Helpful shopping starting points for this topic: Senior cat ramp and Curved steps.
Cats hide discomfort well
A cat may not limp dramatically. Instead, the cat may stop using a perch, sleep lower to the ground, avoid stairs, miss jumps, or become less tolerant of handling.
Make favorite places reachable
Start with the places your cat already loves: the bed, couch, sunny window, favorite chair, and litter area. Add steps or ramps before the cat starts avoiding those places completely.
Litter box access matters
Senior cats may need lower entry boxes and shorter routes. If litter habits change suddenly, contact your veterinarian.
When to call a veterinarian
If pain signs are sudden, severe, worsening, connected to trauma, or paired with trouble breathing, collapse, inability to urinate, repeated vomiting, a swollen abdomen, or paralysis, seek veterinary care quickly.
Frequently asked questions
Why did my older cat stop jumping?
Possible reasons include pain, stiffness, weakness, vision changes, fear, or illness. A veterinarian can help identify the cause.
Are ramps good for cats?
Some cats prefer steps, while others use ramps. Texture, stability, and placement near favorite spots matter most.
What home changes help senior cats?
Add easy access to resting spots, low-entry litter boxes, non-slip surfaces, warm resting areas, and food/water stations that do not require climbing.