This is a specific conversation about Senior cat care — what changes and what helps — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Transitioning off a prescription dental diet with vet clearance is actually a really positive moment — it means the dental work has done its job and you've got some flexibility back. The key now is finding a food that keeps supporting your Persian's teeth and overall health without the strict prescription constraints. Before I point you in a direction, a few quick questions: how old is your Persian, are there any other health concerns your vet mentioned alongside the dental stuff, and do you have a preference between wet and dry food going forward?
She's 11, the vet just said her teeth look much better after the dental clean and the prescription food did its job. No other diagnosed conditions, though the vet did say to keep an eye on her kidneys as she gets older. She's always been on dry food but I'm open to wet if it's better for her.
inparticular.ai
At 11, your Persian is firmly in senior territory, and the kidney comment from your vet is worth taking seriously — it's the most common condition in older cats and diet plays a real role in managing it early. Here's the thing about dry versus wet for a senior Persian: wet food is genuinely better for kidney support because it adds moisture to their diet, and Persians in particular don't tend to drink much on their own. Switching to wet now, while she's healthy, is a smart preventive move. Can I ask — does she have any texture preferences or fussiness? Persians can be particular, and knowing whether she tolerates pâté versus chunks will help me give you a more useful recommendation.
She's always eaten dry without fuss but I've never really tried wet. I'd probably go pâté to start since it seems easier for a Persian face shape. No other issues — good weight, healthy coat, eats well.
inparticular.ai
Good instinct on the pâté — brachycephalic cats like Persians genuinely do better with smooth textures, and it makes the transition from dry easier too. Given everything you've described — healthy 11-year-old, kidney monitoring on the horizon, coming off a dental diet, Persian breed — I'd go with Royal Canin Ageing 12+ Wet Cat Food in pâté. I know she's 11 rather than 12, but this formula is specifically designed for cats heading into that life stage, with controlled phosphorus levels to support kidney function, a soft texture ideal for Persian jaw shapes, and a nutrient profile that maintains lean muscle in older cats. It's not a prescription renal diet, which means you don't need ongoing vet authorisation, but it's formulated with the same kidney-protective thinking. Transition over about 10 days by mixing increasing amounts with her current dry food to avoid digestive upset — start with about 25% wet and work up.
That sounds really sensible. Should I drop dry food entirely or keep some in her routine?
inparticular.ai
You can keep a small amount of dry in her routine if it helps with the transition or if she seems to want it — there's no harm in a mixed approach for a cat with healthy teeth and good weight. That said, for a senior Persian with kidney monitoring on the agenda, I'd aim for wet as the majority of her diet, say 80% wet and 20% dry at most. If you do keep some dry, choose one that's also senior-formulated with moderate protein and low phosphorus rather than going back to a standard adult kibble. The main goal is getting more water into her daily intake, and wet food does that far more reliably than a water bowl.
Perfect, that makes sense. I'll pick up the Royal Canin Ageing 12+ and do a gradual switch. Thanks.
inparticular.ai
You're in a great position — she's healthy, her teeth are sorted, and you're being proactive about the next stage. The gradual transition is the right call, and if she turns her nose up at first, try warming the pâté slightly to bring out the smell. Keep an eye on her appetite and litter box habits during the switch, and if anything seems off, a quick check-in with your vet. She sounds like she's in good hands.