Caring for a senior pet.
The grey muzzle years are some of the most rewarding, if you adjust to them. Older dogs and cats need a little more watching, a little more comfort, and a vet who sees them more often. Here is what changes, and how to give an ageing pet the good days they have earned.
๐ When is a pet a senior?
It depends on species and size, not a single birthday. Small dogs are often called senior around 10-12, medium dogs around 8-10, and large and giant breeds as early as 6-7, because bigger dogs age faster. Cats are usually considered senior from about 10-11. The point is not the label but the shift in care it signals: more watching, more comfort, and more frequent vet visits.
๐ฉบ Health: catch problems early
Ageing bodies hide illness well, so the biggest thing you can do is see the vet more often - twice a year rather than once, with bloodwork to catch kidney, liver, thyroid and other changes before they show. Keep on top of dental care, watch for new lumps, and mention anything that seems 'just old age' - stiffness, drinking more, weight change or confusion often have a treatable cause.
๐ฝ๏ธ Nutrition and weight
Older pets usually need fewer calories but good-quality protein to hold muscle. Keeping them lean is one of the kindest things you can do - extra weight punishes ageing joints, heart and organs. Ask your vet whether a senior or a condition-specific diet suits your pet, keep water easy to reach, and watch for a fading appetite, which is worth a check rather than a wait.
๐ฆด Mobility and comfort
Stiff, sore joints are the most common quiet struggle of old age. A supportive orthopedic bed, a warm draught-free spot, rugs or runners over slippery floors, and ramps or steps up to the sofa or car all make daily life easier. Keep nails trimmed, keep gentle exercise going little and often, and ask your vet about joint supplements or pain relief - arthritis is very treatable and no pet should live in pain.
๐ Fading senses and the mind
Sight, hearing and sharpness fade gradually. Keep furniture and food bowls in the same places, approach a deaf or blind pet gently so you do not startle them, and light night-time routes for cloudy eyes. Signs of canine or feline cognitive decline - pacing, night waking, confusion, staring at walls, forgetting house-training - are worth raising with your vet, as diet, routine and medication can genuinely help.
โค๏ธ Quality of life
The goal of senior care is good days, not just more days. A simple way to keep track is to watch the things your pet loves - eating, greeting you, moving comfortably, resting well - and notice honestly when good days start to be outnumbered by bad ones. Your vet can help you weigh comfort and dignity, and there is no shame in leaning on them for the hardest conversations. Loving an old animal well is one of the quiet privileges of having them.
๐ฉ See the vet if you notice
- Drinking or peeing noticeably more
- Stiffness, limping or trouble with stairs
- Weight loss or a fading appetite
- New lumps, or bad breath and sore gums
- Confusion, night waking or pacing
- Any sudden change in behaviour or routine
Most of these have a treatable cause when caught early. Ageing is not a diagnosis.
Worried about a specific symptom now? Start with the symptom checker (and your vet). Otherwise, browse care guides for your dog or cat breed, and keep records with the printable care logs.