Showing 24 cats

Anastasia
7 years 2 months • Domestic Longhair/Mix
Annex Cat Rescue

Benji
3 years • Ragdoll
Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario)

Buffy (at Huntsville Petsmart)
5 years • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario)

Casey
7 years 1 mo • Domestic Long Hair
North Toronto Cat Rescue

Chewie
7 years • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario)

Cooper
5 years 1 mo • Domestic Long Hair
North Toronto Cat Rescue

Gabby
1 year • Domestic Long Hair
North Toronto Cat Rescue

Jade
5 years • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario)

Jimmy
8 years 5 months • Domestic Longhair/Mix
Annex Cat Rescue
KOKI
2 years, 4 months old • Domestic Longhair
Ottawa Humane Society

Luna
5 years 2 mo • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Ottawa Area)

Maverick
11 months • Domestic Long Hair
North Toronto Cat Rescue
MICHA
2 years, 1 month old • Himalayan
Ottawa Humane Society

Oreo
3 years 7 mo • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Central Ontario)

Pearl
6 years 5 mo • Domestic Medium Hair
North Toronto Cat Rescue

Robin Hood(petsmart)
1 year • Domestic Longhair
Ontario SPCA (Ottawa Area)
Adopting a long-haired cat
Long-haired cats have an undeniable appeal: the full coat, the plume tail, the lion-like ruff. In rescue you will find purebred types like Maine Coon, Persian, and Ragdoll alongside plenty of fluffy domestic long-hair mixes, who bring the same look with fewer breed-specific health quirks.
Every cat in the grid above is listed by a rescue as long-haired. Listings update regularly as rescues take in new cats.
The grooming reality
A long coat is more upkeep than a short one. Without regular brushing, long-haired cats develop painful mats, especially behind the ears, under the legs, and along the belly. Most need a thorough brush a few times a week, and some need an occasional professional groom or a sanitary trim. They also shed more and can be more prone to hairballs.
What to know before you adopt
Budget the time for brushing before you fall for the floof, and start handling sessions early so the cat learns to tolerate grooming. Ask the rescue whether the specific cat is used to being brushed, since a cat that already enjoys it makes the whole job easier. Otherwise these cats are no different from any other to live with.
Looking more broadly? Browse every adoptable cat across the province on Cat Adoption Ontario.
Long-Haired Cats FAQ — Ontario
Which long-haired breeds turn up in rescue?
Maine Coon and Maine Coon mixes, Persians, Ragdolls, Himalayans, Norwegian Forest types, and a great many fluffy domestic long-hair cats that are not a specific breed at all. The mixes are the most common by far and tend to be hardier than the purebreds. The grid above shows the long-haired cats currently listed across the province.
How much grooming does a long-haired cat need?
Plan on brushing a few times a week to prevent mats, with extra attention behind the ears, under the legs, and on the belly where tangles form fastest. Some cats also benefit from an occasional professional groom or sanitary trim. A cat that learns to enjoy brushing young makes this easy; one that fights it is the main reason mats get out of hand.
Do long-haired cats shed more or trigger more allergies?
They do tend to shed more visibly and can produce more hairballs, so regular brushing helps on both fronts. On allergies, coat length is not really the driver — the trigger is a protein in saliva and dander, not the hair itself, so a long coat is not automatically worse for allergy sufferers. If allergies are a concern, spend time with the specific cat first.
Are long-haired cats available to adopt right now?
Usually a few are listed across the province in the grid above, including both purebred types and fluffy mixes. If the exact look you want is not there today, check back, as the listings refresh regularly. Being open to a domestic long-hair mix rather than a specific breed will shorten your wait considerably.