Nothing Is Wrong With Your Pet: Why Winter Can Feel Hard for Dogs and Cats

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Nothing Is Wrong With Your Pet: Why Winter Can Feel Hard for Dogs and Cats

Updated Jan 5, 2026

If your dog or cat seems a little “off” right now, you’re not alone—and chances are, nothing is wrong.

Dogs and cats often sleep more during winter, responding naturally to shorter days, colder temperatures, and changes in daily routines.

This time of year can be tough on people, and it can be just as hard on our pets. The holidays are over, routines have shifted again, the weather is colder, and the days can still feel heavy with darkness. Many people experience a version of the winter blues during January and February, even if they don’t call it that. Less daylight, more time indoors, and fewer spontaneous moments of joy can quietly affect our mood.

Our animals notice these changes too.

Changes in routine often show up in subtle ways. Dogs and cats may sleep more, play less, seem clingier, or withdraw a bit when daily rhythms shift. These responses are not signs of something being wrong—they’re normal expressions of adaptability. Animals thrive on predictability, and when schedules, activity levels, or household energy change, they adjust in the only ways they know how. What looks like a behavior problem is often just a response to a different pattern of living.

Dogs and cats are deeply attuned to the rhythms of our lives. When our schedules change, our energy dips, or the household feels quieter—or more tense—they feel it. A dog who seems clingier than usual, a cat who retreats under the bed, or a pet who sleeps more or plays less is often responding not to a problem, but to the season where everyone in the household has slowed down.

Winter naturally brings less stimulation. Walks may be shorter. Outdoor play may be limited by cold, ice, or snow. Windows stay closed. The world gets smaller. For indoor cats and dogs in snowy climates, especially, the change can feel abrupt. One day they’re sniffing every blade of grass or basking in sunny windows, and the next they’re navigating boots, coats, and a lot more time inside.

It’s also worth remembering that while winter can feel endless in the moment, we’ve already passed the most important milestone: the winter solstice. That means the darkest days are behind us. There is nothing but increasing light ahead.

Even if it doesn’t feel dramatic yet, the days are getting longer. The sun is slowly returning. That matters—to us and to our pets.

In the meantime, small adjustments can make a big difference. For dogs who are missing longer walks, short bursts of indoor play can help burn energy and lift spirits. A few minutes of tug, hide-and-seek with treats, or basic training games can be surprisingly effective. For cats, rotating toys, adding puzzle feeders, or even something as simple as a cardboard box can spark curiosity and movement.

Mental enrichment matters just as much as physical exercise, especially in winter. Sniffing games for dogs and hunting-style play for cats tap into natural behaviors that don’t require perfect weather. And sometimes, the most powerful thing you can offer is simply presence—sitting together, brushing, talking softly, or sharing a quiet moment.

It’s also okay to give yourself some grace. If you’re feeling slower or less motivated this time of year, you’re human. Your pets don’t need perfection. They need consistency, kindness, and reassurance—and those can show up in very simple ways.

One thing I hear often in January is worry. People wonder if their dog has become lazy, if their cat is depressed, or if they’ve somehow failed their pet. In most cases, what they’re seeing is normal seasonal adjustment. Behavior doesn’t exist in a vacuum; it’s shaped by environment, routine, and emotional climate.

As the light continues to return, you may notice subtle shifts. A little more energy. A little more curiosity. A little more playfulness. These changes often arrive quietly, just as winter settles in quietly.

So if your pet feels different right now, take a breath. Look at the calendar. Look at the light. This season is temporary.

Spring will come. Longer days are already on their way. Until then, a little patience, creativity, and compassion—for your pet and for yourself—can carry you both through.

Sometimes, simply understanding why things feel harder is enough to make them easier.

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This article originally appeared on CathyRosenthal.com | Nothing Is Wrong With Your Pet: Why Winter Can Feel Hard for Dogs and Cats

Thank you for helping us spread the message of compassionate care and responsible pet ownership!

Cathy Rosenthal 2026

Cathy Rosenthal (aka The Pet Pundit), CHES, CFE

Animal Welfare Communications Strategist, Writer & Educator

Cathy M. Rosenthal is an award-winning humane educator and author, animal welfare strategist, pet columnist, and speaker who has spent more than 38 years working in animal welfare with local and national humane organizations. She helps people better understand and care for animals through her nationally syndicated My Pet World column and has been the longtime pet columnist for the San Antonio Express-News since 2003.

In addition to her writing, Cathy develops humane education, leadership, customer service, and compassion fatigue training programs for animal welfare organizations nationwide, and has helped raise millions of dollars through grant writing, strategic communications, and program development.

Cathy is the editor and curator of Humane Perspectives: Leadership in Animal Welfare and is the author of several books, including Grant Writing Boot Camp for Animal AdvocatesThe Lucky Tale of Two Dogs, and The Happy Tale of Two Cats, which was the 2026 winner of the Association of Professional Humane Educators’ (APHE) "Educator’s Choice Award" for Best Humane Education Book for Young Children. She also received the 2026 APHE Nathania Gartman Heroes Award for Impact in Humane Education. Her humane education programs in Texas have reached more than 45,000 elementary school children since 2019.

She resides in Texas with her husband, their cat Sterling, and a former community cat, Maddie, who successfully negotiated an indoor living arrangement but still considers human affection highly negotiable.

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