
15 Signs a Cat Is Pregnant: How to Tell If Your Cat Is Expecting Kittens
If you are searching for signs a cat is pregnant, how to tell if your cat is pregnant, or whether your cat is pregnant or just gaining weight, the most useful thing to know is this: cat pregnancy follows a fairly predictable 9-week pattern. The signs do not all appear at once. They build in order.
This guide breaks the process into exactly 15 clear pregnancy signs, each with when it usually appears, what to look for, what it means, and what to do next. Use it as a practical timeline, not a replacement for veterinary confirmation. If you already know or suspect the mating date, use the Cat Pregnancy Calculator to estimate her due date, birth window, current pregnancy week, and key milestone dates.
Quick Answer: What Are the First Signs a Cat Is Pregnant?
The earliest reliable sign is usually “pinking up” of the nipples around days 15 to 20 after mating. Before that, you may notice subtle behavior changes, more sleeping, or mild appetite changes, but these are easier to misread. By weeks 4 to 6, pregnancy becomes much more visible through belly rounding, steady weight gain, increased appetite, and mammary gland development.
Cat Pregnancy Timeline at a Glance
Cat pregnancy usually lasts about 63 to 67 days. The first signs are subtle, the middle weeks make pregnancy easier to spot, and the final signs help you prepare for labor. For a date-based estimate, open the Cat Pregnancy Calculator and enter the first and last mating dates.
Early Pregnancy
Pinking up, behavior changes, appetite shifts, stopped heat cycles, and more sleeping.
Mid Pregnancy
Visible belly rounding, steady weight gain, increased appetite, mammary changes, and vet confirmation.
Late Pregnancy
Large abdomen, kitten movement, nesting, restlessness, temperature drop, and loss of appetite before labor.
The 15 Signs a Cat Is Pregnant
Look for signs in combination. One sign alone can be misleading, but several signs appearing in the right order are much more meaningful.
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1Early sign · Days 15-20
“Pinking up” of the nipples
Clear signal: the nipples become pinker, slightly larger, firmer, and easier to see through the fur.
This is one of the earliest reliable physical signs of cat pregnancy. It is easiest to notice in light-colored cats, but darker-coated cats may still show more prominent nipples and slight thinning of fur around the mammary line.
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2Early sign · Weeks 1-3
Subtle behavior changes
Clear signal: your cat acts noticeably different from her normal baseline.
Some pregnant queens become more affectionate, follow their owner, purr more, knead more, or seek extra attention. Others become quieter, more private, or less interested in interaction. The important detail is the change from her usual personality.
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3Early sign · Weeks 1-3
Mild appetite changes
Clear signal: a brief appetite dip or a mild increase in interest in food.
Some cats eat a little less during early pregnancy, similar to mild morning sickness. Others start eating slightly more from the beginning. A short change can be normal; a prolonged refusal to eat is not.
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4Early clue · After mating
Heat cycles have stopped
Clear signal: calling, rolling, restlessness, and other heat behaviors do not return on schedule.
If an unspayed female cat had access to an intact male and her usual heat cycle stops, pregnancy is a strong possibility. Cats are induced ovulators, so mating can trigger ovulation and conception.
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5Early sign · Week 2 onward
Increased sleeping and lower energy
Clear signal: she sleeps more, plays less, and chooses quiet resting spots more often.
Pregnant cats may conserve energy early, even before the belly changes. This should look like calm tiredness, not collapse or severe lethargy.
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6Mid pregnancy · Weeks 4-5
Visible belly rounding
Clear signal: the lower abdomen rounds outward and slightly downward while the shoulders and chest remain relatively unchanged.
This is one of the clearest mid-pregnancy signs. Pregnancy creates a more pear-shaped body, while general weight gain tends to spread more evenly across the body.
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7Mid pregnancy · Weeks 4-8
Steady weight gain
Clear signal: her weight increases gradually and consistently over several weeks.
Many pregnant queens gain about 1 to 2 kilograms, depending on litter size and starting body condition. The gain should be steady, not sudden or paired with weakness.
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8Mid pregnancy · Weeks 4-6
Increased appetite
Clear signal: she finishes food faster, asks for food more often, or becomes more interested in meals.
As kittens grow, her energy needs rise. By mid-pregnancy, many queens need more calories and more nutrient-dense food.
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9Mid pregnancy · Weeks 5-6
Enlarged, firmer mammary glands
Clear signal: the mammary chain becomes more developed and the nipples become easier to identify.
This is more than early pinking up. The underside of the body may look fuller as the mammary glands prepare for nursing.
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10Confirmation window · Days 21-35
A vet can confirm pregnancy
Clear signal: ultrasound confirms pregnancy and may detect fetal heartbeats.
Home signs can strongly suggest pregnancy, but veterinary imaging gives certainty. Ultrasound is especially useful from about day 21 onward.
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11Late pregnancy · Weeks 7-9
Obvious abdominal enlargement and kitten movement
Clear signal: the belly is large and pendulous, and you may see small ripples or shifting movements when she rests.
By the final weeks, pregnancy is usually unmistakable. Kitten movement is most visible when the queen is relaxed on her side.
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12Late pregnancy · Final 1-2 weeks
Strong nesting behavior
Clear signal: she searches closets, drawers, laundry baskets, under beds, or prepared boxes for a safe place to give birth.
Nesting often becomes stronger as labor approaches. She may dig at towels, pull bedding around, or return to the same hidden spot repeatedly.
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13Pre-labor sign · Final week
Restlessness and grooming changes
Clear signal: she paces, changes positions often, struggles to get comfortable, or grooms her belly and genital area more than usual.
This can happen as her body prepares for delivery. Some cats groom obsessively; others groom less because the belly makes it difficult.
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14Imminent labor · Final 24 hours
A drop in body temperature
Clear signal: body temperature drops below about 37.8°C / 100°F shortly before labor.
This is one of the more reliable signs that labor is close, but it requires safe, calm monitoring and should not stress the cat.
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15Imminent labor · 12-24 hours before birth
Loss of appetite right before labor
Clear signal: she ignores food shortly before delivery, especially when paired with nesting and restlessness.
Many queens stop eating in the final 12 to 24 hours before labor. Mild vomiting or soft stool can also happen, but prolonged refusal to eat without labor is a warning sign.
Pregnant Cat or Just Gaining Weight?
Pregnancy usually creates a lower, pear-shaped belly, while ordinary weight gain tends to spread more evenly across the body. The strongest combination is pinking up, stopped heat cycles, behavior changes, and belly rounding in the correct timeline.
More likely pregnancy
- Pinking up around days 15-20
- Lower abdomen rounds outward
- Heat cycles stop after mating
- Mammary glands develop
- Kitten movement appears late
More likely weight gain
- Body rounds evenly
- No nipple or mammary changes
- No known mating event
- No pregnancy timeline pattern
- Weight gain continues without labor signs
How to Confirm Cat Pregnancy
The most reliable way to confirm pregnancy is through a veterinarian. Home signs are helpful, but they cannot confirm pregnancy with certainty.
Ultrasound
Best early confirmation method. Can detect pregnancy and fetal heartbeats.
X-ray
Best for counting kittens once fetal skeletons are visible.
Palpation
Sometimes possible for experienced vets, but less reliable than imaging.
When to Call a Vet
Call a veterinarian urgently if your pregnant cat has bloody, green, or dark discharge before labor, refuses food for more than 24 hours with lethargy, pants heavily, collapses, seems in severe distress, or has active contractions for more than 2 hours without delivering a kitten.
Cat Pregnancy Signs FAQs
How early can you tell if a cat is pregnant?
The earliest reliable physical sign is usually pinking up of the nipples around days 15 to 20 after mating. A vet can often confirm pregnancy with ultrasound from about day 21 onward.
Can a cat be pregnant without obvious signs?
Yes. Cats can hide early pregnancy well, especially in the first 2 to 3 weeks or with small litters. If signs are unclear, ultrasound is the best confirmation method.
Is my cat pregnant or just fat?
Pregnant cats usually develop a lower pear-shaped belly, plus nipple and mammary changes. Weight gain alone is usually more evenly distributed and does not cause pinking up.
What should I do if I think my cat is pregnant?
Confirm with a vet, estimate the timeline from the mating date with the Cat Pregnancy Calculator, transition nutrition carefully, prepare a nesting box in late pregnancy, and watch for labor warning signs.
Related Cat Calculators
These tools can help you plan the next step after checking pregnancy signs, from due-date timing to feeding, weight, age, and ownership cost planning.

