Pet Guides

Russian Blue care guide

Quiet, gentle, intelligent, reserved

Quick facts

Lifespan15-20
Grooming frequencyLow — weekly brush
Common health issuesurinary stones, dental
TemperamentQuiet, gentle, intelligent, reserved
SpeciesCat

How to care for a Russian Blue

Long-lived breed; minimal grooming; do well in quiet households

What to ask your vet about Russian Blue health

PetGuides.au does not diagnose from breed alone. Use this guide as a prompt for a practical conversation with your vet about weight, teeth, skin, ears, mobility, parasite prevention, vaccination timing and any family history you know. For Russian Blues, start with the listed watch-points: urinary stones, dental.

Book sooner if you notice appetite changes, drinking changes, repeated vomiting, breathing effort, lameness, sudden behaviour shifts, toileting changes, persistent itch, ear odour or a drop in normal activity. Breed patterns can guide questions, but the individual animal, age, lifestyle and current symptoms matter more than a generic breed label.

Is a Russian Blue a good fit for your home?

Match the breed to your actual week, not the ideal version of it. Consider heat, rental rules, grooming budget, transport to a local vet, holiday care, daily enrichment and how many hours the animal will spend alone. If the grooming frequency, temperament or health notes above feel hard to sustain, compare nearby groomers, trainers or vets before committing.