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Raw Feeding for Cats/Kittens - Meal Pack #01

A high-quality raw starter pack to nourish cats and kittens with variety, balance, and vital nutrients.

$59.14
Raw Feeding for Cats/Kittens - Meal Pack #02

A nutrient-rich raw selection to fuel feline health from kittenhood to adulthood.

$52.49
Raw Feeding for Cats/Kittens - Meal Pack #03

Balanced raw nutrition with proteins, bones, and omega-rich fish—tailored for cats and kittens.

$52.01
Raw Feeding for Cats/Kittens - Meal Pack #04

Essential variety for growing kittens and thriving cats—rich in taurine, omega-3s, and protein.

$37.05

Raw meal packs for cats are the simplest way to feed your cat what their biology was built for. Each pack here is a curated, balanced raw diet for cats and kittens, combining muscle meat, organ, raw meaty bones, fish and mutton bird across a real protein rotation. Cats are obligate carnivores, which means meat isn't optional, it's the diet. Whether you've got a fussy adult who's been holding out for something better than kibble, a growing kitten who needs concentrated nutrition, or a senior cat with kidney or urinary issues, there's a pack built for the job. Browse the four meal packs below and pick the one that suits your cat's size, stage and condition.

 

Why Raw Meal Packs Suit Cats Better Than Kibble

Cats evolved to eat small whole prey, not heat-extruded kibble. Their kidneys are built to extract water from food, their teeth are designed for tearing not grinding, and they can't synthesise taurine, an amino acid only found in animal tissue. Cooked or processed diets miss most of what their bodies are calibrated for.

That mismatch shows up over time. Chronic dehydration leads to urinary and kidney issues. Carbohydrate-heavy kibble drives weight gain, diabetes and inflammation. Low taurine causes heart problems. Fillers and synthetic additives trigger allergies, asthma and IBD.

A raw diet built on whole prey ingredients fixes most of these at the source. The natural moisture content keeps your cat properly hydrated. The biologically appropriate protein supports muscle, organ and immune function the way nothing else can. Our deeper case sits on our why cats need raw food guide.

 

What's in Our Raw Meal Packs for Cats

Every pack is built around real Australian produce, balanced for cats specifically, and free of grains, fillers and preservatives. The exact mix varies by pack, but each one includes a deliberate spread of the following:

  • Muscle meat across multiple proteins for amino acid variety
  • Organ meat (liver, kidney, heart) for taurine, vitamin A and B vitamins
  • Raw meaty bones for calcium, phosphorus and natural dental work
  • Whole fish and sardines for omega-3s, skin and coat support
  • Specialist proteins like Tasmanian mutton bird for serious omega density

Everything ships frozen through our cold chain rather than standard post, arriving ready to portion into your freezer. For more on the wild and free-range sourcing side, the mutton bird oil deep dive explains why that ingredient pulls so much weight in feline nutrition.

 

The Four Cat Meal Packs Explained

Cats and Kittens Meal Pack #01

The starter pack, built as a high-quality entry point for cats and kittens new to raw feeding. Variety, balance and the right vital nutrients in one ready-to-feed selection. Good first choice if you're transitioning a cat off kibble or wet food and want to keep things simple.

 

Cats and Kittens Meal Pack #02

A nutrient-rich selection designed to fuel feline health from kittenhood right through adulthood. Slightly different protein mix from Pack #01, useful as a second pack if you're rotating between packs across the week to broaden the nutrient base.

 

Cats and Kittens Meal Pack #03

Balanced raw nutrition with proteins, bones and omega-rich fish. The fish content makes this pack particularly useful for cats showing dull coats, skin sensitivities or joint stiffness, since omega-3s do most of the heavy lifting on those issues.

 

Cats and Kittens Meal Pack #04

The essential variety pack for growing kittens and thriving adult cats, especially strong on taurine, omega-3s and protein. Lower price point, useful as the everyday base of a raw cat rotation or for owners trying raw cat feeding for the first time.

 

Cat Health Issues Raw Feeding Can Help With

The best medicine for most chronic feline conditions starts with the food. Cats on a biologically appropriate raw diet routinely show improvement across the conditions kibble-fed cats are most likely to develop:

  • Urinary tract infections, cystitis and bladder inflammation
  • Bladder and kidney stones, struvite and oxalate crystals
  • Chronic kidney disease (CKD, CRF, kidney insufficiency)
  • Diabetes and obesity, often reversed with a low-carb raw switch
  • Feline asthma and allergic airway disease
  • Inflammatory bowel disease and irritable bowel issues
  • Hyperthyroidism and hepatic lipidosis
  • Persistent hairballs (the moisture in raw food keeps gut transit normal)
  • Skin issues, food allergies and dull coat

For cats with chronic allergies or sensitivities specifically, our raw food for allergies page covers the full reset protocol.

 

How to Feed and Transition Your Cat onto Raw

Daily feeding amounts

Most adult cats eat around 2 to 4% of their body weight daily, so a 5kg cat lands around 100 to 200g, split across two meals. Active and young cats sit at the higher end. Older or less active cats need less. Kittens eat more relative to their size because they're growing, often 5 to 8% of body weight. Run exact numbers through our raw feeding calculator.

 

Transitioning a cat from kibble or wet food

Cats are notoriously stubborn about diet changes, so go slow. Start by mixing a small amount of raw into your cat's existing food and gradually increase the raw portion over two to three weeks. If your cat refuses, try warming the raw to slightly above room temperature, mashing it into a familiar pate texture, or topping it with a sprinkle of crushed dried treats they already love. Patience wins here.

 

Serving temperature matters

Cats almost universally prefer their food at room temperature or slightly warm, never fridge-cold. Thaw what you need in the fridge over 12 to 24 hours, then leave it out for 15 minutes before serving to take the chill off.

 

Pair with the rest of a balanced cat diet

Meal packs are the core, but the broader raw food for cats range has additional items worth working into rotation: organ supplements, additional raw meaty bones for chewers, and fish-based items for omega-3 top-ups. The dedicated mutton bird range is especially worth a look for cats with skin or joint issues.

 

Storage and hygiene

Keep meal packs frozen until needed, thaw in the fridge over 12 to 24 hours, and use within two to three days of thawing. Wash bowls and hands after each feed. For cats who like to graze, leave food out for no more than 30 to 60 minutes at a time rather than all day.

 

Related Collections

Build out the rest of your cat's diet with the full raw food for cats range, natural pet supplements for omega-3 and taurine support, raw meaty bones sized for cats, and raw treats for training rewards. New to raw cat feeding? Start with why raw works and the food selector guide.

Frequently Asked Questions

Raw meal packs for cats are balanced, ready-to-feed bundles of muscle meat, organ, raw meaty bones, fish and specialist proteins like mutton bird, portioned for feline nutrition. Each pack is built around the fact that cats are obligate carnivores and need real meat-based food, not processed kibble. Everything ships frozen and uses real Australian produce.
Most adult cats eat 2 to 4% of body weight daily, so a 5kg cat needs around 100 to 200g split across two meals. Active and young cats sit at the higher end, seniors and less active cats lower. Kittens eat more relative to their size, often 5 to 8% of body weight, because they're growing.
Slowly. Start by mixing a small amount of raw into existing food and increase the raw portion over two to three weeks. Try warming the raw slightly, mashing it into a familiar pate texture, or topping it with crushed treats your cat already loves. Cats are stubborn about diet changes, so patience matters more than speed.
Generally yes, and often beneficial. Cats with urinary issues, diabetes, IBD, obesity, dull coat or food allergies usually improve on raw because the diet eliminates the carb and additive load that drives those conditions. For cats with diagnosed chronic kidney disease, check with your vet first to balance protein levels appropriately.
The packs cover the core meal, but rotating in additional items broadens the nutrient base. Useful extras include omega-rich supplements like mutton bird oil for skin and coat, small raw meaty bones for dental work, and occasional organ top-ups. A cat eating one meal pack on rotation and one omega supplement daily covers most needs.