How Much Food to Put in an Automatic Cat Feeder: Complete Portion Guide by Age & Weight
How Much Food to Put in an Automatic Cat Feeder: Complete Portion Guide by Age & Weight
Introduction
The most common mistake new automatic feeder owners make is getting the portion size wrong. Too little, and your cat is hungry between meals — or the feeder runs out before you get home. Too much, and your cat overeats, gains weight, or the bowl overflows.
The right portion depends on three things: your cat’s weight, their age and activity level, and the caloric density of their food. This guide provides portion calculations for every common scenario.
How Dry Cat Food Portions Are Measured
Automatic feeders measure portions in one of three ways:
Portion “snaps” or “turns”: The feeder dispenses a set amount per portion, defined by one rotation of the auger. One portion typically equals 1-2 tablespoons or 5-15g depending on the brand.
Time-based dispensing: The feeder runs the motor for a set duration (e.g., 3 seconds). The exact volume varies by kibble size and feeder model.
Gram settings: Higher-end smart feeders (PETLIBRO, PETKIT) let you set portions in grams. This is the most accurate method.
The portion guide below uses grams and tablespoons as a baseline. Check your feeder’s manual for the exact portion size for your model.
Daily Food Requirements by Weight
Adult Cats (1-7 years)
| Cat Weight | Daily Dry Food | Per Meal (2 meals/day) | Per Meal (3 meals/day) |
|---|---|---|---|
| 5 lbs (2.3 kg) | 1/4 cup (25-30g) | 2 tbsp (12-15g) | 1.5 tbsp (8-10g) |
| 8 lbs (3.6 kg) | 1/3 cup (35-45g) | 2.5 tbsp (17-22g) | 2 tbsp (12-15g) |
| 10 lbs (4.5 kg) | 1/2 cup (45-55g) | 1/4 cup (22-27g) | 2.5 tbsp (15-18g) |
| 12 lbs (5.4 kg) | 2/3 cup (55-65g) | 1/3 cup (27-32g) | 3.5 tbsp (18-22g) |
| 15 lbs (6.8 kg) | 3/4 cup (65-80g) | 6 tbsp (32-40g) | 1/4 cup (22-27g) |
| 18 lbs (8.2 kg) | 1 cup (80-95g) | 1/2 cup (40-47g) | 1/3 cup (27-32g) |
These are averages for standard dry food (350-400 kcal per cup). Adjust for food density and cat metabolism.
Kittens (up to 12 months)
Kittens need 2-3 times more calories per pound than adult cats. Their portions should be smaller but more frequent.
| Kitten Age | Weight | Daily Portions | Meals/Day |
|---|---|---|---|
| 2-3 months | 1.5-2.5 lbs | 1/4-1/3 cup (25-40g) | 4-5 |
| 4-5 months | 3-5 lbs | 1/3-1/2 cup (40-55g) | 4 |
| 6-8 months | 5-7 lbs | 1/2-2/3 cup (55-65g) | 3-4 |
| 9-12 months | 7-10 lbs | 2/3-3/4 cup (65-80g) | 3 |
Feed kittens free-choice (unlimited) during the first 4 months if the feeder allows. After 4 months, switch to scheduled portions.
Senior Cats (11+ years)
Senior cats often need fewer calories due to reduced activity, but some need more due to medical conditions. General guidelines:
| Cat Weight | Senior Daily (less active) | Senior Daily (active) |
|---|---|---|
| 8 lbs | 1/4 cup (30-35g) | 1/3 cup (35-40g) |
| 10 lbs | 1/3 cup (35-45g) | 1/2 cup (45-50g) |
| 12 lbs | 1/2 cup (45-55g) | 2/3 cup (55-60g) |
Senior cats with hyperthyroidism, kidney disease, or diabetes need vet-prescribed portions regardless of these guidelines.
Adjusting for Food Caloric Density
Not all cat foods have the same calorie count. A “cup” of one food be 350 calories while another is 450 calories. Check the label for kcal per cup.
Adjustment formula:
(Standard portion from table above) × (target daily calories) / (actual food calories per cup)
Example: Your 10-lb cat normally needs 1/2 cup of 350 kcal/cup food (175 kcal/day). If your food is 400 kcal/cup, feed 175/400 = 0.44 cups per day (about 7 tablespoons).
Activity Level Adjustments
| Activity Level | Multiplier | Example |
|---|---|---|
| Sedentary (indoor only, sleeps most of day) | 0.9x | Reduce portions by 10% |
| Moderate (indoor with play sessions, some outdoor access) | 1.0x | Standard portion |
| Active (outdoor cat, multi-cat household, plays frequently) | 1.1x | Increase portions by 10% |
| High (young cat, high-energy, multiple play sessions daily) | 1.2x | Increase portions by 20% |
Portion Settings by Feeder Brand
PETLIBRO Feeders
- Portion sizes in grams (1g increments)
- Default portion: 5-10g per “snap”
- Test: dispense 5 portions, weigh total, divide by 5
PETKIT Feeders
- Portion sizes in grams (1g increments)
- Default portion: 8g per “portion”
- Minimum: 10g per meal on most models
Cat Mate C5000
- Portion = one compartment of the rotating tray
- Each compartment holds approximately 1/4 cup (30g for standard kibble)
- Fill each compartment individually
WOPET Feeders
- Portion sizes in “portions” (1-10 per meal)
- One portion ≈ 10-15g (varies by model)
- Test actual portion weight before programming
SureFeed Microchip
- No portion control per meal (cat eats until full or bowl is empty)
- Bowl capacity: approximately 30g (1/4 cup)
- Refill frequency depends on number of access events
Feeding Schedule Templates
2 Meals Per Day (Standard Adult Cat)
| Meal | Time | Portion |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | 7:00 AM | Half daily portion |
| Dinner | 7:00 PM | Half daily portion |
Best for: Adult cats, consistent schedules, owners who work regular hours.
3 Meals Per Day (Grazing Prevention)
| Meal | Time | Portion |
|---|---|---|
| Breakfast | 6:00 AM | 1/3 daily portion |
| Lunch | 12:00 PM | 1/3 daily portion |
| Dinner | 9:00 PM | 1/3 daily portion |
Best for: Cats that overeat when fed twice, cats that vomit from eating too fast, weight management.
4 Meals Per Day (Kitten / Senior / Medical)
| Meal | Time | Portion |
|---|---|---|
| Early | 6:00 AM | 1/4 daily portion |
| Midday | 11:00 AM | 1/4 daily portion |
| Evening | 5:00 PM | 1/4 daily portion |
| Late | 10:00 PM | 1/4 daily portion |
Best for: Kittens, cats with medical conditions, cats that need frequent small meals.
1 Meal Per Day (Supplemental Feeding)
| Meal | Time | Portion |
|---|---|---|
| Supplemental | 12:00 PM | 1/4 to 1/2 daily portion |
Best for: Cats that also eat wet food separately, cats on a feeding trial, portion adjustment periods.
How to Test Your Feeder’s Actual Portion Size
Feeder portion settings are approximate. The actual amount dispensed varies by kibble size and feeder calibration.
Portion calibration test:
- Empty the feeder bowl
- Program one portion to dispense
- Weigh what comes out on a kitchen scale
- Repeat 3 times and average the results
- Adjust your programming based on actual weight, not the portion number
For example, if your feeder’s “1 portion” dispenses 12g and your cat needs 45g per meal, program 4 portions per meal (48g, close enough).
Signs Your Portions Are Wrong
Too Little Food
- Cat finishes bowl quickly and meows for more
- Cat chews on the feeder or tries to open it
- Weight loss visible over 2-4 weeks
- Food bowl is completely empty before the next scheduled meal
Too Much Food
- Food left in bowl between meals
- Cat gains weight over 2-4 weeks
- Kibble spills over the bowl onto the floor
- Feeder empties slower than expected
Adjusting
Change portions by 10% (about 2-5g per meal) and monitor for 5-7 days before making another adjustment.
Portioning for Multi-Cat Households
Automatic feeders that do not identify individual cats cannot portion per cat. For multi-cat households:
- Use the total daily food for all cats and divide by the feeder’s meal count
- Example: two 10-lb cats eat 100g total per day. Program 50g per meal for 2 meals
- Microchip feeders (SureFeed) allow per-cat portioning — one feeder per cat
- Without microchip feeders, supplement with wet food meals for the cat that needs different portions
FAQ
How much food does an automatic feeder hold?
Most feeders hold 2-6 liters of dry food. A 3L hopper holds approximately 12 cups of kibble, which is 12-24 days of food for one adult cat depending on portion size.
Can I set different portion sizes for different meals?
Most feeders allow different portion sizes per meal. Some budget timer feeders use a fixed portion size for all meals. Check the manual before buying.
How accurate are feeder portion sizes?
Feeder portions are approximate. Actual dispensed amount varies by ±10-20% depending on kibble size, moisture level, and how full the hopper is. For precision feeding, use a gram-scale feeder (PETLIBRO, PETKIT) and calibrate by testing actual output.
Should I include treats in the daily portion calculation?
Yes. Treats count toward daily calorie intake. If you give 5-10 treats per day (10-20 calories), reduce the feeder portion by 5-10%.
My cat eats wet and dry food. How do I portion the feeder?
Feed the dry food portion from the feeder and the wet food separately. Reduce the feeder portion by the calorie equivalent of the wet food. One 3oz can of wet food (70-90 kcal) replaces roughly 1/4 cup of dry food.
The feeder says one portion is 10g, but I measured 14g. Is that normal?
Yes. Brand portion claims are approximate. Use your own measurement to set portions. If the variance is consistent, adjust the number of portions per meal to match the actual weight.