This is a specific conversation about Kitten food — the right nutrition from the start — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A 3-month-old Sphynx with a vet-flagged high metabolism — that's a really important flag to act on quickly. Sphynx cats naturally burn more energy than most breeds because they lack a coat and have to work harder to regulate their body temperature, so their calorie needs are genuinely higher than your average kitten. Your vet is right to push for calorie-dense kitten nutrition at this stage. To point you to exactly the right thing: is your kitten eating wet food, dry, or a mix right now? And has the vet mentioned any other concerns — weight, digestion, anything like that?
She's on a generic supermarket wet food at the moment, just whatever the rescue gave us to start with. Vet didn't flag anything else, just said she seemed lean and we should upgrade her food.
inparticular.ai
That makes a lot of sense — supermarket wet foods often have higher moisture and filler content, which means the actual calorie and protein density per serving is lower than it looks. For a lean Sphynx kitten at 3 months, that gap really matters. Can I ask — are you open to dry food, wet, or would you prefer to stick with wet? And roughly how many meals a day is she getting?
We're doing wet food four times a day. Open to switching to dry or a mix if it helps, but she seems to like wet so far.
inparticular.ai
Four wet meals a day is a solid routine for a 3-month-old — and honestly, for a Sphynx with high metabolism, I'd suggest keeping wet food as the base but adding a high-quality dry food alongside it to boost calorie density without increasing meal volume. The one product I'd go straight to here is Royal Canin Sphynx Kitten. It's breed-specific, which matters more with Sphynx than almost any other cat — it's formulated with their elevated energy needs and skin health in mind (since without fur, skin barrier nutrition is actually critical for them too). The kibble is designed for their jaw shape, and the calorie profile is meaningfully higher than generic kitten food. It's available on Amazon UK and widely stocked. I'd offer it free-access in a bowl alongside her four wet meals and let her self-regulate the dry — most Sphynx kittens top themselves up naturally when they need the extra energy.
That sounds really good actually. Is Royal Canin Sphynx Kitten definitely suitable from 3 months, or is there a minimum age?
inparticular.ai
Yes, it's suitable from 4 months officially — Royal Canin label it for Sphynx kittens from 4 to 12 months. At 3 months you're very close, but for the next few weeks the Royal Canin Mother & Babycat wet food is an excellent bridge — it's ultra-digestible, very calorie-dense, and designed for kittens from weaning up to 4 months. You could run that as her wet food now and introduce the Sphynx Kitten dry alongside it, then transition fully once she hits 4 months. That way you're hitting the vet's calorie-density goal immediately without waiting.
Perfect, that's really helpful. I'll grab both and make the switch. Thank you!
inparticular.ai
Great plan — she'll be in much better shape very quickly once those calories are dialled in. Sphynx kittens are incredibly rewarding once you get their nutrition right; they have enormous energy and personality. If she's still looking lean after 4 to 6 weeks on the new food, it's worth a quick weigh-in at the vet just to confirm she's tracking upward — but with Royal Canin Sphynx Kitten and the Babycat wet food, you're giving her exactly what she needs. Good luck with her!