KITTEN VACCINATION · NOIDA

Kitten Vaccinations in Noida for a Healthy Life Ahead.

Kittens need timely vaccinations in the first few months of life to build strong immunity and reduce the risk of preventable infectious diseases. At Ichi & Ori Pet Care, every plan is calm, unhurried and shaped around the individual kitten.

Curious young kitten resting on a soft blanket during a vaccination visit at Ichi and Ori Pet Care, Sector 90 Noida — placeholder image
WHY VACCINATIONS MATTER

Why vaccinations are essential for kittens.

A kitten’s early weeks look playful and carefree, but underneath, the immune system is doing quiet, urgent work. Vaccination is what protects that work from being derailed by preventable illness.

Immature immune system

A kitten’s protection from its mother fades within a few short weeks. Vaccines step in during that gap and teach the immune system how to fight back on its own.

Early disease protection

Panleukopenia and severe respiratory viruses spread quickly among unprotected kittens. A timely FVRCP series dramatically lowers that risk.

Indoor cats need vaccines too

Viruses travel on shoes, clothing and visiting animals. A house-cat lifestyle reduces exposure, it does not remove it, and core vaccines remain important.

Healthy growth

A kitten who is not fighting off preventable infection has more energy for eating, playing, sleeping deeply and building strong body condition.

Safer socialisation

Confident adult cats are usually shaped in the first three months. Vaccinations let kittens meet new sights, sounds and people without unnecessary illness risk.

Lifelong preventive care

A well-vaccinated first year sets the foundation for annual wellness visits, early disease detection and long, comfortable adult years.

Better quality of life

Skipped vaccines can quietly translate into recurring respiratory issues or immune stress later in life. Prevention keeps that story simpler.

Peace of mind

For a new cat parent, a clear vaccination plan is often the biggest source of reassurance in a very new relationship.

RECOMMENDED SCHEDULE

A gentle month-by-month kitten plan.

This is an educational overview, not a fixed prescription. The exact schedule depends on your kitten’s health, weight and history, and is decided together with the veterinarian.

  1. 6 – 8 WEEKS

    First FVRCP vaccine

    The first core vaccine is given after a full health check and confirmation that the kitten is eating, drinking and gaining weight steadily.

  2. 9 – 12 WEEKS

    FVRCP booster

    A follow-up booster helps the immune system build stronger, more reliable protection than any single dose can achieve on its own.

  3. 12 – 16 WEEKS

    Final FVRCP + lifestyle vaccines

    The last booster in the FVRCP series is given here, and FeLV is discussed based on lifestyle, household and exposure history.

  4. RABIES VACCINE

    Anti-Rabies

    Anti-Rabies is typically added at the appropriate age, once the FVRCP series is well progressed. The exact week is decided during the consultation.

  5. ANNUAL BOOSTERS

    Yearly refresh

    From the first year onwards, an annual booster and wellness review keeps protection strong and catches subtle changes early.

  6. INDIVIDUAL PLAN

    Your kitten’s own map

    Every kitten is different. Weight, mother-derived immunity and any early illness all influence the plan. The final schedule is always built together.

WHAT KITTEN VACCINES PREVENT

Diseases vaccinations help prevent.

Most of the serious infectious illnesses in kittens are now largely avoidable. Understanding what the core vaccines protect against makes the schedule feel less like a checklist and more like a gift.

Feline Panleukopenia

A highly contagious viral illness that attacks the gut and immune cells of young cats. It is preventable through the FVRCP vaccination series and is one of the most important reasons to vaccinate on time.

Feline Viral Rhinotracheitis

Caused by feline herpesvirus, this respiratory disease can leave cats prone to recurring sneezing, eye issues and stress flares throughout life. Vaccination reduces both risk and severity.

Calicivirus

A common respiratory virus in cats that can also cause mouth ulcers and joint discomfort. It spreads quickly in shared spaces, and FVRCP covers this reliably.

Rabies

A fatal viral disease preventable only by vaccination. Anti-Rabies is essential for the safety of your cat, your family and everyone your household comes into contact with.

BEYOND VACCINATIONS

Complete preventive care for kittens.

Vaccines cover a defined set of viruses. The rest of a healthy start comes from the small, steady habits below, decided together during the first year of visits.

Nutrition

Kitten-specific food, in the right portion, supports the rapid growth of the first six months. Wet and dry balance also shapes hydration and long-term urinary health.

Deworming

Kittens pick up parasites easily and often carry them silently. Age-appropriate deworming supports both vaccine response and steady weight gain.

Growth monitoring

Regular growth checks help confirm that your kitten is developing at a healthy pace, without either falling behind or growing too quickly on high-calorie food.

Weight checks

Sudden weight loss or plateaus in a young kitten always deserve a proper look. The scale is often the earliest signal that something needs attention.

Parasite prevention

Fleas, ticks and internal parasites can affect kittens even indoors. Season-aware protection is planned around your household without over-medicating.

Dental development

Baby teeth arrive early and start giving way around three to four months. Learning what is normal helps you spot the small dental issues that need a professional look.

Behaviour

Litter routines, biting-play boundaries, handling and confidence around carriers all shape the kind of cat your kitten grows into. A little guidance goes a long way here.

Routine veterinary examinations

Short, positive visits during the first year build a calm relationship with the clinic and make future adult check-ups much less stressful for everyone.

PREPARING FOR THE VISIT

A calm, prepared vaccination day.

Cats notice tension long before we do. A few thoughtful steps at home make the whole vaccination visit softer for your kitten and for you.

  1. 01

    Scheduling

    Book a slot at a time when your kitten is likely to be relaxed. A quieter mid-morning or early-afternoon appointment usually works better than end-of-day rush.

  2. 02

    Carrier training

    Leave the carrier out at home in the days before the visit, with familiar bedding inside. Feeding a treat or two in the carrier turns it into a safe, familiar space.

  3. 03

    Health check

    Every kitten visit begins with a physical examination. Weight, temperature, gums, ears, mouth and body condition are all reviewed before any vaccine is considered.

  4. 04

    Previous records

    Bring vaccination and deworming records from the breeder, shelter or rescue. Even a small history helps the veterinarian design a precise, non-repetitive plan.

  5. 05

    Observation after vaccination

    A few settled minutes at the clinic after the vaccine let the team confirm your kitten is comfortable before the drive home.

  6. 06

    Expected mild reactions

    Some kittens are quieter, less hungry or a bit sore at the injection site for a day. These reactions are usually mild and pass on their own without treatment.

  7. 07

    When to call the vet

    Facial swelling, hives, repeated vomiting, breathing difficulty or extreme lethargy should be reported the same day. Serious reactions are rare but need prompt attention.

FROM NEW CAT PARENTS

Questions we hear from new cat parents.

A short, reassuring guide to the questions that come up when you have just welcomed a kitten home.

Does my indoor kitten need vaccines?

Yes. Even entirely indoor kittens can be exposed to viruses brought into the home on clothing, footwear, visitors and other animals. Core vaccines like FVRCP and Anti-Rabies protect against illnesses that spread quickly and are safer prevented than treated.

Can kittens meet other cats?

Meeting fully vaccinated, healthy resident cats in a calm setting can begin gradually once your veterinarian is satisfied with the kitten’s progress. Interaction with unknown cats or shared litter environments is best delayed until the FVRCP series is complete.

When can kittens go outside?

Outdoor exposure is a bigger decision for cats than for dogs. Many households choose to keep cats fully indoor. If outdoor access is planned, please wait until the core series is complete and discuss safe options with the veterinarian.

Are vaccines safe?

The vaccines used are well studied and considered safe for kittens. Most reactions are mild and short-lived. Serious side effects are uncommon, and the risk of skipping vaccines is significantly higher than the risk of side effects.

Can vaccines be delayed?

A short delay is not usually a problem. If the gap grows, the veterinarian will look at how the schedule has drifted and, in most cases, continue from the next planned dose rather than restarting the series.

Do kittens require boosters?

Yes. The first FVRCP dose introduces the immune system to the vaccine, and the boosters teach it to respond strongly and lastingly. Skipping boosters weakens the protection the earlier dose started to build.

Dr Kaushal Singh Yadav, veterinarian at Ichi and Ori Pet Care, Sector 90 Noida
WHY CHOOSE ICHI & ORI

Care built with feline behaviour in mind.

Kittens read the room quickly. Ichi & Ori is set up to keep that room quiet. Dr Kaushal moves slowly around cats, keeps waits short and gives every kitten time to explore the consultation space before anything else begins.

Consultations are education first. You leave knowing what was examined, what the next visit will cover and how to build small, feline-friendly routines at home in between.

  • Gentle, low-stress feline handling
  • Cat-friendly consultation rooms
  • Patient, education-first approach
  • Personalised vaccination schedules
  • Digital medical records
  • Timely booster reminders
  • Room for every question
  • Honest guidance on lifestyle vaccines
AREAS WE SERVE

Trusted by new cat parents across Noida.

Our clinic in Sector 90 is easy to reach from Noida Expressway and the neighbouring residential sectors, with quiet parking and short waits when you arrive.

Sector 90 Sector 137 Sector 143 Sector 168 Sector 93 Sector 100 Noida Expressway Nearby residential societies
FREQUENTLY ASKED

Kitten vaccination questions, answered clearly.

Most kittens begin the FVRCP series between 6 and 8 weeks of age, once they are eating well and steadily gaining weight. The exact starting point is confirmed during the first consultation after a full health check.

Give Your Kitten the Best Possible Start.

Timely vaccinations, calm consultations and honest guidance in the first year quietly shape the calm, confident cat your kitten will grow into. Book a visit and let’s plan the healthiest possible beginning.