Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica)

Cat pica and eating non-food items: nutritional deficiency, anxiety, OCD, and GI disorders. Preventing dangerous ingestion.

Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica) illustration

Plastic Chewing Is a Behavior, Pica Is a Diagnosis

The clinical term is pica — the compulsion to eat non-food items. Plastic (grocery bags, shrink wrap, electrical cord sheathing, shower curtains) is the most common target in cats, followed by wool/fabric (especially in Oriental breeds) and elastic bands. The International Cat Care / ISFM classifies pica as either primarily medical (underlying disease is driving it) or primarily behavioral (anxiety, understimulation, early weaning, compulsive disorder), and a good workup rules out medical before settling on a behavior plan. The concern is not the plastic itself — it is a linear foreign body and intestinal obstruction, which are feline surgical emergencies with mortality as high as 25–40% if presentation is delayed.

Emergency Red Flags

If your cat has eaten plastic and is vomiting repeatedly, not eating, painful in the belly, hiding, or straining with a hunched posture, treat it as an ER visit. Linear foreign bodies (string, ribbon, plastic bag strands) wrapped under the tongue or anchored at the pylorus can saw through intestinal walls within 24–48 hours. Always lift the tongue to look for a string base before assuming "he'll pass it."

Medical Causes to Rule Out First

Behavioral and Environmental Drivers

The Vet's Workup

For a new pica complaint in any cat over 8, or any cat with concurrent weight change, vomiting, or diarrhea, expect:

When It Becomes Surgery

Intestinal foreign bodies that cause complete obstruction, linear foreign bodies that have anchored, or any cat with peritonitis require surgical exploration (exploratory laparotomy with enterotomy or resection-anastomosis). Post-op mortality ranges 6–15% in uncomplicated cases, closer to 30–40% if septic peritonitis is present. A bowel that has been rubbed by a linear object for more than 24 hours often has multiple perforations and a guarded prognosis.

2026 Cost Ranges

What to Do Tonight

Immediate environmental control works better than anything else:

What Not to Do

Medication When Behavior Doesn't Shift

For genuinely compulsive pica that persists after environmental enrichment and stressor removal, a veterinary behaviorist may prescribe clomipramine (a tricyclic) or fluoxetine (an SSRI). These are tried at 4–8 week intervals and adjusted. The International Society of Feline Medicine treats psychopharmacology for feline compulsive disorders as legitimate adjunctive therapy, not a first-line tool — environmental changes come first.

Quick Answers

Should I go to the emergency vet?

Yes if your cat has recently eaten plastic and is vomiting, not eating, painful, or straining. Yes if you see string coming from the mouth or rectum. No for a cat that licked a plastic bag once, is eating normally, and is acting normally — monitor closely for 48 hours.

How much will treatment cost?

A workup without surgery is usually $400–$900. Surgical foreign body removal runs $3,500–$7,000, and complications (septic peritonitis, resection of dead bowel) push well beyond $10,000. Pet insurance that covers foreign body ingestion pays for itself in one episode.

Can I treat this at home?

Environmental and behavioral changes are home territory. Underlying medical disease and foreign-body obstruction are not — they need diagnostics and, sometimes, surgery.

Got a Specific Question?

Keep a photo log of the items your cat chews for a week and bring it in — it helps your vet decide whether the target is texture, smell, or substrate-specific, which changes the enrichment prescription.

How this page was reviewed

The editorial team at Pet Care Helper AI drafts health-critical content from named clinical references, then cross-checks every numeric claim and escalation threshold before publishing. We do not have licensed veterinarians on staff; we work from peer-reviewed and professional-body sources. The full process is documented on our medical review process page.

Reviewer: Paul Paradis, editorial lead. Clinical references consulted for this page:

See an error? corrections@petcarehelperai.com. All corrections are published in our corrections log.

Sources & References

Primary references consulted for this page.

Reviewed: March 2026. Re-examined against published veterinary guidance periodically. Animal-specific health decisions should run through your own vet.

Real-World Notes on Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica)

The strongest owner notes on Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica) describe a steady process: keep the routine predictable, change one variable at a time, and note which changes actually affect comfort, behavior, and health markers.

Vet Planning Notes for Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica)

A practical plan for Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica) includes more than average annual cost. It should account for travel time to the right clinic, after-hours availability, refill logistics, and whether the veterinarian regularly sees this type of pet.

Important context: Online guidance cannot diagnose Why Does My Cat Eat Plastic (Pica). Use the information here as a planning aid, then confirm health or treatment decisions with your veterinarian. Affiliate support does not affect recommendations.