--- title: "How to Prepare for Cat Sitting Visits" url: "https://meganspetsitting.com/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-cats-how-to-prepare-for-cat-sitting-visits/" description: "Learn how to prepare for cat sitting visits, including feeding notes, litter boxes, water, medications, hiding spots, emergency information, and cat sitter instructions." focus_keyword: "how to prepare for cat sitting visits" word_count: 1664 estimated_token_count: 2250 --- # How to Prepare for Cat Sitting Visits A little preparation can make cat sitting visits calmer, safer, and more familiar for your cat. Clear instructions, easy-to-find supplies, emergency details, and routine notes help your sitter care for your cat with confidence. Category: [Cat Care Resources](/cat-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/) Related service: [Cat Sitting in Charlottesville, VA](/cat-sitting-in-charlottesville-va/) --- ## Quick Answer To prepare for cat sitting visits, leave clear instructions for food, water, litter boxes, medications, hiding spots, behavior, favorite toys, emergency contacts, and the carrier location. Make supplies easy to find, keep routines familiar, put away hazards, and tell your sitter what is normal for your cat so changes are easier to notice. --- ## Why Preparation Matters Cat sitting visits go more smoothly when the sitter does not have to guess. Cats can be sensitive to changes in routine, and small details can matter more than people realize. A clear care setup helps your cat keep more of their normal routine while you are away. It also helps the sitter notice what is typical, what is unusual, and what may need attention. This article is for general educational purposes only. If your cat has medical needs, medication routines, behavior concerns, or a history of stress-related illness, ask your veterinarian what details should be included in your care instructions. --- ## Write Down Feeding Details Clearly Feeding instructions should be specific. Include the food brand, flavor, amount, timing, bowl location, treat rules, and whether food should be refrigerated, warmed, mixed, measured, or served in a certain way. If your cat has wet food, dry food, prescription food, a microchip feeder, a timed feeder, or separate meals from another pet, write that down clearly. It also helps to explain what is normal. Some cats eat everything right away. Some graze. Some wait until the sitter leaves. A sitter can give better updates when they know what to expect. --- ## Explain Your Cat's Water Preferences Water routines can be surprisingly important for cats. Some cats prefer a specific bowl, fountain, sink, tub, room, or water station away from food. Before visits begin, show or explain where all water sources are located. Include whether bowls should be washed, whether fountains need to be checked, and whether backup water should be left out. If your cat has unusual water habits, include those too. A cat who drinks from a sink, waits by a tub, or ignores certain bowls may need more detailed notes. --- ## Make Litter Box Care Easy to Follow List every litter box location, including any hidden boxes in closets, bathrooms, basements, laundry rooms, or spare rooms. Leave instructions for scooping, disposal, litter type, litter genie use, trash location, cleaning supplies, and anything unusual about your cat's litter box routine. Litter box notes can also help with health monitoring. Tell your sitter what is normal for your cat, including whether accidents, constipation, diarrhea, straining, or urine changes would be unusual. --- ## Prepare Medication and Health Instructions If your cat takes medication, write down the medication name, dose, timing, route, storage instructions, and what to do if a dose is missed or refused. Keep medications in one easy-to-find location unless they need refrigeration. Include any pill pockets, syringes, treats, gloves, inhalers, sharps containers, or special tools needed for care. Also list medical conditions, allergies, prescription diets, mobility concerns, recent symptoms, and anything your sitter should watch closely. --- ## Share Your Cat's Normal Behavior Every cat has their own normal. Some cats greet visitors. Some hide. Some watch from a doorway. Some want play. Some prefer quiet companionship. Tell your sitter where your cat usually hides, how they show stress, what kind of attention they like, and what behavior would be unusual. These details help your sitter avoid forcing interaction and better understand your cat's comfort level during each visit. --- ## Keep Cat Supplies Easy to Find Gather or clearly point out the supplies your sitter may need. This can include food, treats, bowls, litter, scoop, trash bags, cleaning spray, paper towels, medication, toys, brushes, and towels. If supplies are stored in different places, leave a simple note. For example, wet food in the pantry, dry food in the closet, litter in the laundry room, and cleaning supplies under the sink. Having supplies ready saves time and prevents confusion during visits, especially if something spills, a litter box needs extra attention, or a food routine has multiple steps. --- ## Cat Sitting Visit Prep Checklist Use this checklist to make sure your sitter has the details needed for calm, consistent care. ### Food and water Food amounts, feeding times, bowl locations, water stations, fountain notes, treats, and diet restrictions. ### Litter boxes Box locations, scooping instructions, litter type, disposal details, cleaning supplies, and normal habits. ### Health details Medications, medical conditions, allergies, prescription food, mobility issues, and warning signs. ### Comfort notes Hiding spots, favorite toys, play style, stress signs, brushing preferences, and normal visitor behavior. --- ## Leave Emergency Information in One Place Emergency information should be easy to find. Include your regular veterinarian, preferred emergency clinic, carrier location, medication list, medical conditions, and an emergency contact if you cannot be reached. If you have care authorization preferences, write those down before travel. Your sitter should know who to call, where to take your cat, and what to do if you are temporarily unavailable. A printed emergency information sheet near the cat supplies or carrier can be very helpful. --- ## Put Away Hazards Before You Leave Before visits begin, put away anything your cat may chew, swallow, knock over, or get tangled in. This can include string, ribbon, hair ties, rubber bands, plastic, fragile items, toxic plants, medications, and unsafe foods. Check favorite cat areas, counters, desks, floors, laundry spaces, and under furniture for small objects. If your cat has a known habit, such as eating plastic, chewing cords, opening cabinets, or stealing food, tell your sitter directly. --- ## Make Entry Instructions Simple Clear entry instructions help visits start smoothly. Confirm keys, door codes, alarm details, parking instructions, building access, elevator notes, and any door that needs special attention. If your cat is likely to hide near the door, try to explain that too. Some cats may wait by the entrance, while others may run if the door opens. A sitter should be able to enter safely, secure the home, and avoid guessing about locks, alarms, or access issues. --- ## Tell Your Sitter What Updates Are Most Helpful Many cat parents want to know how their cat is eating, drinking, using the litter box, behaving, and responding to visits. Photos and videos can also provide reassurance. If there are specific things you want included in updates, say so. For example, you may want to know whether medication was given, whether the cat came out, whether the water fountain is working, or whether the litter box looked normal. Clear update preferences help the sitter send information that actually answers your concerns. --- ## Related Cat Resources Continue learning about cat care planning, safety, and routines: - [Cat Care Resources](/cat-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/) - [How to Prepare a Cat Emergency Information Sheet](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-cats-how-to-prepare-a-cat-emergency-information-sheet/) - [Why Cat Routine Matters](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-cats-why-cat-routine-matters/) - [Signs Your Cat Needs Emergency Vet Care](/pet-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents-cats-signs-your-cat-needs-emergency-vet-care/) --- ## In-Home Cat Sitting in Charlottesville Megan's Pet Sitting provides in-home cat sitting in Charlottesville, VA, with thoughtful drop-in visits designed around each cat's routine, safety needs, comfort level, and personality. Visits may include food, fresh water, bowl cleaning, litter box care, play, enrichment when approved, companionship when wanted, observation, photos, videos, and detailed updates. Related services: - [Cat Sitting Services](/cat-sitting-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Senior Cat Care](/senior-cat-care-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Cat Medication Support](/cat-medication-support-in-charlottesville-va/) - [Rates and Pricing](/pet-sitting-rates-pricing-in-charlottesville-va/) --- ## Need Cat Sitting in Charlottesville? If your cat needs familiar routines, thoughtful observation, detailed updates, or care instructions followed closely, Megan's Pet Sitting can help you explore whether drop-in cat sitting is the right fit. [Contact Megan's Pet Sitting](/contact-megans-pet-sitting-of-charlottesville/) [Back to Cat Care Resources](/cat-care-resources-for-charlottesville-pet-parents/)