Popular Cat Breeds

The History of Cat Breeds

According to National Geographic, cats first started hanging around human settlements and eating the rodents that threatened our grain stores as early as eight thousand years ago. It wasn't until the nineteenth century, however, that cat fanciers started breeding cats deliberately for a specific appearance or demeanor. A select few cats, such as the Egyptian Mau, still resemble their wild ancestors from the deserts of the Middle East (or in the case of the Maine Coon, snowy North America). The rest are the result of human tinkering with one of nature's most purr-fect animal companions.

Unlike dogs, cats have changed very little genetically from the wild cats that first hung around our ancient farms. Since cats were never bred for specific hunting or herding tasks the way dogs were, their variations are more subtle than, say, the difference between a Rottweiler and a beagle.

How Many Breeds Are There?

Finding out how many cat breeds exist in the world depends on where you look for your information. International cat registries and other organizations all list different qualifications for the breeds they accept, and the total number varies among them—though there are far fewer recognized cat breeds than there are dog breeds. While Encyclopedia Britannica only lists fifteen cat breeds, The International Cat Association, the world's largest genetic registry of pedigreed cats, recognizes seventy-three different kinds. Many other well-recognized registries and associations tend to fall between those two numbers.

For example, The Cat Fanciers' Association (CFA), the largest American cat registration body, recognizes forty-five different breeds as of 2022. Fédération Internationale Féline, with member organizations in forty countries, recognizes forty-eight breeds broken down into four categories.

There are a few reasons why various associations qualify cat breeds differently. The simplest reason is the overall classification. Some registries won't consider non-pedigreed cats that don't have their parents' names and breeds traced back a certain number of generations. Additionally, some associations include multiple types of cats in one classification, while others separate them into their own categories. 

So, how many cat breeds are there? There's no single determined number — just one more piece of evidence that cats like to follow their own rules. 

Here are some popular cat breeds

A

B

C

D

E

H

J

K

L

M

N

O

P

R

S

T

Back to blog