How To Tell How Old A Kitten Is?

Check teeth:

No teeth yet: usually under 1–2 weeks

Small incisors: about 2–3 weeks

Canines start forming: about 3–4 weeks

Premolars/molar eruption begins: about 4–6 weeks

Most baby teeth present: about 6–8 weeks

Check eye opening:

Eyes closed: newborn to ~7–10 days

Eyes start opening: ~7–14 days

Eyes fully open and clearer vision: ~2–3 weeks

Check ear development:

Ears folded/closed: newborn to ~1 week

Ears begin standing: ~2–3 weeks

Check walking and coordination:

Crawling/unsteady: ~1–2 weeks

Starting to walk: ~2–3 weeks

Walking confidently: ~3–4 weeks

Check ability to eat:

Nursing only: ~0–4 weeks

Interested in food, starting weaning: ~3–5 weeks

Eating solid food reliably: ~5–7 weeks

Check litter box use:

Not reliable yet: ~0–3 weeks

Gradually learns: ~3–5 weeks

More consistent: ~4–7 weeks

Check fur development:

Sparse/soft fuzz: newborn to ~2 weeks

Noticeable fur coverage: ~2–4 weeks

Mostly full kitten coat: ~4–8 weeks

Check size and weight (approximate ranges):

~1 week: ~4–8 oz (100–225 g)

~2 weeks: ~8–12 oz (225–340 g)

~3 weeks: ~12–16 oz (340–450 g)

~4 weeks: ~1–2 lb (450–900 g)

~5–6 weeks: ~1.5–3 lb (700–1,400 g)

Check behavior:

Mostly sleep and nurse: ~0–3 weeks

More play/mobility: ~3–6 weeks

Confident play and social behavior: ~6–10 weeks

Use “best estimate” ranges:

If multiple signs conflict, choose the age range that matches teeth + eye opening + ability to walk/eat

Get help from a veterinarian or rescue if:

The kitten is very young, very underweight, or you’re unsure about health, dehydration, or infection

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