes a meaningful difference to overall hydration.
It depends on what they eat. A cat on a wet-only or mostly wet diet genuinely doesn’t need to drink much — the food provides most of their daily water. If your cat is on wet food and barely touches the bowl, that can be completely normal and healthy.
However, a cat on dry or mostly-dry food who barely drinks is worth paying attention to. Check for signs of dehydration: gently press the skin on the scruff and release — it should spring back immediately. Check the gums — they should be wet and pink, not dry or tacky. If you see these signs alongside reduced drinking, contact your vet.
A sustained and noticeable increase in water consumption is one of the most common early indicators of illness in cats. It should always prompt a vet visit, especially if it’s accompanied by more frequent urination, weight loss, reduced appetite, or lethargy.
The most common causes in cats include hyperthyroidism (extremely common in cats over 10), chronic kidney disease, diabetes mellitus, and liver disease. All of these are much more manageable when caught early through routine bloodwork. A basic blood panel and urinalysis can usually identify the underlying issue quickly.
A single hot day or a switch to dry food would also cause increased drinking — these are not causes for concern. It’s the sustained pattern over days or weeks that matters.
Three checks you can do at home:
- Skin pinch test: Gently pinch and lift the skin on the back of the neck (scruff) and release. In a well-hydrated cat, it should spring back immediately. If it stays tented or returns slowly, dehydration is possible. Note: this test is unreliable in older cats and overweight cats, whose skin elasticity is naturally reduced regardless of hydration status.
- Gum check: Press gently on the gums and release. The pink colour should return in under 2 seconds. Feel the gums — they should feel slippery and wet, not dry or tacky. Dry, pale, or sticky gums are a concern.
- Eye check: Sunken-looking eyes can indicate moderate to severe dehydration. This is a later sign, meaning significant dehydration is already present.
If you find any of these signs, contact your vet the same day. Dehydration in cats usually has an underlying cause that needs identifying — it’s rarely just about “not drinking enough water.”
Yes — consistently. Moving water triggers a cat’s natural instinct to drink, because in the wild, moving water signals freshness and safety. Still, stagnant water would have been associated with contamination.
Multiple cat behaviour studies and veterinary references confirm that cats drink significantly more from flowing fountains than from still bowls — the increase is often 30 to 50%. For cats on dry diets, this can be a meaningful difference to overall hydration. For cats with CKD, the increased intake supports kidney function.
The main downsides are that fountains need regular cleaning (bacteria build up in the pump and bowl) and the pump can wear out. Ceramic or stainless steel fountains are more hygienic and longer-lasting than plastic. Clean the fountain at least once a week.
Yes, a few additions that work for some cats:
- Low-sodium chicken or tuna broth: A small amount added to water makes it more appealing to some cats. Make sure it genuinely has no salt, onion, garlic, or other additives — all of these are harmful to cats.
- Ice cubes: Some cats are drawn to cold water or enjoy batting at and drinking ice. This also cools water in summer.
- Tuna juice from a can packed in spring water: A teaspoon added to water tempts many cats who ignore plain water. Use only water-packed tuna, never brine or oil.
Avoid any additives that contain salt, xylitol, onion, garlic, dairy, or alcohol. When in doubt, plain fresh water changed daily is always the safe baseline.
Calculate your cat’s daily water needs
Enter weight and diet type. Find out exactly how much should go in the bowl, what comes from food, and whether your cat’s drinking is in the normal range.