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
Feeding ten rescue cats on a volunteer budget is a real challenge, and wet food is genuinely the better choice here — it keeps cats hydrated, is more filling per portion, and cats are far more likely to actually eat it consistently, which matters a lot in a shelter setting where stress can suppress appetite. The honest caveat: cost and logistics are legitimate constraints, not excuses. So before I point you to the best bulk option, tell me — what are the ages of the cats roughly (mostly adults, or a mix with kittens), any with known health issues, and are you buying out of pocket or does the shelter have any budget to work with?
Mostly adults, a couple of older ones maybe 8-10 years. No specific health conditions that we know of. It's pretty much out of my own pocket with occasional donations, so I need something that won't break the bank but is still decent quality.
inparticular.ai
Got it — adult and senior cats, no special dietary needs, and real budget pressure. That actually makes this simpler. What's your current setup — are you feeding twice a day, once, and roughly how many pouches or tins are you going through per week?
Twice a day, I give each cat about one pouch per meal so roughly 20 pouches a day, maybe 140 a week. It adds up fast.
inparticular.ai
140 pouches a week — yeah, that adds up to a serious amount of food. Here's my honest recommendation: Felix As Good As It Looks, bought in the large bulk multipacks on Amazon UK. You can get 120-pouch boxes of the mixed variety for around £30-35, which works out to roughly 25-29p per pouch. That's about as low as you'll get for a wet food cats reliably eat. Felix isn't a premium food, but it has decent moisture content, it's highly palatable so you get very little waste, and the mixed variety keeps cats from going off it. For your older two, the standard Felix is fine — they don't have conditions that require a senior-specific formula. The main thing with senior cats is just keeping them on wet food, which you're already doing. Buy the 120-packs rather than smaller multipacks and you'll save meaningfully over a month.
That's really helpful. Is Felix actually nutritionally complete though? I always worry the cheap stuff is just junk.
inparticular.ai
It's a fair concern and worth being direct about. Felix As Good As It Looks is labelled as complementary food, not complete — which means technically it doesn't meet full daily nutritional requirements on its own. In practice, for cats eating normal varied portions it rarely causes problems, but if you want to be safe feeding it as the sole food at volume, I'd suggest swapping some of those pouches for Felix's 'Senior' or mixing in a box of Sheba Classic pouches periodically, which are complete. Sheba Classic is also available in 96-pouch bulk boxes on Amazon UK for similar pricing. Alternating between Felix and Sheba gives you coverage and variety without a big cost jump.
Perfect, that's exactly what I needed. Thanks for being straight with me about the Felix labelling — I wouldn't have known to check that.
inparticular.ai
Of course — that detail matters when you're feeding this many cats every day. To summarise: bulk Felix As Good As It Looks 120-packs as your main staple, rotate in Sheba Classic 96-packs for nutritional completeness, both on Amazon UK in large multipacks for the best per-pouch price. You're doing a genuinely good thing here — those cats are lucky to have someone thinking this carefully about what they eat.