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Cat behavior

My new cat is hiding but using the litter box: is that okay?

Hiding while still using the litter box can be normal for a new cat. Keep the room quiet and predictable, and let food, water, and box habits tell you whether the basics are stable.

New-cat progress can be quiet. This page helps you decide what to leave alone, what to adjust, and what would deserve a vet call.

Wide shallow food bowl for a cat

What to notice at home

Watch the room like a cat would. Notice loud sounds, the path to the litter box, where people reach from, and whether the hiding spot has food, water, and a quiet exit.

Treat the visible behavior as a clue rather than the whole answer. Track what happened right before it, how much choice your cat had, and how quickly the room returned to normal.

Cat vet records and appointment questions

What to try first

Make one change at a time. Sit nearby without reaching, speak softly, keep visits short, and let your cat choose whether to approach. If eating, drinking, or litter use stops, call your vet.

Add distance, choice, and a safer outlet before adding more handling. Shorter sessions, clearer escape routes, and predictable routines often tell you more than one dramatic correction.

Senior cat using low steps to reach a bed safely

When to get help

Call your veterinarian if a new cat stops eating, stops using the litter box, seems weak, breathes oddly, vomits repeatedly, or hides in a way that feels more like illness than caution.

Get help quickly for bites, escalating fights, redirected aggression, fear that traps one cat, or sudden behavior that does not fit the cat's normal routine.

Before you decide

  • Is this new, sudden, or getting worse?
  • Did food, litter, scent, guests, noise, another pet, or the room setup change recently?
  • Can your cat leave the interaction, reach resources, and settle after the moment passes?
  • Would pain, toxin exposure, breathing trouble, or a urinary problem make this urgent?

Next best moves

  • Add choice, distance, and a safer outlet before you add more handling.
  • Write down timing, triggers, appetite, litter use, and what helped.
  • Call your veterinarian quickly for health, toxin, pain, breathing, urine, or severe behavior concerns.

Helpful supplies

Use litter tools to make the easiest bathroom choice obvious: reachable box, enough room, manageable scatter, and daily scooping.

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Clean cat litter box in a quiet room

High-sided litter box

A roomy box with higher sides can help contain litter scatter while still giving the cat space to turn.

Low entry litter box for easier access

Low-entry litter box

A lower front can help kittens, senior cats, or sore cats step in without a big climb.

Litter trapping mat beside a box

Litter trapping mat

A washable mat can catch some litter at the exit without blocking the path to the box.

Litter scoop and holder for daily cleaning

Scoop and holder

A visible scoop setup makes daily cleaning easier to keep up with.

Quick cat question

My new cat is hiding but using the litter box: is that okay?

Hiding while still using the litter box can be normal for a new cat. Keep the room quiet and predictable, and let food, water, and box habits tell you whether the basics are stable.

When should I get help?

Call your veterinarian if a new cat stops eating, stops using the litter box, seems weak, breathes oddly, vomits repeatedly, or hides in a way that feels more like illness than caution.

References