Kittens get adopted fast, so this page changes often. It pulls the kittens and young cats currently adoptable in Hamilton from Hamilton-Burlington SPCA into one place, refreshed regularly. If you do not see one today, check back, as rescue kittens cycle through quickly, and adoption season peaks in spring and summer.
Two-kitten adoptions are often the easier choice, not the harder one: a pair keeps each other company, burns energy together, and tends to settle faster than a single kitten alone all day. Many Hamilton rescues encourage adopting kittens in pairs for exactly this reason. Apply through the rescue; LocalPetFinder is a free aggregator.
Showing 15 cats

Arvak
3 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Athenea
1 year • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Breyer
3 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Brightbill
2 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Leonidas
7 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Manitoba Merv
2 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Pebbles
4 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Pyrex
3 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Rose
5 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Ruffian
3 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Sherlock Holmes
3 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Sizzle
6 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Spicy Salmon Roll & Dumpling (Bonded Pair)
1 year • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Sterling
2 months • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA

Stewart Little
1 year • Domestic Shorthair
Hamilton-Burlington SPCA
Kittens in Hamilton: common questions
Should I adopt one kitten or two?
Two is often easier than one, despite sounding like more work. A pair of kittens keeps each other company while you are out, plays and burns energy together, and usually settles faster and gets into less trouble than a single bored kitten. Many rescues actively encourage adopting kittens in pairs, and some will only place a solo kitten into a home with an existing young cat.
How much are rescue kittens in Hamilton?
Kitten adoption fees in Hamilton typically run about $150 to $400, usually including the first vaccines, deworming, a microchip, a spay or neuter (or a contract to do it once old enough), and often a FeLV/FIV test. That is a fraction of buying from a breeder, and the fee goes back into the rescue's care for the next litter.
How do I adopt one of these cats in Hamilton?
Find a cat you like here, then apply directly through the rescue that has it (Hamilton-Burlington SPCA). LocalPetFinder is a listings aggregator, not a shelter: we pull adoptable cats from Hamilton-area rescues into one place and refresh them regularly, but the application and adoption happen through the rescue. Listings reflect what is genuinely available, though a cat can be adopted between refreshes.