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Siamese vs Bengal

Side-by-side comparison of Siamese and Bengal cats. Weight, lifespan, exercise needs, calorie requirements, and key health risks β€” from AKC / AAHA / AAFP guidelines.

MetricSiameseBengal
Adult male weight (lb)8–1010–15
Adult female weight (lb)6–88–12
Maturity (months)1824
Typical lifespan (years)15–2012–16

Breed-specific notes

Siamese

Slim active breed. Commonly misclassified as underweight. Prone to asthma and dental disease.

Bengal

Highest-activity domestic cat. Needs 30-60 min active play daily + climbing shelves + puzzle feeders.

Which breed is right for you?

Choosing between Siamese and Bengal comes down to three dimensions most families weigh:size and space requirements, daily activity commitment, and lifetime health-care expectations. The table above shows the numeric side; the sections below add context.

Size & living space

The Siamese is typically 8–10 lb (male) vs. 10–15 lb for the Bengal. Both are cats β€” fit in any home β€” but larger breeds need taller cat trees and wider cat doors.

Activity & enrichment needs

Daily exercise requirements drive owner satisfaction more than any other single factor. A breed that needs 90+ minutes per day will become destructive in a household that can only commit 30 minutes. Match to your honest schedule, not your aspiration.

Lifetime cost & health planning

Lifespan differences between breeds translate directly to veterinary-care budgets. Breeds with longer lifespans have more senior-care years (biannual exams, bloodwork, chronic disease management). Breed-specific predispositions (HCM, hip dysplasia, BOAS) affect insurance premiums and expected lifetime vet costs.

Next steps

Use our specialised tools for deeper breed calculations:

Sources & References

  1. [1]
    CFA Breed Profiles β€” Cat Fanciers' Association
  2. [2]
    AAFP Feline Life Stage Guidelines β€” American Association of Feline Practitioners
  3. [3]
    Cornell Feline Health Center β€” Cornell University