How to introduce a new cat to an older cat
If you're thinking about adding a second cat, or you've already brought one home and your older cat is hissing under the bed — please don't give up. This can work. Most cats can learn to coexist peacefully, even if they never become best friends. But here's the part that's hard to hear: it's going to take longer than you want. Weeks, not days. If you rush it, you'll make it worse. Your older cat will associate the new cat with all the stress they're feeling, and that association takes months to undo. The good news: cats are territorial, but they're also adaptable. With a slow, patient introduction, most cats go from 'I want to kill you' to 'you live here, I guess' within 2-4 weeks. Some become genuinely bonded. Most just coexist peacefully. Both are wins.
Start with separation — complete isolation
I know. You want them to meet and become friends right away. That's the worst thing you can do.
When a new cat appears suddenly in an established cat's territory, the established cat sees them as an invader. Every interaction confirms 'that intruder is dangerous.' Starting with direct contact is how you create lifelong enemies.
Instead:
- New cat in their own room with food, water, litter, toys
- Closed door between them for 3-7 days
- No visual contact yet — they smell each other through the door
- Swap which cat is in which room after a few days
This sounds excessive. It's not. The separation is the foundation. Skipping it is the most common cause of failed introductions.
Scent swap — the most important step
Cats identify each other primarily by smell. Before they ever see each other, they need to learn the new cat's scent. Scent familiarity creates 'oh, that smell has been around for a while, must be safe' before the visual contact.
How to do scent swapping:
- Swap blankets or beds between the cats (one night in each cat's space)
- Swap toys
- Use a sock or cloth to gently rub one cat's face (cheeks, forehead) and place it in the other cat's area
- Switch rooms briefly — let the established cat explore the new cat's room while the new cat explores elsewhere
Do this for several days. You'll know it's working when:
- The established cat stops hissing at the door
- They eat treats near the door calmly
- They sleep near the door
If hissing and growling persist at the door after a week, scent swap more. There's no rush.
Visual contact — through a barrier first
Once they're calm with each other's scent (usually 3-7 days), allow visual contact through a barrier:
- Crack the door open an inch (with a baby gate if possible)
- Use a screen door or pet gate
- Open the door briefly while supervised
Watch their body language:
- Calm: loose body, slow blinks, normal breathing
- Tense: ears back, dilated pupils, tail flicking, low growl
If tense: close the barrier, go back a step.
If calm: increase visual contact duration. Multiple short sessions per day, building up.
Feed them on either side of the barrier during these sessions. Treats help create positive associations.
First direct meeting — supervised and brief
When they're calm with visual contact, try a supervised direct meeting. Brief is the key word.
Setup:
- A neutral room (not the established cat's favorite spot)
- Both cats able to escape if they want
- Treats ready
- You calm and ready to intervene
Open the door or remove the gate. Watch closely:
- Hissing, growling, swatting → separate immediately, try again later
- Ignoring each other → great, end on a positive note
- Curious sniffing → great, let it happen
First meeting: 5-10 minutes. End before either cat gets stressed.
Repeat daily, gradually increasing duration. Most cats reach calm coexistence within 2-4 weeks of daily short meetings.
Set up the home for two cats
Resource competition is the silent killer of cat introductions. Even cats who like each other will fight if they have to share:
- Litter boxes: one per cat, plus one extra, in different locations
- Food bowls: separate feeding areas
- Water bowls: multiple, in different locations
- Cat trees/perches: at least 2-3, in different rooms
- Scratching posts: multiple
- Hiding spots: each cat needs their own safe space
Vertical space is especially important. Cat trees, shelves, window perches. Cats feel safer when they can be up high. Adding vertical space reduces conflict significantly.
If cats are competing for resources, they can't relax around each other. Adding more resources eliminates the competition.
Know when to get help
Most cat introductions go smoothly with patience. Some don't. Get professional help if:
- Active fighting continues past 6-8 weeks of careful introduction
- Either cat stops eating, hides constantly, or shows signs of illness
- The established cat starts inappropriate urination/defecation
- Aggression is escalating rather than decreasing
- One cat is bullying the other constantly
A certified cat behavior consultant (look for credentials through IAABC or similar) can assess the specific dynamics and create a plan. Sometimes medication helps (yes, for the cats — anti-anxiety medication can be useful during introductions).
Also, if the introduction just isn't working after months of effort, it might be that this particular cat combination isn't going to work. That's rare but real. Rehoming one cat to a more compatible home isn't failure. It's the right call for everyone involved.
Citations & External Resources
This guide was researched using authoritative sources. For further reading, explore the references below:
Frequently Asked Questions
How to introduce a new cat to an older cat?
Introducing a new cat to an older cat takes weeks of patience. Rushing it is the most common reason it fails. For more practical tips, check out our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.
What is the best way to introduce a new cat to an older cat?
The best way to introduce a new cat to an older cat is to follow a systematic step-by-step approach. If you're thinking about adding a second cat, or you've already brought one home and your older cat is hissing under the bed — please don't give up. This can work. Most cats can learn to coexist... You might also find our guide on How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants helpful.
How long does it take to introduce a new cat to an older cat?
Most people can introduce a new cat to an older cat within 6 minutes of consistent practice. The exact timeline depends on your starting point and how diligently you follow the steps in this guide. For more help, read our related guide: How to Dose Fertilizer for Plants.