Cat Behavior: Is This Normal?

Reviewed by Dr Georgina Ushi Phillips, DVM (AVMA, FVMA) · Updated June 2026

Most odd cat behavior – head-butts, slow blinks, sleeping on your legs, the occasional lick-then-bite – is normal feline communication, not a problem. We explain what each behavior means in plain English, flag the few signs that are worth a vet visit and have a licensed vet check it. Good news first, always.

Reviewed by licensed vets

10+ years hands-on animal-welfare experience

Calm, plain-English answers

 Every page shows its review date

Start here

Your cat is talking to you – here’s how to read it

Cats communicate constantly: with their tails, their eyes, where they choose to sleep and the funny little things they do at 2am. The trouble is, type a question into Google and you get ten conflicting answers, half of them alarming, most of them from people who’ve never met a cat like yours.

This is the home for everything cat behavior on Better With Cats. We answer the “why does my cat do that?” questions in plain English, lead with reassurance, and tell you the small number of times a behavior change is actually worth a vet visit, never to scare you, just so you can decide with confidence.

Every explainer here is written by people who genuinely live with cats and reviewed by a licensed veterinarian, so you’re getting real guidance instead of a stranger’s best guess. Pick a topic below, or browse our most-read behavior guides.

Why trust this over a random search?

Vet-reviewed, but never cold. As accurate as a vet, as warm as a friend.
Reassurance first. The likely-normal answer up top; the “when to worry” detail underneath.
Real experience. Written by people who actually live with cats, not theory scraped from other blogs.
Honest, never pushy. Where a product genuinely helps, we say so – pros, cons, and who should skip it.
Always dated. Every page shows when a vet last reviewed it.

Explore by topic

What kind of behavior are you wondering about?

Cat body language icon

Body Language & Signals

Tails, ears, paws and that slow blink – what your cat is actually telling you.

"Why does my cat" behavior icon

“Why Does My Cat…?”

The everyday quirks – staring, kneading, head-butts and gift-giving – decoded.

Cat sleep and affection icon

Sleep & Affection

Where (and how much) your cat sleeps, and what their closeness really means.

Cat anxiety and calming icon

Stress, Anxiety & Calming

Spot the signs of an anxious cat, and what genuinely helps calm them.

When behavior means health icon

When Behavior Means Health

The few times a behavior change is your cat’s way of saying something’s wrong.

Reader favorites

Most-read behavior guides

Our deepest, most-loved articles – start here if you’re not sure where to begin.

First, the reassuring part

The vast majority of “weird” cat behavior is completely normal, it’s just how cats communicate. Before you panic (or book the vet), it helps to know the handful of signs that are genuinely worth a call:

A sudden, out-of-character change in behavior with no obvious trigger
Hiding, much less appetite, or a clear drop in energy lasting more than a day or two
Behavior changes paired with physical symptoms – vomiting, litter-box changes, or signs of pain

If you’re seeing any of those, read our vet-reviewed when to call the vet checklist. And remember: Better With Cats is here to help you understand your cat – it is not a substitute for examining your cat in person.

Marina Titova Cat Lover & Product Tester
Dr Irma Sharma, Veterinarian who reviews Better With Cats health content
Logan Mastrianna, founder of Better With Cats, with 10+ years of animal welfare experience
Dr Georgina Ushi Phillips, DVM, veterinary advisor who reviews Better With Cats health content

A knowledgeable friend, with a vet on speed dial

Better With Cats has been helping cat owners since 2020. Our guidance comes from Logan Mastrianna, with 10+ years of hands-on animal-welfare experience, and every health claim is checked by Dr Georgina Ushi Phillips, DVM – a member of the AVMA and FVMA.

That’s the gap we fill: the big authority sites are accurate but cold and generic; random blogs are warm but unqualified. We’re both, clinical accuracy with genuine warmth and the review dates to prove it.

Quick answers

Cat behavior — frequently asked questions

Get the calm, vet-reviewed answer before the 2am Google panic.

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