This is a specific conversation about Senior cat food — what they need as they age — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Senior cats generally do better with higher protein than lower — that's a common myth worth busting — along with reduced phosphorus to protect the kidneys, and wet food tends to help a lot with hydration as they age. But the right choice really depends on what's going on with your individual cat. How old is yours, do they have any health conditions, and what are you currently feeding them?
She's 8, an Egyptian Mau. No health issues yet — I just know the breed runs lean and fast and I want to make sure she stays in good condition as she heads into her senior years.
inparticular.ai
Good thinking, and Egyptian Maus are exactly the breed where staying ahead of it makes a real difference. They have a naturally high metabolism and tend to carry very little body fat, which means muscle mass is really what you're protecting. At 8 she's just crossing into senior territory — not geriatric, but the right time to start thinking about kidney support and keeping that lean condition dialled in. Is she on wet food, dry, or a mix right now?
Mostly dry at the moment. She eats well but she's always been on the slender side.
inparticular.ai
That's pretty common with Maus — they're just built that way. Shifting toward wet food now would be a smart move, partly for hydration and partly because it's easier to get higher protein levels without the carb load that most dry foods carry. For a cat like yours — lean, active, no current conditions, but heading into senior years — I'd point you toward Royal Canin Ageing 12+ in wet form. I know the name says 12+, but the formulation is genuinely what a fast-metabolism breed like a Mau benefits from earlier: high digestible protein, controlled phosphorus, and it supports lean muscle really well. You can introduce it gradually alongside her current dry if you want to ease the transition.
That makes sense. Should I be worried about her weight staying stable as she gets older?
inparticular.ai
Yes, but probably not in the way most cat owners think about it. With Maus the risk isn't obesity — it's the opposite. As cats age, they lose muscle mass more easily, and in a breed that's already lean, that can sneak up on you. Keeping protein high and doing a quick feel along her spine and ribs every few weeks is the best early warning system you have. If she starts losing condition — feels bonier, less muscle tone along her back — that's when to act fast, not wait. The Royal Canin Ageing 12+ wet is a good anchor, and if she needs extra calories you can top up with a high-protein kitten or all-life-stages wet food alongside it.
Really helpful, thank you. I'll give it a try.
inparticular.ai
Great — she sounds like she's in really good hands. Catching this at 8 rather than 12 is exactly the right instinct. If her weight or condition changes noticeably in either direction over the next few months, it's worth a vet check just to rule out thyroid issues, which Maus can be prone to as they get older. But for now, higher protein wet food and regular condition checks is the right plan.