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    Best food for Ragdoll kitten diet

    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
    Honestly, the fact that you're thinking about diet before any problems show up is exactly the right move — especially with a Ragdoll. They're prone to hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and urinary issues as they age, and diet is one of the few levers you actually have. Wet food is generally the better foundation: it keeps cats hydrated, is more satiating, and sits closer to what they'd eat naturally. Dry food is convenient and cheaper, but cats don't compensate well for the low moisture content. A mixed approach works for many people, but if you're going proactive, I'd lean wet as the main event. To give you a specific steer — how old is your Ragdoll exactly, any health flags so far, and what are you feeding at the moment?
    She's 8 months old, a Ragdoll kitten. No health issues at all — vet gave her a clean bill of health last month. Right now I'm feeding her a mix of dry kitten biscuits in the morning and a cheap wet pouch in the evening. I want to set her up properly before any issues develop.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a solid instinct. At 8 months she's still growing, so protein quality really matters — it's building muscle and supporting organ development at the same time. The cheap wet pouches are better than nothing, but most of them are high in cereals and low in actual meat content, which isn't ideal long-term. For a Ragdoll specifically, I'd prioritise a high-meat, low-carbohydrate wet food to support lean muscle mass and keep her urinary system happy. Can I ask — are you open to moving her mostly to wet, or do you want to keep some dry in the rotation for convenience?
    I'd like to keep a little dry in the morning just for convenience, but I want the wet food to be doing most of the work. I'm happy to spend a bit more if it's genuinely worth it.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a completely sensible setup — wet as the main meal, a small amount of quality dry as a morning convenience feed. The product I'd point you to is Applaws Kitten Wet Cat Food in broth. It's made with whole named meat or fish as the primary ingredient, no added cereals, minimal filler, and the broth format adds hydration without relying on gravy thickeners. The protein content is meaningfully higher than most supermarket pouches, and it's formulated specifically for kittens, so the nutritional profile suits where she is right now. It's available in multipack tins on Amazon UK, which brings the per-serving cost down to a reasonable level. For the dry component, just make sure whatever you're using is also named-meat-first — but honestly, with Applaws doing the heavy lifting in the evening, you've got a good foundation for her adult years.
    That sounds great. How much wet food should she be getting at her age and size?
    inparticular.ai
    At 8 months, a Ragdoll kitten is still growing — they're a slow-maturing breed and won't fully fill out until around 3 to 4 years old. A rough guide is around 40–50g of wet food per kilogram of body weight per day, split across meals. So if she's around 3–4kg right now, you're looking at roughly 120–200g of wet food daily in total. Given you're keeping some dry in the morning, I'd adjust the wet portion slightly downward and use the dry feeding guide on pack as a top-up reference. The Applaws tins come in 70g sizes, so two tins as an evening meal works well for most kittens her size. Weigh her monthly — Ragdolls can quietly put on too much weight if the dry food intake isn't monitored.
    Perfect. I'll order the Applaws tins today. Really appreciate the honest steer on this.
    inparticular.ai
    You're doing everything right by thinking ahead. One last thing worth knowing: Ragdolls are indoor cats at heart and can become less active as they mature, so revisit her portion sizes around 12–18 months when she transitions to adult food. The same Applaws range has an adult version, so it's an easy switch when the time comes. Good luck with her — she sounds like she's in good hands.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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