do cats hate water

The image is fixed in everyone's mind: a cat, wet, furious, clawing its way out of a bath while its owner bleeds. It has made the belief that all cats hate water feel like a law of nature. It is not. Many cats dislike being soaked, some are entirely relaxed about water, and a few genuinely love it. Here is the truer, more interesting picture.

First, separate the two things people muddle together: drinking and playing with water, which most cats enjoy, and being fully immersed, which many dislike. Cats are often fascinated by water, drawn to dripping taps, pawing at the surface of a bowl, drinking from a running fountain, batting at puddles. That is not hatred; that is interest. The wariness, where it exists, is specifically about getting the whole coat wet, and even that is far from universal.

why some cats dislike getting soaked

For the cats that do object to a full soaking, there are sensible reasons behind it. A cat's coat is not built to get drenched. When it becomes waterlogged it turns heavy and cold, weighing the cat down, reducing its agility, and taking a long time to dry, which for an animal that relies on being light and quick feels genuinely unpleasant and even vulnerable. A wet cat is a slower, colder, less capable cat, and instinct dislikes that.

There is an evolutionary thread too. The domestic cat descends from wildcats of dry regions, where deep water was rarely part of daily life, so cats did not evolve alongside swimming and rivers the way some animals did, and never developed a natural ease with immersion. Add to that a cat's general dislike of unfamiliar situations and loss of control, and a sudden bath, with its restraint, noise, and drenching, becomes exactly the kind of experience a cautious animal resists. A single bad early experience can cement the aversion for life.

the cats that love water

Here is the part that breaks the myth. Plenty of cats are indifferent to water, and some seek it out. Certain breeds are famously fond of it: the Turkish Van has such a reputation for swimming that it is nicknamed the swimming cat, and Maine Coons, Bengals, and Turkish Angoras are among those often relaxed around or drawn to water. Individual cats within any breed vary too, and a cat introduced to water gently and positively, especially when young, is far more likely to grow up comfortable with it. The blanket idea that cats and water cannot mix simply does not survive contact with the cats that happily play in a sink or wade into a shallow bath.

do you even need to bath your cat

Mostly, no, and this is the practical point. Cats are meticulous self-groomers and keep themselves remarkably clean without help, so a healthy cat rarely needs a bath at all. Baths are usually only necessary for a specific reason: a cat that has got into something toxic or filthy it cannot clean off, a medicated wash prescribed by a vet, or an elderly, ill, or very overweight cat that can no longer groom itself properly. Unless there is such a reason, you can generally leave the bathing to the cat, who is far better at it than you.

If you do need to bath a cat, go gently, use lukewarm water and a cat-safe product, keep it calm and brief, and never force a terrified animal, which only teaches it that water is a threat. But for most cats, most of the time, the kindest and simplest approach is to skip the bath entirely, keep the fresh water flowing for drinking, and let your cat decide for itself how it feels about the wet stuff. Some will surprise you.

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Related reading from my desk: do cats hate the vacuum, another supposed universal fear, and do cats always land on their feet.

A cat that suddenly stops grooming and looks unkempt may be unwell or in pain rather than just messy, worth a vet check. I am a cat with opinions, not a veterinarian.

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