What Does Your Cat’s Fur Type Mean? · Kinship

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Does Your Cat’s Fur Pattern Determine Their Personality?

It’s a little more complicated than that

Short haired woman holding a gray cat that's playfully pawing at her nose
Michela Ravasio / Stocksy

What can you tell about someone just by looking at their hair? Can you tell if they’ll be affectionate and friendly or aloof and guarded? If they’re athletic or lazy? Can you tell if they’ll enjoy dropping dead mice at your feet as a gift? Sorry, I forgot to mention that the ‘someone’ in this scenario is a cat.

Cats can be tiny, fuzzy ciphers who spurn your attempts to understand them, so Kinship decided to look into whether their fur patterns can offer any insights into their behaviour, personalities and whims. Below, everything you wanted to know about cat fur and more.

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There are six main coat patterns for cats

To know whether a cat’s coat pattern can tell us anything about their personality and behaviour, we have to know what the different types of coat patterns are. Dr Mark Freeman, a Clinical Assistant Professor for Community Practice at Virginia-Maryland Regional College of Veterinary Medicine at Virginia Tech, broke it down for us over email. How exactly they are divided up depends on who you ask, but cat coat patterns fall into six main categories. Most of them you probably already know, but who knows? Maybe it’ll come up at a pub quiz or something.

Photo: Natalie Birdy / Pexels

Solid (all colours except white)

Fairly self-explanatory. A solid fur pattern is one in which all the fur is one colour. Like a black cat, for example.

Photo: Carolyn Lagattuta / Stocksy

Tabby

Tabby is the most common coat pattern for cats. And though tabbies come in a wide variety of colours – typically brown or grey, but also orange and cream – Dr Freeman explains that in most cases ‘their individual hairs are banded in a light and dark colour, with darker stripes, bands or spots all over the body.”

Photo: Carolyn Lagattuta / Stocksy

Tortoiseshell, calico and tricolour

Tortoiseshell and calico are “technically one pattern,” according to Dr Freeman, and refer to the ‘patches’ of colour all over the cat’s body – usually black and brown, or orange and red. But while a calico pattern has large, easily identifiable patches of colour, the two colours are closely interwoven in a tortoiseshell pattern, making individual patches harder to identify. If a calico cat also has white markings, it is considered a ‘tricolour’.

Photo: W-ings / iStock

White-spotted (or bicolour) and solid white

“Cats that are white with one other colour are called bicolour,” Dr Freeman says. This bicolour pattern is also sometimes referred to as piebald. Solid white cats are known as epistatic white. Epistatic white cats, especially ones with blue eyes, are more prone to deafness. Although they’re all white, they’re not albino.

Photo: Lera Mk / Pexels

Colourpoint

This is the classic Siamese cat pattern: a lighter base colour with darker fur around the ‘points’ (their face and ears, tails, and feet and legs). Dr Freeman adds that “this coat pattern is also often associated with the albino trait, and can result in both blue-eyed and pink-eyed cats.” Colourpoint cats are also much more likely to have crossed eyes. 

Photo: (Left) Amelie / Pexels, (Right) Anastasia Lashkevich / Pexels

Silver and golden

These cat colours are famously celebrated in the song ‘Silver and Gold’ by Sam the Snowman in 1964’s Rudolph the Red-Nosed Reindeer. (Maybe it was just about Christmas decorations, but who’s to say?) According to Dr Freeman, these coats result “from the suppression of specific pigmentation resulting in the base colour being silver instead of grey, and gold instead of orange.” Often, they are accompanied by a tabby pattern. And sometimes, a snowman.

Coat patterns used to be more breed specific

Maybe at one time, thousands of years ago, you could look at a cat’s fur pattern and accurately deduce its breed of origin, and by extension, its physical and behavioural characteristics. But over the years, so many tabby cats have bred with colourpoint cats, and solid cats with piebald cats, and so on and so forth, that genetic lines have become so diffuse that it’s hard to draw any meaningful conclusions. As Dr Freeman put it: “The high degree of cross-breeding among domestic cats has resulted in coat patterns appearing on cats that are only marginally related to the breed in which the coat pattern originated.”

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Can your cat’s fur tell you something about their personality? Eh, maybe

Because so many generations of cross-breeding have spread different coat patterns far and wide, Dr Freeman says only broad generalisations can be made. “There are commonly held beliefs, such as the tortoiseshell pattern is often associated with a more reactive temperament, the colourpoint breeds are more independent, and long-haired breeds are more aloof.” But these are not hard and fast truths. “There is a high degree of variation among individuals, even when these coat characteristics are present.

So, give your cats an opportunity to show you their personality rather than drawing any big conclusions from their furry ensembles.

Don’t ignore your cat’s fur completely

Even if the coat pattern doesn’t tell you much about your cat’s general vibe, the quality of a cat’s fur can be a good indicator of their general health. According to VCA Animal Hospitals, “a healthy coat should be shiny and smooth, not coarse and brittle, and healthy skin should be supple and clear, not greasy, flaky or bumpy.”

Dr Freeman offered that a good-quality diet, regular vet visits and frequent brushings (especially for long-haired cats) go a long way toward keeping a healthy coat.

madeleine aggeler

Madeleine Aggeler

Madeleine Aggeler is a freelance journalist and copywriter in Washington, D.C. Previously, she was a writer at New York magazine’s The Cut. She lives with her dog, Cleo, who works primarily as a foot warmer.