This is a specific conversation about Wet vs dry cat food — the honest answer — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
You're already thinking about this at exactly the right time. Male cats do have a higher risk of urinary blockages, and the single most effective thing you can do — starting now — is make sure your Abyssinian gets most of his hydration through his food rather than relying on a water bowl. Wet food is genuinely better for cats: it's closer to their natural diet, more satiating, and crucially it keeps the urinary tract flushed. Cost and convenience are real considerations though, and a mixed approach can work. Before I point you to something specific — is your kitten on any food currently, and has your vet mentioned anything about his urinary health so far?
He's on dry kitten food at the moment, just whatever the breeder recommended. No vet concerns yet, he's healthy. I just read that male cats are prone to blockages and it scared me a bit.
inparticular.ai
That's a completely reasonable thing to be concerned about — it's one of the more serious and common issues in male cats, and dry food is a genuine contributing factor because cats on dry-only diets tend to be chronically mildly dehydrated. Their kidneys and bladder concentrate urine more than is ideal, which over time raises the risk of crystals and blockages. The good news: at 6 months you have a real opportunity to build good habits. Is he fussy at all, or has he only ever known dry food?
He's only ever had dry food so I'm not sure how he'll take to wet. He's pretty food motivated though.
inparticular.ai
Food-motivated Abyssinian — you're in luck, they're usually pretty adaptable. Here's what I'd recommend: Royal Canin Veterinary Care Urinary Care wet food in pouches. It's formulated specifically to support urinary health by diluting urine and reducing crystal formation, and because it's wet, it's doing the hydration work automatically with every meal. It's not a prescription diet, so you don't need a vet sign-off, but it's a step up from standard wet food in terms of urinary support. I'd switch him gradually — mix a little into his current dry food over a week or two. You don't have to go fully wet if that's tricky, but even making wet food the majority of his diet will make a meaningful difference over his lifetime.
That sounds sensible. Is this something he'd stay on forever or just for a while?
inparticular.ai
For a male cat with no current issues, this is a perfectly good long-term diet — there's nothing in it that requires cycling off. The urinary support formulation just keeps conditions in the bladder less hospitable to crystal formation, which is exactly what you want maintained consistently. As he gets older, if a vet ever flags anything specific like struvite or oxalate crystals, you might move to a prescription version, but for now this is a smart, proactive choice. Keep fresh water available too — a cat fountain can help encourage drinking on top of the wet food.
Great, I'll look that up. Does it come in different sizes or varieties?
inparticular.ai
Yes — it comes in multipacks of pouches on Amazon UK, which is the most convenient way to buy it. Each pouch is a single serving, so it's easy to portion. Look for Royal Canin Urinary Care wet cat food pouches — the 85g pouches in a 12 or 48 pack are what you want. At his age and size, one to two pouches a day alongside a small amount of dry is a reasonable starting point, adjusting as he grows. Your vet can confirm the right amount at his next check-up.