Quick Answer
Why is my cat vomiting? Vomiting can happen from stomach irritation, diet change, hairballs, infection, toxin exposure, or obstruction. Repeated vomiting, vomiting with weakness, or vomiting with appetite loss should be treated as a veterinary concern.
Severity
Causes

- why is my cat vomiting may be linked to stomach irritation, hairballs, or eating too quickly
- recent diet change, spoiled food, stress, or food intolerance
- parasites, infection, inflammation, pancreatitis, or pain
- toxin exposure, swallowed objects, obstruction, or severe systemic illness
Action Steps

- Keep your cat calm and observe breathing, energy, appetite, urination, stool, and pain level.
- Remove access to possible toxins, spoiled food, plants, medications, or unsafe objects.
- Offer water if your pet is alert and able to drink normally; do not force food or fluids.
- Write down when the sign started, how often it happens, and whether it is improving or worsening.
Vet Guidance
- See a vet if the sign is severe, worsening, repeated, or lasts more than 24 hours.
- Seek urgent care for breathing trouble, collapse, pale gums, seizures, inability to urinate, severe pain, blood, or repeated vomiting.
- Contact a vet sooner for kittens, puppies, senior pets, pregnant pets, or pets with known health conditions.
FAQ
Is why is my cat vomiting serious?
Why is my cat vomiting can be mild, but it becomes more serious when it is repeated, worsening, or paired with weakness, pain, blood, or breathing changes.
When should I worry about vomiting in my cat?
Worry if the symptom lasts more than 24 hours, happens repeatedly, or appears with vomiting, diarrhea, hiding, lethargy, blood, or fast breathing.
How long does vomiting usually last in cats?
Mild short-term signs may improve within a day, but persistent or worsening signs should be checked by a veterinarian.
What can I check at home for why is my cat vomiting?
Check breathing, gum color, energy, appetite, water intake, urination, stool, pain level, and whether the symptom is improving or worsening.
Can why is my cat vomiting be an emergency?
Yes. It can be an emergency with collapse, pale gums, breathing trouble, severe pain, repeated vomiting, seizures, heavy bleeding, or rapid decline.
Disclaimer
Pet Answer Hub provides general informational content only. It cannot diagnose your pet, replace a veterinarian, or provide emergency medical advice. If your pet seems very sick, is in pain, has trouble breathing, collapses, has repeated vomiting, or you are unsure, contact a veterinarian or emergency clinic promptly.

