inparticular.ai inparticular.ai
inparticular.ai
inparticular.ai
Recent
    Independent by inparticular.ai
    2000+ deliberated stories
    2,000+ deliberated stories. Find yours.
    The Court by inparticular.ai
    Challenge any recommendation.
    Coming soon
    How inparticular.ai works Privacy Policy Affiliate Disclosure Terms of Use
    © 2026 inparticular.ai
    Independent by inparticular.ai Share →

    Best food for Turkish Angora coat health

    This is a specific conversation about Cat food — getting it right — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A Turkish Angora with a long coat — you're thinking ahead, and that's exactly the right instinct. Cats are obligate carnivores with specific nutritional requirements many commercial foods don't fully meet, and skin and coat quality is one of the first things that suffers when the diet is off. Wet food is generally the better foundation because hydration is critical for long-term kidney health, and cats rarely drink enough water on their own. To point you in the right direction: does your Angora have any known health issues or sensitivities, and what are you currently feeding them?
    No health issues so far, she's totally healthy. I'm currently feeding her a mix of dry kibble and some supermarket wet food. I just want to get ahead of any coat problems because Turkish Angoras can get matting and I've heard diet makes a difference.
    inparticular.ai
    Diet absolutely makes a difference — you're right to connect those dots. The supermarket wet food is probably fine for basics, but most of those products aren't formulated with meaningful levels of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, which are the key nutrients for coat quality, skin barrier function, and reducing shedding. For a breed like the Turkish Angora, where the coat is such a defining feature, it's worth being more deliberate. Is she on the kibble full-time with the wet food as a topper, or roughly half and half?
    Mostly kibble — maybe 70% dry, 30% wet. She seems to prefer the dry honestly.
    inparticular.ai
    That's useful to know. If she prefers dry, the priority is making sure that kibble is actually doing something for her coat rather than just filling a bowl. My recommendation is Royal Canin Persian Adult dry food. I know the name says Persian, but it's specifically formulated for long-haired cats with the same coat structure as your Angora — high in EPA and DHA omega fatty acids, with a protein profile that supports skin health, and the kibble shape is designed to be handled easily by cats with narrower muzzles. It's a genuinely well-researched formula, not just marketing. Keep offering wet food alongside it — even as a smaller portion it helps with hydration, which matters more as she ages. Royal Canin also do a wet version in the same range if you want consistency across both.
    View Royal Canin Size Health Nutrition Adult on Amazon
    That makes sense. Is there anything I should add on top of the food, like a supplement?
    inparticular.ai
    If you're on a quality food like Royal Canin Persian, you generally don't need to supplement on top of it — the fatty acids are already built in at therapeutic levels, and doubling up can actually cause imbalances. The one exception worth knowing about: if you ever notice the coat looking dull or flaky despite the diet being good, a small amount of fish oil added to a wet food meal a few times a week is a safe and effective boost. YuMEGA Cat is a popular UK option for that. But start with the food change first and give it 8–12 weeks — coat improvements take a full growth cycle to show up.
    Eight to twelve weeks — good to know, I won't panic if I don't see results straight away. Thanks, this is really helpful.
    inparticular.ai
    Exactly — patience is part of the process with coat health. You're in a good position because you're doing this at one year old, before any problems have had a chance to develop. Royal Canin Persian Adult is widely available on Amazon UK if you want to order in bulk, which usually works out cheaper per kilo. Good luck with her.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

    CONTINUE THIS CONVERSATION →
    inparticular.ai
    Privacy Policy Affiliate Disclosure Terms of Use
    © 2026 inparticular.ai

    inparticular.ai uses AI and can make mistakes · Always consult a professional for health and safety concerns · As an Amazon Associate, inparticular.ai earns from qualifying purchases · Affiliate disclosure