Popular cat problem checks
Start with the symptom pattern if you already know what looks different.
Cat stool checker
Use the selector below to compare common stool colors and textures, then get a combined result with practical next steps.
Color guide
Not sure which color matches?
Compare all poop colors first, then come back to check texture and next steps.
Choose both details, then open the combined result if you need next steps.
Live result preview
This updates from your two selected options. Open the detailed page for severity, red flags, FAQ, and vet-note copy.
Usually normal
Brown stool is usually a healthy sign when your dog is eating, drinking, and acting normally. A firm, log-shaped stool that is easy to pick up is usually the target texture for a healthy dog.
Why this matters
Color points to possible causes. Texture tells you whether the stool is moving normally, too slowly, or too fast.
What it may mean
Next steps
A cat stool color chart is useful, but watery, hard, mucus-coated, or firm texture changes the practical guidance. Use the checker first, then compare the visual guide if the color is unclear.
Open visual guide
Common searches
Use these focused cat poop color and texture pages when you already know the main clue, such as diarrhea color, blood, black stool, mucus, yellow stool, or white stool.
Use the chart if you are not sure which color or texture matches before checking the result.
Popular cat checks
These links help you compare common stool problems without repeating the full checker.
Start with the symptom pattern if you already know what looks different.
Open a specific result when the color and texture are both clear.
Use these pages if you only know color or only know texture.
Keep exploring
Most pet owners arrive with one detail. The better answer usually comes from comparing color, texture, symptoms, and whether the change repeats.
Most checked colors
Problem tools
Diarrhea, blood, black stool, and mucus each have a faster path.
When to call a vet
Black, tar-like stool or bright red blood should not be treated like a normal color variation.
Before a clinic call
A clear photo plus timing, food changes, and symptoms makes the vet conversation faster.
Color + texture matters
Brown stool with watery texture means a different next step than brown, firm stool.
Treat as a high-signal color because it can point to digested blood.
Fresh blood signals should be taken seriously, especially when repeated.
Can be diet-related, but repeated changes need context from texture and symptoms.
Texture can raise concern even when the color looks normal.
A slick coating can happen with colon irritation and deserves tracking.