How to Care for Orphaned Kittens: Feeding and Weaning

Feeding orphaned kittens can feel like a full-time job, especially in the beginning when they need to be fed the most. But it’s also incredibly rewarding. And before you know it, your kittens will be eating on their own and soon ready for homes of their own. The feeding protocols below are provided by Salt Lake County Animal Services in partnership with Best Friends Animal Society.

1-week-old kittens or younger: Bottle-feeding

  • Food type: Formula
  • Frequency: Every 2-3 hours (8-12 times per day)
  • Amount: 3-4 cc per feeding

2-week-old kittens: Bottle-feeding

  • Food type: Formula
  • Frequency: Every 3 hours (8 times per day)
  • Amount: 5-6 cc per feeding

3- to 4-week-old kittens: Bottle-feeding

  • Food type: Formula
  • Frequency: Every 4 hours (6 times per day)
  • Amount: 13-17 cc per feeding

4-week-old kittens: Begin feeding gruel (weaning stage)

  • Food type: 1/2 can per kitten of gruel (gruel instructions below) in a dish, dry kitten food in a dish, and a dish full of water at all times — plus formula three times per day
  • Frequency: Keep kibble, water, and gruel available at all times
  • Give 13-17 cc of formula every 8 hours (3 times per day)
  • During bottle-feeding sessions, try to get the kittens also to eat gruel off a spoon or tongue depressor and from a dish (see instructions on making gruel for more tips). It is important to start getting small amounts of gruel into their stomachs.
  • Note: At this time, also introduce a litter box; kittens can eliminate on their own at this age and do not need to be stimulated to go anymore.

How to mix gruel

Small batch (for one kitten): ½ can of wet kitten food mixed with ¼ can of formula (use an empty food can as a measuring cup)

Large batch: Whisk 8 cans wet kitten food with 4 cans of fresh, warm formula (use the empty food can as a measuring cup). At this age, kittens like their food a little lumpy so they can chew.

Note: Substitute the warm water for formula in gruel for kittens 5 weeks and older.

Helpful tips when using gruel:

  • When introducing kittens to gruel, put the gruel in a flat dish and place the kittens near the dish. If they do not start to eat on their own after a few minutes, use a tongue depressor or spoon to scoop gruel into the kitten’s mouth. You may have to open their mouth and put a little in. You can also put a little gruel on their nose and see whether they will lick it off. Sometimes the kittens need to adjust to the new taste.
  • Once a kitten starts to eat gruel off the spoon or tongue depressor (it might take a few feedings for them to figure this step out), slowly start to lower it toward the dish of gruel. The kittens should easily transition from the spoon or depressor to the dish (though it might take a day for them to start eating out of the dish regularly).
  • During the weaning process, kittens still need to be bottle-fed three times per day (about every eight hours) to ensure they are receiving proper nutrients.
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5- to 8-week-old kittens: Solid food

Food type: ½ can per kitten of kibble in a dish and wet food in a dish at all times, plus a dish full of water at all times

  • Kittens 3 to 5 weeks should be given baby cat kibble.
  • Kittens 5 to 6 weeks should be given kitten kibble, and kibble should be mixed into the wet food.
  • Kittens 7 weeks and older should eat mainly dry kibble.
  • Weeks 5 and 6 are transition weeks where the two foods (what they were eating and what they will be eating) should be mixed together, so their tummies do not get upset by the change in diet. Gradually decrease the amount of food they were eating while increasing what they will be eating over the course of seven days.

Spay/neuter and adoption

Eight-week-old healthy kittens are fully weaned and should soon be ready to be spayed or neutered and go to adoptive homes. It is much easier to find homes for 8-week old kittens than it is if you wait longer, so start setting a plan early on. Sharing photos of the kittens with friends and family as they grow, and telling everyone you know that you’ll be looking for homes for the kittens, is a great way to find homes. For more advice on finding homes for the kittens, see this guide on finding homes for pets.

It is also important to ensure that all the kittens are spayed or neutered, so they don’t accidentally add to the thousands of litters of kittens who enter shelters each year. Find a low-cost spay/neuter clinic near you.

While caring for orphaned kittens is a lot of work, it’s also a lot of fun. The most rewarding part is watching your charges grow up and go to new homes. And the best part is that you can feel good knowing you helped keep the kittens safe and loved.

More about baby kitten care

Note: This article is the last in a four-part series on caring for baby kittens who are orphaned or abandoned.

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About Best Friends Animal Society

Best Friends is working to end the killing of dogs and cats in U.S. shelters in part by getting more pets out of shelters and into loving homes.

We’ve come a long way since the first known city reached no-kill in 1994, and now we’re closer than ever to making the entire country no-kill. Of the roughly 3,900 shelters operating in America today, 1,300 of them are not yet no-kill, but nearly half are close with 100 or fewer additional pets to be saved, and we know what to do to get them there.

Best Friends is committed to working with passionate people like you to save homeless pets through adoption, volunteering, fostering, and advocacy. In addition to our lifesaving centers around the U.S, we also founded and run the nation's largest no-kill sanctuary for companion animals.

Working together, we can save homeless pets in our communities and secure a better future for our best friends. Together, we will bring the whole country to no-kill.