How to tell your kitten’s age with easy signs
Working out your kitten age can be tricky, especially in those fast early weeks. Newborn kittens arrive with closed eyes and folded ears, often weighing just 50 to 150 grams. In days, they change. That pace makes guessing hard without a few solid clues from kitten developmental milestones.
This guide shows you the simple signs. Teeth, eye colour, body size, and behaviour all point to a likely age. You will also see how a kitten weight chart and feeding pattern help. If you want a quick way to tell tiny baby from bold explorer, you are in the right place.
Key Takeaways
- Newborns have closed eyes and folded ears, weighing 50–150 grams, then often double to 150–250 grams in the first week.
- Baby teeth, known as deciduous teeth, start at about three weeks and a full set appears by six to seven weeks. Permanent teeth follow from three to four months.
- All kittens start with baby blue eyes. Adult eye colour begins to shift from around seven weeks and is usually set by eight weeks.
- Very young kittens have soft, fluffy coats. As they grow, fur gets sleeker; patchy or coarse hair can suggest an older or senior cat.
- Use a simple age chart, including weight ranges, feeding frequency, and behaviour, to match your kitten’s growth at home.
Observing Physical Features

Think of this like detective work with whiskers. Teeth, eyes, and coat texture are the big three that reveal age fast.
Teeth development
Kitten teeth development begins early. Tiny incisors usually break through the gums at about three weeks. These first teeth are called baby teeth or deciduous teeth, and they are small and needle sharp.
Around five weeks, premolars appear near the back of the mouth. That timing lines up with weaning kittens who start trying wet food for kittens, not just milk from a nursing mother. By six to seven weeks, most kittens have all 26 baby teeth, perfect for playful nips and gentle chewing.
Permanent teeth start pushing through from three to four months. Middle incisors often arrive near week 14, the next set around 15 weeks, and the outer incisors by 16 weeks. Adult teeth look wider with flatter edges than the sharp baby set. Spot wider incisors and emerging molars, and you are likely looking at a kitten older than three months.
These stages matter because teeth give one of the clearest age windows. If the mouth is hard to check, ask your vet to take a quick look during a routine visit.
Eye colour changes
Eyes begin to open between day 8 and day 12. By two weeks, most kittens have both eyes open and they will be blue. That deep blue does not last. From seven weeks, you can see the shade start to change as adult pigment arrives.
By eight weeks, the permanent colour is usually set, often amber, gold, green, or copper. Young adults keep bright, clear eyes. Later in life, some cats develop cloudiness or cataracts, which is more common in senior companion animals and something an animal hospital sees often.
“All kittens start out with baby blues before nature paints their final masterpiece.”
Keep an eye on any haze or discharge. Cloudiness can hint at health issues like pressure problems or infection that need veterinary care from trusted vets or veterinarians.
Coat texture and appearance
A very young kitten’s fur feels like soft cotton. Under eight weeks, coats are fluffy and light, with almost no mats. As growth picks up, the coat gets sleeker and glossier, especially around six to eight weeks.
Adult cats shed the baby fluff and the hair feels denser. Seniors can show thin spots or coarse patches. Arthritis or dental pain can make grooming harder, so you may see dull or clumped fur. If fur looks patchy or lifeless on a cat that seems full sized, you are likely holding a mature pet, not a baby.
Monitoring Developmental Milestones

Growth can feel slow day to day, then suddenly your tiny sleeper is a spring-loaded athlete. Small changes pile up fast, which is why tracking kitten developmental milestones helps you spot age ranges with confidence.
Eye opening and vision
In week one, eyes stay shut and ear canals are folded. Newborns cannot see or hear, so they use warmth and scent to find mum. Somewhere between day 8 and day 12, eyelids part and blue peepers appear.
By two weeks, both eyes are open, but the world still looks fuzzy. A three-week-old kitten blinks at new shapes and reacts to quick hand movements near the nose. Clearer vision arrives bit by bit over the next fortnight.
Little eyes peeking out tell big stories about a kitten's early weeks.
If one eye opens much later than the other or shows heavy discharge, book a quick check. Early help prevents long-term irritation or scarring.
Walking, running, and playing
A two-week-old kitten wobbles on soft legs, paws splayed and balance shaky. By the third week, short, clumsy steps appear around the nest, along with first curious visits to the litterbox.
At four weeks, the pace changes. Kittens start running little sprints, pouncing on siblings, and batting at toys with better control. Strong coordination shows up by five to six weeks. That lively play tells you this is a four-week-old kitten or older, and confidence grows every day.
Assessing Weight and Size
Weight is one of the quickest clues for estimating kitten age. Newborn kittens usually weigh 50 to 150 grams. In a healthy first week, that often doubles to 150 to 250 grams. By two weeks, expect roughly 250 to 350 grams, then around 350 to 450 grams by week three.
A five-week-old kitten often reaches 550 to 650 grams and looks more like a mini cat. By eight weeks, many kittens hit about 850 to 950 grams, close to two pounds. As a simple guide, about one pound suggests four weeks, two pounds points near eight weeks, and three pounds is close to twelve weeks.
A kitchen scale and a clear kitten weight chart make this easy. Weigh at the same time each day, before feeding, for consistent readings.
Behavioural Indicators by Age

Newborns squirm and mew for mum, eyes and ears still closed. They huddle for warmth and rely on scent to find the teat. Very young kittens drink colostrum, the first milk rich in maternal antibodies that support early health.
At two weeks, movement improves but stays wobbly. Around week three, curiosity blooms and short adventures begin, often with gentle nudges at toys. Four-week-old explorers can cross a room, bat at shoelaces, and react to your voice.
By five weeks, kittens sample more solids and spacing feeds every five to six hours gets easier. A six-week-old kitten plays rougher, chasing tails and wrestling with energy to spare. You will also see full baby teeth, including tiny canine teeth that help with soft foods. Seven-week-old kittens usually master the litter tray and social play. By eight weeks, most are weaned, eating on their own, and ready for adoption if spayed or neutered.
Using a Kitten Age Chart for Reference
A good chart brings the clues together in one place. Match weight, feeding pattern, and behaviour to estimate age at home with less guesswork.
| Kitten Age | Weight (g) | Feeding Frequency | Development & Care | Milestones |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 0-1 weeks | 85-115 | Every 2 hours, overnight too | Keep warm, bottle-feed, stimulate to toilet | Eyes closed, ears folded, no walking |
| 1-2 weeks | 115-170 | Every 2-3 hours | Begin deworming at day 14, still need help toileting | Eyes start opening, blue eyes, wobbly crawl |
| 2-3 weeks | 170-225 | Every 3-4 hours | Keep warm, bottle-feed, hearing starts | Ear canals open, kitten tries to stand, first teeth |
| 3-4 weeks | 225-300 | Every 4-5 hours | Offer formula in a bowl, introduce soft food | Baby teeth in, first steps, playful behaviour |
| 4-5 weeks | 300-400 | Every 5 hours | Start litter training, eating some solids | Running, rough-and-tumble play, growing curiosity |
| 5-6 weeks | 400-550 | Every 6 hours | Mostly kitten food, fewer bottle feeds | Good coordination, social with littermates |
| 6 weeks | 550-700 | 3-4 meals daily | First FVRCP vaccination, confident on feet | Full set of baby teeth, eyes shift shade |
| 7-8 weeks | 700-900 (about 2 lbs at 8 weeks) | 3-4 meals daily | Weaned off milk, adoption ready, surgery possible | Independent eating and toileting, lively and alert |
Some kittens race through stages while others take more time. If your kitten is small for age or seems off colour, speak to a vet for tailored advice.
Conclusion
Age clues are everywhere once you know where to look. Check the mouth for baby teeth or emerging permanent teeth. Watch those blue eyes shift to their adult colour. Feel the coat change from fluff to sleek as size climbs along the kitten weight chart.
If you still see an umbilical cord, you are holding a very fresh arrival. Behaviour rounds it out, from wobble to wrestle in just a few weeks. When in doubt, ask a professional. A quick exam from your vet can confirm kitten age and flag any health concerns like plaque, tartar, or gum disease before they cause trouble.
Use these simple checks and you will peg the age of your new friend with far more certainty, from newborn kittens to an eight-week-old kitten ready for the next adventure.
FAQs
1. How can I use my kitten’s umbilical cord to guess its age?
If you spot an umbilical cord, your kitten is likely less than a week old. This little string usually falls off by day seven, so if it’s still there, your furry friend is brand new.
2. What do baby blue eyes tell me about my kitten’s age?
Kittens are born with striking baby blue eyes. These start to change colour after about seven weeks. If those peepers are still sky-blue and clear of plaque or cloudiness, you’re probably looking at a very young cat.
3. How does teeth development help in telling how old my kitten is?
Teeth say plenty! Tiny milk teeth begin popping up around three weeks old. By eight weeks, most kittens have a full set of sharp pearly whites ready for action; if the mouth looks bare or only has tiny nubs, your pet is younger.
4. Can fleas give clues about my kitten's age?
Fleas don’t care how old your cat is; they’ll jump on any chance for a meal! But older kittens explore more and pick up fleas easier than newborns tucked away with mum. If you find fleas along with other signs like developed teeth or no umbilical cord, chances are you’ve got an adventurous eight-week-old kitten or older on your hands.