Cat vomiting triage
Cat Vomiting Repeatedly: When To Worry
Repeated cat vomiting should not be dismissed as a hairball without context. Frequency, appetite, hiding, hydration, toxin exposure, and energy level all change the safest next step for Australian cat owners.
What to check now
- Count vomiting episodes and note whether food, bile, foam, hair, or blood appears.
- Check appetite, drinking, hiding, litter tray behaviour, and energy.
- Think about string, plants, human food, medication, toys, or other toxin exposure.
Cat vomiting red flags
- Emergency vet now for repeated vomiting with collapse, severe lethargy, pale gums, or breathing trouble.
- Emergency vet now if toxin or foreign object exposure is possible.
- Call a vet today if vomiting repeats, appetite drops, or your cat seems unusually quiet.
What PawVerity gives you
PawVerity turns the episode history and optional photo into a vet-ready summary, with urgent care guidance never paywalled.
PawVerity is not a diagnosis and does not replace a physical veterinary examination. It is a structured triage and evidence tool for Australian pet owners.