Cats are living longer than ever. Advances in disease management mean more feline patients are navigating chronic conditions well into their senior years, and their families want more than just treatment. They want support. According to AAFP/IAAHPC feline hospice and palliative care guidelines, the demand for veterinary hospice has grown steadily alongside the human-animal bond, and it is not slowing down.
For practices, that represents both a real service gap and a genuine opportunity. Feline hospice is not a separate specialty or a major operational lift. In many ways, it formalizes care you are already providing. But getting it right, particularly around the home environment, client communication, and stress reduction for cats, takes deliberate attention.
Why cats need home-centered end-of-life care
Cats are territorial, routine-driven animals. Their sense of safety is tied to familiar sights, smells, and people. When a cat with a serious illness is repeatedly transported to a clinic for care, the stress alone can compound their suffering. Research published in Applied Animal Behaviour Science found cats examined at home showed significantly lower stress indicators than those seen in a clinic setting.
This matters clinically, not just emotionally. Stress in anxious cats can distort lab results, suppress immune function, and trigger gastrointestinal and urinary complications. It can amplify pain, and pain amplifies fear. The cycle is real, and it directly affects a cat's quality of life during their most vulnerable stage.
Veterinary hospice addresses this by shifting focus from curative treatment to comfort and quality of life at home. The 2023 AAHA Senior Care Guidelines and the 2021 AAFP Feline Senior Care Guidelines both emphasize the growing importance of supporting patients in their own environment. For cats especially, familiar territory is not a preference. It is a medical consideration.
Telemedicine and in-home veterinary assessments are increasingly recognized as valuable tools here. A 2025 study in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found that video telehealth significantly improved at-home management of chronic mobility conditions in cats, reducing the need for stressful clinic visits while maintaining quality of care.
How to talk to clients about feline hospice
Many families struggle with the word hospice. They hear it as giving up, as stepping back from care rather than stepping into a different kind of care. Reframing this conversation is one of the most important things you can do.
Dr. Mary Gardner, DVM, co-founder of Lap of Love and a leading voice in veterinary hospice, recommends explaining hospice as a shift in goals rather than a withdrawal of support. The goal changes from curing a disease to ensuring a patient lives as comfortably and meaningfully as possible. Medical and environmental support continues. Euthanasia is not the immediate next step. The family gains time, and the cat gains relief.
Clients also need practical guidance on what home hospice involves day to day. That includes:
- Assessing their cat's quality of life across comfort, appetite, mobility, hydration, and social engagement.
- Safely administering any medications their cat requires.
- Making environmental adjustments: easy access to food, water, litter, warm resting spots, and low-stimulus spaces.
- Recognizing signs of pain, which in cats are often subtle: reduced grooming, withdrawal, hunched posture, changes in facial expression.
- Understanding anticipatory grief and knowing when and how to ask for support.
Begin these conversations early, ideally as soon as a life-limiting diagnosis is confirmed. The families who feel most prepared at the end are the ones who had the most honest conversations along the way.
What this means for you
- Start a hospice program even without a formal structure. Much of feline hospice involves care you already provide: pain management, quality-of-life assessment, client support. Document your approach and communicate it to clients as a program.
- Train your whole team on cat-specific stress signals and Fear Free handling. Vet techs and support staff who recognize feline anxiety early are essential to low-stress care, whether in-clinic or on home visits.
- Consider connecting clients to in-home services. For cats with clinic aversion, carrier anxiety, or difficult transport situations, in-home vet tech visits can extend quality care into the home environment without the stress of the clinic.
- Build quality-of-life check-ins into your hospice conversations. Use a validated tool such as the HHHHHMM scale as a shared framework with families. It gives them agency and reduces the burden of making final decisions alone.
- Support your team through end-of-life care. Research in Frontiers in Veterinary Science found that emotional labor in end-of-life veterinary care is a significant driver of moral distress. Regular debriefs and access to peer support matter here.
Feline hospice is one of the most meaningful services a practice can offer. Done well, it extends the bond between cats and their families through the hardest stretch of that relationship.
Bring comfort home
For cats who do better in their own environment, in-home vet tech visits can make a real difference in end-of-life care. Homelove, at-home vet tech visits that pets love, connects practices with in-home support for clients whose cats need low-stress, familiar-environment care.
Sources: "Veterinary hospice offers cats and clients familiar comforts (Part 1): Familiarize clients with veterinary hospice," Mary Gardner, DVM, dvm360, June 18, 2026.