People see that pedigreed kittens are sold for $400 or more
and assume that breeders must be making a profit. It's hard to
understand how expensive breeding is without actually trying it.
Breeding each domestic species is different with different
special challenges. With cats, the biggest challenge is
preventing and managing infectious disease because cats evolved
as loners, almost never in contact with other cats after
reaching adulthood. Cats also tend to start manifesting
behavioral problems in a multicat situation. Hence there is no
such thing as “economies of scale” when breeding cats. As
long as you continue to give the cats all the veterinary care
and other things they deserve, the more cats you have, the more
expensive it gets.
I. GETTING STARTED
A. When a breeder starts breeding for the first time, they have
to buy at least one very good female kitten to eventually be used
for breeding. This female (queen) must be registered and have an
excellent pedigree. In addition, the queen needs to be an
outstanding example of her breed, absolutely sound and
cosmetically much better than pet quality. Outstanding examples of
the breed don't grow on trees and so usually the price of a
breeding queen is high. Also, it's very unlikely that the new
breeder will be able to find and persuade a reputable breeder to
sell you a healthy, high quality female unless you have first
spent about a year educating yourselff and networking with more
experienced breeders (see part G below). Experienced breeders
don't want to sell breeding cats to a newbie without abundant
evidence that the newbie will do right by her cats and by the
breed. This cat will also have to be shown to it highest level of
championship which may take 4-8 months of showing.
Expense #1: one year of prior
networking (breed club dues, advertising, telephone calls: $160)
and one female kitten who costs $500 to $1000. Cat show entries
$1000-2500; hotels/gas/food for the cat shows and additional
$1500-2500. Total at least one year advance preparation and $2660
to $4160.
B. Next, every time a breeder buys a new kitten or cat for
breeding they must make certain that cat is healthy and won't
transmit any diseases, parasites, or genetic defects to the
kittens (or to other cats already living in the home). The
veterinary testing includes a physical exam, stool exam for
parasites, blood tests (FIV, feline leukemia), and it's also wise
to do PCR testing for hard-to-detect parasites.
Expense #2: veterinary health
screening, about $200 per cat.
C. The new breeder must either purchase an excellent stud and
build him stud quarters (very, very expensive and challenging for
a newbie) - or must locate a breeder with an excellent stud who is
willing to provide stud service. A responsible stud owner will
want to protect the stud from possible exposure to disease.
Therefore, even though you had a thorough vet exam of your queen
when you first bought her, you will probably be asked to repeat at
least the blood tests and show the test results to the stud owner
prior to each and every breeding.
Expense #3: stud service and further health testing of
queen, about $400 to $600 per breeding. It's MORE expensive and
much more work to keep your own stud, but usually consistent
quality stud service is not available and there is no choice.
D. The breeder must pay to register a cattery name with at
least one cat association ($50 for CFA to be paid for a five-year
registration), must register her new breeding queen ($10), and
must register each litter produced ($10). There will be at least
one litter per year and at least one kitten kept and registered
per year thereafter.
Expense #4: registration fees, at least $70 the first year
and at least $20 per year thereafter.
E. The breeder must buy two or three textbook type reference
books to help learn what she needs to know about making breeding
decisions, veterinary screening, genetic screening, rearing
kittens, caring for females in heat, caring for pregnant and
lactating females, common feline diseases, feline nutrition, and
much more. Visiting the library is not sufficient because the
library is unlikely to have books that are up-to-date on feline
husbandry - or may not have books on that topic at all.
Expense #5: reference books, about $100 the first year and
at least $10 per year thereafter.
F. The breeder needs special equipment to rear litters of
kittens. At minimum, the breeder needs a heating pad designed
specifically to be safe for kittens to keep them warm ($40).
Hypothermia is the leading cause of death of young kittens. Also
needed are clean rags for bedding and cleaning (cheap),
disinfectants and special urinary enzyme deodorizers to reduce
disease risk and aid in housebreaking ($20), feeding tubes and
feeding syringes for weak or sick kittens ($5), KMR kitten formula
(there is a kitten who needs supplementation or who threatens to
need it in almost every litter, $20), cardboard kittening box
(cheap), at least two small litter pans for built for kittens
($15), an accurate scale to weigh kittens every day ($15 to $100),
first aid and kitten delivery kit (latex gloves, twine, food
coloring, betadine, kaopectate, millions of paper towels,
terramycin, eyedroppers, etc., about $30).
Expense #6: kitten rearing equipment, about $145 to $230 for
first litter and at least $30 per year thereafter, or at least $30
for every subsequent litter.
G. The breeder needs to advertise kittens, promote the cattery,
promote ther breed, and network with other breeders. Advertising
of kittens can be done various ways, but will cost an absolute
minimum of $100 per year if you are very lucky. Cattery promotion
involves a form of year-round advertising, which will cost at
least $80 per year independent of kitten advertising. Breed
promotion and networking is not only to help the breeder advertise
longterm, but to altruistically help the breed, to help the
breeder educate themself, and to provide the breeder with contacts
that will help to achieve breeding goals far into the future. To
do these things a breeder must join at least one cat association
and at least one breeder's club at a cost of about $50 per year in
dues.
Expense #7: advertising, breed promotion, networking, about
$320 per year minimum.
H. The breeder must have a sales contract and other cattery
forms, a cattery brochure with which to answer written inquiries,
may need business cards, and must take photos of breeding cats and
all kittens for cattery documentation, advertising, and other
purposes. The breeder must make many phone calls, including long
distance phone calls, as a courtesy in returning calls received
from kitten clients and even those merely curious about the breed.
The breeder must also do longterm follow-up on every kitten sold,
telephoning new owners regularly to answer questions and nip
problems in the bud. All these forms of communication come at a
cost that is hard to estimate accurately, but I would say a bare
minimum of $10 per month.
Expense #8: forms, photos, phone calls, and other modes of
communication, about $120 per year.
II. MAINTENANCE OF ADULT CATS
Food, litter, routine veterinary bills, and other basic
maintenance costs will vary depending on the quality of the food
and litter, the number of toys and special furniture items
purchased for the cat(s) and more. But it always costs more than
$500 per year to maintain one healthy adult cat - and it can
average as much as $2000 per cat per year, especially as cats age.
A queen can only be bred for 1 to 2 litters per year for 5-6 years
after which she must be spayed and retired. Every breeder may
begin with one queen, but eventually there will be other queens,
perhaps one or two studs, retirees, and a cat or two of any age
that was too special to the breeder to adopt out or that was
unadoptable because of health or behavioral problems. As cats age,
their vet bills increase substantially, beginning with annual
dental cleaning ($150 per year) and accelerating to much higher
costs as the cat develops physical problems with aging. Even
though they retire some of their adult cats early and adopt them
out into loving homes, breeders sooner or later accumulate more
elderly cats than a pet owner usually would, with the result that
their yearly expenses for taking care of their beloved retirees
and pensioners can be substantial. Even adopting cats out all cats
while still young is not a financial solution (and certainly not
an easy solution from an emotional perspective!) because the more
often cats are retired and adopted out, the more often the breeder
must buy a new breeding cat, pay for health screening, and
register her/him. In addition, an occasional new breeding cat will
prove to be unbreedable for various reasons and the effort and
expense of finding a replacement must be repeated yet again.
II. THE COSTS PER LITTER
Even once you have the kittening equipment and other overhead
expenses taken care of, there are additional costs incurred per
litter. They include:
A. Queen must be vaccinated right before she is bred or in some
cases during the pregnancy. That's at least $10 if the vet does it
(more if he charges for an office visit) and $3 if you learn how
to do it yourself (that's if you manage your inventory perfectly
and can avoid having vaccines expire before you can use them all
up, not that easy to do).
B. Stud fee and health screening discussed in part I section C
above. $400 to $600.
C. Queen will eat up to twice as much as usual during her
pregnancy and up to three times as much as usual while she is
nursing the kittens. She needs special premium quality food that
is approved for pregnancy and lactation. That is two 6-ounce cans
per day for 9 weeks of pregnancy and 3 cans per day for at least 8
weeks of lactation. Each can costs about 50 cents for premium
food, so that is 63 days X $1.00 + 56 days X $1.50 = $147.00.
D. Kittens can die within hours if they don't get enough to eat
because of a feeding problem. So you need to keep emergency
formula, feeding tubes, and feeding syringes on hand. The formula
needs to be purchased fresh nearly every time you have a litter,
so that's $20 per litter.
E. The kittens will begin to eat solid food at age 4-6 weeks
and will be eating almost entirely solid food at age 8 weeks. At
age 8 weeks, each kitten eats about two 3-ounce cans per day of
premium food rated for growing kittens and will eat perhaps 1/8
cup of dry premium kitten food each day. What they don't eat, they
spill soil, scatter, or play with until it must be discarded. The
kittens will stay with the breeder usually until age 12 weeks -
and sometimes for much longer. So that's a minimum of 3 cans X 4
weeks X 33 cents per can = $28 per kitten. Average litter size for
Siamese is five kittens, so 5 X $28 = $140.00. Then the dry food
adds up to 1/8 cup X 5 kittens X 28 days = 17.5 cups. So that's
about one 4 pound bag of premium kitten food per litter, or $8.00.
Total food for kittens is $140 + $8 = $148.00.
F. The kittens will require at least two vaccinations, one at
age 9 weeks and one at age 12 weeks. Those cost $10 each if the
vet does it, or $3 each if the breeder does it. So that's five
kittens X 2 vaccinations X $10 per vacc = $100.00, or
alternatively it is $30.00 if the breeder does her own
vaccinations.
G. Each kitten must be spayed or neutered prior to adoption.
This is responsible breeding that prevents new owners from
unintentionally failing to neuter kittens in time to prevent
accidental litters. Breeders aim to preserve their breeds but they
also wish to avoid adding to the numbers of homeless cats on the
streets and in shelters. If you can find a good low-cost early
neuter clinic (not always possible), average cost of neutering is
$25.00 per kitten X four kittens = $100.00. NOTE: If you
can't find a low-cost neutering clinic, it will cost you about
$50.00 and up to neuter and or spay each kitten. The reason there
are only four kittens neutered, and not five, is because the
breeder nearly always keeps one kitten from each litter to see if
it will have potential as a future breeding or show cat.
Obviously, in many cases the kitten does not realize its potential
and thus is eventually placed in a home as a pet, but placed at a
later age it may have to be sold for almost nothing.
H. In virtually all litters there is at least one kitten who
during his 12 weeks living with the breeder requires veterinary
attention due to an umbilical infection, failure to thrive
normally, getting poked in the eye, falling off a table the wrong
way, developing an upper respiratory infection, developing a minor
eye infection during the period when the eyes are starting to
open, needing a re-examination after neutering, being born with a
minor birth defect, developing a mysterious limp, swallowing a
foreign object, or many other possible calamities. Kittens are
like small human children. They have a talent for getting
themselves into scrapes or picking up bugs. The veterinary costs
typically vary from a $35 exam (to be on the safe side) to $300
emergency surgery or treatment (off-hours).
I. Occasionally, the queen requires a C-section to deliver her
kittens or may require treatment after the birth of the kittens
due to lactational diarrhea, intestinal obstruction, mastitis,
hemorrhaging, uterine infection, or other complications. The costs
associated with treating these problems may run up to $1200 for an
emergency off-hours C-section. Also, if C-section is required up
to half of the litter may die due to side effects of the
anesthesia. Kittens may also be lost due to the effects of
complications on the queen's milk production.
J. The queen will require at least one precautionary prenatal
or perinatal veterinary examination, $35.00.
K. The litter must be registered and the one kitten who is kept
must be individually registered, $20.00.
L. You must replenish, repair, replace some of the kittening
equipment each litter (see part I), $30.
Total costs per litter in best case scenario where all goes
well, breeder
does her own vaccinations,and somehow no kitten gets sick =
$933.00
IV. INCOME FROM ONE LITTER OF KITTENS
A. If the breeder keeps one kitten and sells four, the income
is 4 X $400 = $1600.00
In the best-case scenario J-1 and if you ignore start-up costs and
overhead for a moment, you have $1600 - 933 = $667.00
B. But the queen originally cost you at least $500 + $160 for
advance networking + $200 for health screening + $10 for
registration + min $500 per year maintenance for perhaps six years
of reproductive life. Total cost of queen = $1370. Divide that by
six years and you get $228 per year (and that's the minimum she
cost you assuming you don't have to support her after her
retirement). Since she only produced one litter per year, you have
to subtract the cost of her support from the litter income:
$667.00 - $228.00 = $439.00. And of course in reality you didn't
get a best-case scenario from every litter she produced. But let's
suppose you did...
C. You also paid $160 per year in networking and advertising
for six years while you were breeding her. $439 - 160 = $279.00.
D. You had $120 per year of long distance phone calls and
related expenses. $279 - $120 = $159.00.
E. You had the costs of registering a cattery name with CFA $50
per five years. We are actually talking about breeding the queen
for six years, but let's be generous and average the cattery reg
fees over five years, or $10 per year. $159.00 - 10 = $149.00.
F. Oh, and Uncle Sam won't let you deduct your cattery expenses
as business expenses because it will turn out you never make a
profit. So you have to declare your kitten income as hobby income
and pay taxes on at LEAST everything you make in immediate
"profit," so let's say that's 25% of part A's $667.00 =
$167.00.
Now $149.00 - 167.00 = - $18.00. So now you've LOST $18.00
per year even with a best-case scenario.
G. But we're not done. Reference books were $100 (during
preparatory year) + $10 per year X 6 years = $160.00 divided by 6
= $27.00. So that makes a loss of $45.00 per year.
H. And there was the $145.00 of up-front kittening equipment.
Divide that by 6 years and you have $24.00.
So now we have lost $69.00 per year under the very best of
circumstances.
I. Remember that due to the occasional accident of nature, you
may also end up with at least one unadoptable kitten, a kitten
with a special health or behavioral problem, to which you must
give a lifetime of love and good care. That adds to the richness
of your emotional experience with the cats, but it also costs you
a lot more.
J. And we haven't even talked about what it would cost you if
you were showing your cats several times per year at cat shows!
V. ECONOMIES OF SCALE?
Well, you say, maybe if you buy more than one breeding queen
and start raising more litters per year, THEN you can make a
profit.
Unfortunately, it turns out that with cats the more breeding
cats you have living together, the higher your costs climb.
First of all, you absolutely can bet you won't have a best-case
scenario with all the litters produced by every cat, so you will
be much more in debt from some cats than others.
You can also bet that a percentage of the breeding cats you buy
will turn out to be unbreedable, will die unexpectedly, will
develop pyometra and have their reproductive lives cut short, and
so on.
As the number of cats you buy climbs beyond about one, you will
find that it becomes nearly impossible to continue to get by with
stud service. There aren't many breeders who will offer stud
service and who have a high quality stud and who are located near
you. In fact, there may not be any. And if you have multiple
queens, you can't be shipping them ALL long distances on a regular
basis. Also, your stud service provider may be unable to offer you
all the stud services you need WHEN you need them.
So you buy a stud. That means you have to have special stud
housing that will cost you at least several hundred dollars in
materials and several hundred more in equipment (e.g., special
cleanable surfaces, heated bed and other niceties for the
studhouse). Now you also have to maintain the stud year-round
whether he is siring litters or not. And you have to hire someone
to care for him while you are out of town. Studs are not cats you
can leave in the hands of just anyone, especially if they spray
urine heavily on a daily basis.
If you have multiple queens, you will begin to have some
problems with them getting along. In some cases, that may mean you
have to spay one and adopt her out to keep the peace. And you may
suddenly have extra vet trips to help you differentiate and treat
behavioral versus medical problems.
You will also need cages (about $175 per cage and up). With
multiple queens often several of them will come into heat at once.
If allowed to roam the house, the wailing will drive you and
possibly your neighbors to distraction. Queens in heat also tend
to spray urine on furniture. It's easy to monitor the behavior of
just one queen in heat and leave her free to roam, but when you
have several queens in heat that's not feasible. You have to
confine them during each heat cycle.
You will need more kittening equipment, such as multiple
heating pads, because often more than one queen will have kittens
at the same time.
You will need to remodel portions of your home. When you have
multiple breeding cats and several litters of kittens born per
year, you need rooms in which to separately isolate young fragile
litters. You need cleanable, bleachable surfaces so you can
disinfect because having litters around all the time greatly
increases the risk of infectious disease. It becomes extremely
difficult to keep carpets clean in a house of multiple cats,
especially with young ones underfoot all the time, so you need to
replace the carpets with Pergo or tile or similar cleanable
surface. You need to get rid of the lacy curtains because young
kittens can poke their heads through them and strangle themselves.
You need to replace your old furniture with furniture you can
easily clean.
Yes, you can keep the home sanitary and odorless when you have
multiple breeding cats. You can keep the cats happy and healthy.
But it will require remodeling. It will cost you money.
When you only have one queen and one litter per year you can
work around the limitations of your home. But once you have
multiple cats and multiple litters per year, you can't. The
remodeling will cost you thousands of dollars. Just replacing all
the carpets with Pergo or tile can cost ten thousand dollars.
With multiple cats and multiple litters you will, despite the
best of vaccination and quarantine systems, occasionally end up
with epidemics. Those may be minor or they may be serious, but
they always mean large vet bills. It's very much like running a
day-care center full of young children who succumb to every new
virus and bug that's out there.
When you only have one queen and one litter per year, you have
very minimal vet bills, but once you graduate to multiple breeding
cats and litters, the vet bills can be substantial. Cats evolved
to live by themselves most of the time. Consequently, they are
very susceptible to epidemic diseases, much more so than dogs.
So why do breeders bother to breed multiple cats and litters?
Because they want to keep the breed going and also hopefully
improve its health and appearance. You can't accomplish much for a
breed when breeding only one cat.

So much for the "profits" in cat-breeding.
When you buy a kitten from a reputable breeder, you are
helping the breeder with some of the expenses of breeding so she
or he can keep the breed going. It's that simple.