Transportation Built
Around Animal Care

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

 

Transportation Built
Around Animal Care

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

 

We move your friend
as your life moves

Full-service pet relocation, domestic & international pet moving

Go Pet Go • Feline Pet Relocation

Pet Relocation for Cats

Cats are not small dogs. They experience travel, confinement, noise, handling, environmental change, appetite disruption, and unfamiliar spaces differently than many other companion animals.

Go Pet Go approaches cat relocation with feline-specific planning informed by real cat handling, boarding, transition support, and Cats in the City’s broader animal-care experience.

Feline-sensitive transport Stress reduction Carrier setup TSA awareness Hydration Multi-cat households
Cat relaxing during boarding
Cat relocation should be planned around stress sensitivity, appetite stability, quiet transitions, carrier comfort, and the cat’s ability to regulate through change.
First thing to know

Cats Travel Differently Than Dogs

Many cats are highly sensitive to environmental change. A move may involve unfamiliar smells, new sounds, disrupted routines, vehicle movement, airport handling, temporary boarding, or a completely new home environment.

For cats, transportation planning is not only about distance. It is also about minimizing unnecessary transitions and supporting regulation before, during, and after travel.

A calm cat relocation plan is built around reducing avoidable stress, not just moving the cat from one address to another.
Stress physiology

Why Stress Matters More With Cats

Cats often respond to stress by becoming quiet, hiding, freezing, refusing food, avoiding water, or suppressing normal elimination. These responses can be easy to miss because they may look like “calm” behavior from the outside.

Some cats become silent rather than visibly reactive.
Hiding can be a normal stress response during transition.
Appetite and hydration may drop after environmental disruption.
Noise, motion, and handling can affect tolerance quickly.
TSA awareness

Transitional Stress Anorexia Awareness

Some cats stop eating during or after major transitions. At Cats in the City, this kind of transition-related appetite disruption is taken seriously because early appetite changes can signal stress overload.

Travel planning should consider feeding history, appetite patterns, medical risk, boarding needs, arrival monitoring, and whether the cat may need extra support after relocation.

Quieter transitions

Cats Benefit From Fewer, Quieter Transitions

Every handoff, vehicle change, airport transfer, boarding transition, or new room can add stress for a cat. Whenever possible, cat relocation should reduce unnecessary movement and limit chaotic handling.

Carrier setup

The Carrier Should Support Safety and Regulation

A carrier or travel crate is not just a container. For cats, it becomes the immediate environment during movement, waiting, airport handling, and vehicle transfer.

Use an appropriately sized carrier or airline-approved crate.
Introduce the carrier before travel whenever possible.
Use familiar bedding when allowed by the airline or transport provider.
Avoid last-minute forced loading whenever possible.
Appetite suppression

Appetite Changes After Travel Should Be Taken Seriously

Cats may eat less after travel because of stress, nausea, fear, environmental change, routine disruption, or unfamiliar food placement.

For some cats, especially seniors, kittens, diabetics, cats with kidney disease, or cats with a history of appetite instability, food refusal should be monitored closely after arrival.

A cat who is quiet after travel may not be “fine” yet — they may still be recovering from the transition.
Hydration

Hydration Can Be Disrupted During Relocation

Many cats drink less when stressed or when their environment changes. During relocation, water intake may be affected by carrier confinement, unfamiliar spaces, disrupted routines, and reduced appetite.

After arrival, families should monitor drinking behavior, litter box use, energy, appetite, and hiding patterns.

Litter logistics

Litter Box Planning Matters

Cats rely heavily on familiar elimination routines. During travel, litter access depends on route length, boarding plans, airport timing, carrier setup, and whether the cat is traveling by ground, cabin, or cargo.

After arrival, cats should have immediate access to a clean litter box in a quiet, easy-to-find location.

Multi-cat households

Moving Multiple Cats Requires Extra Planning

Multi-cat households may require coordinated carrier setup, staged loading, separate travel spaces, shared scent management, and careful arrival planning.

Even bonded cats may react differently during travel. Some cats are calmer together, while others need separate carriers or separate recovery spaces after arrival.

Plan carriers for each cat based on safety and airline rules.
Do not assume bonded cats should always travel in the same crate.
Prepare quiet arrival spaces before releasing cats into a new home.
Monitor appetite, hiding, litter use, and inter-cat tension after arrival.
Environmental recovery

Arrival Is Part of the Trip

Cat relocation does not end when the carrier arrives. The first hours and days after arrival can determine how quickly a cat begins to eat, drink, eliminate, explore, and settle.

Why Go Pet Go is different

Cat Relocation Benefits From Real Feline Experience

Go Pet Go’s cat transportation perspective is supported by the larger Cats in the City ecosystem, including feline boarding, medical and special-needs care, transition support, and TANDEM Cat® experience.

That matters because cats are often underserved in transportation planning. Their stress signals are subtle, their appetite can be fragile, and their recovery from transition may require more structure than a standard pet shipping plan provides.

Final thought

Cats Need Transportation Plans Built Around Cats

Safe cat relocation is not only about the route. It is about carrier setup, transition pacing, quiet handling, appetite awareness, hydration, litter logistics, hiding behavior, and post-arrival recovery.

Go Pet Go helps families plan feline transportation with the actual needs of cats in mind.