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 Bengal kitten and an adult Bengal under the same roof — lovely combination, and a really sensible question to ask early. Kittens have very different nutritional requirements from adult cats: much higher protein, more calories per gram, and specific nutrients like DHA, calcium, and phosphorus for proper bone, muscle, and brain development. Getting this phase right genuinely sets the foundation for long-term health. To point you in the best direction, how old is the kitten exactly, do you know the adult's age, and are either of them currently eating anything in particular?
The kitten is 3 months old, the adult is 4 years old. The adult is currently on Royal Canin dry but I can't remember which one. Neither has any health issues.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — healthy cats, both Bengals, one at a critical growth stage and one in their prime adult years. The fact the adult is already on Royal Canin is actually really helpful here, because Royal Canin make a Bengal-specific range with both a kitten and an adult formula. They're designed with Bengals in mind — higher animal protein, a kibble shape that suits their jaw, and nutrients that support the Bengal's notably active, muscular build. My recommendation is to put the kitten on Royal Canin Bengal Kitten and keep the adult on Royal Canin Bengal Adult. Same brand, same philosophy, feeds appropriate to each life stage. Can I ask — are you feeding them in the same room, or do they eat separately?
They eat in the same room at the moment. I was worried the adult might eat the kitten food and vice versa.
inparticular.ai
That's the main practical challenge with multi-cat households at different life stages, and you're right to flag it. Kitten food is calorie-dense and richer — fine for a growing 3-month-old, but if your adult is hoovering it up regularly it could lead to weight gain over time. A few things that genuinely help: feed them at set mealtimes rather than free-feeding, place the bowls at slightly different heights (Bengals are climbers so the kitten's bowl on the floor and the adult's on a raised surface works well), and supervise until the kitten is confident and eating at pace. Once the kitten hits 12 months, you can transition them both onto the adult formula and the separation issue largely goes away.
That makes sense. Should I be adding any wet food for the kitten at this age?
inparticular.ai
At 3 months, a mix of wet and dry is genuinely beneficial — it keeps hydration up, which matters a lot for cats long-term, and the texture variety is good during the weaning window. Royal Canin do a Bengal Kitten wet pouch that pairs directly with the dry kibble. You could do one wet meal and one dry per day, or mix a small amount of wet into the dry. Just don't substitute wet for dry entirely at this stage — the dry kibble helps with dental health and gives the kitten something to work through. As for the adult, Royal Canin Bengal Adult wet pouches are available too if you want to match things up neatly.
Great, this is really helpful. I'll go with the Royal Canin Bengal Kitten dry and wet for the kitten and make sure the adult stays on the Bengal Adult.
inparticular.ai
That's a really solid setup — you're giving the kitten exactly what it needs for this critical growth phase while keeping things consistent and breed-appropriate for both cats. Royal Canin Bengal Kitten dry is on Amazon UK and easy to reorder. One last tip: weigh the kitten every couple of weeks for the next few months — Bengals grow fast and you'll want to adjust portions as they develop. They're a high-energy breed and underfeeding a growing Bengal is just as much of a concern as overfeeding. Enjoy them both — Bengal households are never dull!