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The Pet Affaire

For Cats

Cat Grooming

A calm, low-stress experience for felines — gentle lion cut on request, careful mat removal, soothing bath if needed, nails, and ears.

From
$35
Duration
60 – 120 minutes
For
Cats

How it goes

From drop-off to home, calmly.

  1. 01

    Welcome

    Drop-off, gentle introduction, coat & skin check.

  2. 02

    Bath

    Premium hypoallergenic products, warm water, calm hands.

  3. 03

    Service

    cat grooming — done thoroughly, never rushed.

  4. 04

    Pickup

    Hand-checked, brushed, and ready for home.

What's included

Every visit includes:

  • · Pre-groom assessment in a quiet, cat-only window
  • · Gentle lion cut when requested
  • · Careful mat removal
  • · Soothing bath only if needed
  • · Nail trimming
  • · Ear cleaning

Final price varies with coat length, condition, and temperament — we'll always confirm before we begin.

The detail

A bit more about this service.

A calm, low-stress experience designed especially for felines. We offer a gentle lion cut when requested, careful mat removal, a soothing bath only if needed, nail trimming, and ear cleaning — all handled with patience and expertise.

Your cat leaves feeling lighter and more comfortable.

From the studio

Recent feline visitors.

  • Long-haired tabby cat with green eyes, freshly groomed.
    Long-haired tabby · post-groom
  • White Persian cat sitting on an ornate silver tufted chair.
    Persian · royalty
  • Cream Shih Tzu and a small black puppy saying hello after their groom.
    Studio mornings

See more in the full gallery.

FAQ

Common questions.

  • Do you sedate cats? +

    No. Sedation is a vet decision, not a grooming one. We see one cat at a time in a quiet, dog-free window so most cats can be groomed without it. If your cat needs sedation, we'll refer you to a fear-free vet.

  • What if my cat is matted? +

    We comb out what's safe to comb. For severe matting close to the skin, a sanitary shave is often the kindest path — we'll explain the options and let you decide.

  • Lion cut or comb cut — which is right? +

    Lion cut: short body, mane, boots, and tail tip — great for long-haired cats who hate brushing. Comb cut: keeps about an inch of length all over — softer look, still low-maintenance. We'll talk it through at intake.

  • How often should my cat be groomed? +

    Long-haired cats every 6–8 weeks. Short-haired cats every 3–4 months for nails, ears, and a de-shed. Senior cats often benefit from more frequent, shorter visits.

Book cat grooming.

Live availability, instant confirmation, friendly reminders.