
Minecraft Cat Guide: Spawning, Taming and Farming
Cats spawn naturally in villages and jungles in Minecraft 26.1.2, and they're among the easiest mobs to tame with just raw fish or salmon. Once tamed, they can't be farmed like other mobs for loot, but you can breed them indefinitely with fish to build a massive cat collection.
Where Cats Spawn in Minecraft
Villages are your best bet for finding cats. They'll wander around the village during the day, sometimes sitting on grass like they belong there (honestly, maybe they do). Here's the thing, jungle biomes are the other reliable spawn location, where you'll spot them perched on leaves or just hanging out in the trees.
Cats aren't rare.
But they're not super common either, so if you want one for your base, scouting a nearby village beats wandering aimlessly. One thing to remember: they only spawn naturally in the Overworld. If you're in the Nether or End, you're not finding any cats hanging around.
Taming Cats with Fish
This part's dead simple. Find a wild cat, grab some raw fish or raw salmon from anywhere (ocean biomes, rivers, fishing, or loot chests), and right-click the cat while holding the fish. The cat will eat it, and if the taming succeeds, you'll see a red collar appear and hearts floating around it. Congrats, you've got yourself a cat.
But here's the annoying bit: not every fish works on the first try. I've had cats tank two or three fish before deciding I was worth the effort. It's pure RNG, so just keep clicking if it doesn't work right away. And make absolutely sure you're using raw fish or salmon, not cooked versions. Cooked fish won't tame anything. (I learned that the hard way once, so I'm saving you the frustration.)
Once tamed, your cat will follow you around, attack phantom mobs that come near you, and generally act like it owns your base.
What Cats Drop
Let's be honest: cats don't drop much. When a tamed or wild cat dies, you get 1-3 experience points and maybe a string. That's literally it. No special items, no rare loot, nothing worth collecting. So if you're thinking about farming cats for profit, stop right now.
But that's actually fine, because you're not supposed to farm cats anyway.
The real point of having cats is keeping them alive and breeding them. If you're looking for specific mob drops or farming mechanics, check out our Minecraft Block Search tool to find better farming opportunities for what you actually need.
Breeding Cats for Infinite Kittens
Once you've got one tamed cat (or two, if you want to breed them), breeding is straightforward. Give each tamed cat a raw fish or raw salmon, wait a few seconds, and they'll produce a kitten. The kitten takes on the colors and patterns of its parents, which is handy if you're collecting all ten cat variants.
Kittens take roughly 20 minutes of in-game time to grow into adults, so if you're trying to build a massive cat collection fast, patience is mandatory. You can't speed it up with growth crystals or anything fancy. Just wait.
One practical thing: cats bred in your base stay loyal to you, so they won't wander off or despawn like wild mobs might. Build a nice enclosure with some furniture, and you've got a permanent cat sanctuary. And if you want variety in your army, breed cats with different colors to get a rainbow of felines following you around.
Why Cats Matter
Here's where tamed cats become genuinely useful. They scare away phantoms and creepers. Not in combat, exactly, but their mere presence makes those mobs less likely to stick around. So if you've built a base and want fewer mobs spawning nearby, cats are a legitimate defense tool. Phantoms especially are annoying, and a few cats patrolling your base will keep them away.
Beyond utility, cats are just solid pets.
There's something satisfying about having a herd of cats following you everywhere. You can dye their collars different colors by holding dye in your hand and right-clicking them, which is pure cosmetics but honestly, who doesn't want an army of purple cats? If you want to show off your cat collection, take some screenshots with better lighting and aesthetics. Check out our Minecraft Skins page to match your character to your cat's vibe.
Common Mistakes People Make
Don't expect all cats to behave the same way. Wild cats are skittish, hostile to spiders, and won't help you in actual combat. Tamed cats, on the other hand, are loyal, sometimes annoyingly so (they'll block doorways constantly). Understand the difference before you start planning your defense strategy.
Don't try to farm cats for experience or drops. It's a complete waste of time.
The value of cats is in keeping them alive, breeding them, and using them as visual decoration plus mob deterrents. If you're after actual farming returns, focus on other mobs or mechanics. Cats are for aesthetics and loyalty, not for grinding resources.
Also, don't leave your cats unattended in unexplored terrain. They'll follow you around, which is great, but if you accidentally lead them into lava or off a cliff, they're gone. Keep them close or build them a safe space to hang out while you adventure.
Building Your Cat Army
If you're genuinely interested in maintaining a large cat collection, set up a proper area. Build a pen or room with space for them to roam, throw down some carpets or furniture so it feels less like a prison, and always keep extra raw fish in a nearby chest for breeding. Cats are low-maintenance, but they still need to be fed if you want more kittens.
The best part about cats is there's no upper limit. Keep breeding, keep collecting color variants, and eventually you'll have an absurdly large army of them following you around. It's ridiculous and pointless, but in Minecraft, that's kind of the whole appeal.


