Best Hairball Remedy for Indoor Cats and Long-Haired Cats

Best Hairball Remedy for Indoor Cats and Long-Haired Cats

If you share your home with an indoor cat or a long-haired cat, hairballs can quickly become part of the routine you never asked for. The best hairball remedy is rarely one single trick. It is usually a combination of less swallowed fur, better digestive support, and daily habits that help hair move through the body more smoothly.

Indoor cats often groom a lot, especially when they are resting, bored, or mildly stressed. Long-haired cats simply have more fur to manage. Put those together, and it is easy to see why hairballs become a recurring problem.

Start with grooming

Brushing is still one of the best ways to reduce hairballs because it removes loose fur before your cat swallows it. For long-haired cats, frequent brushing can make a major difference. During seasonal shedding, even short-haired cats may need more grooming than usual.

Support the digestive side of hairballs

Hairballs are not only a coat issue. They are also a digestive issue. Once fur is swallowed, your cat’s body needs to move it through efficiently. That is why many pet parents look for products with fiber and gentle digestive support, especially for cats that seem to cough up hairballs again and again.

Hemp Well Cat Hairball Soft Chews are made with organic hemp, pumpkin seed, and psyllium fiber to support digestion and help hair pass more smoothly. They fit naturally into a daily hairball routine for indoor cats, long-haired cats, and frequent groomers. You can also browse the larger Hemp Well cat collection for other feline wellness products.

Hydration matters more than most people think

Cats are not always great drinkers, but hydration helps support normal digestion. Wet food, water fountains, multiple water stations, and a calm feeding area may all help encourage better water intake. Small changes here can support a bigger goal: helping swallowed hair move through the system instead of collecting into a mess.

Consider the stress connection

Indoor cats sometimes overgroom when they are stressed, understimulated, or dealing with environmental changes. That extra grooming means extra hair swallowed. If your cat seems tense during travel, guests, grooming, or other routine shifts, it may help to support calm behavior too. Calm Cat Oil is one option to explore for cats that need help settling into a more relaxed rhythm.

If vomiting is frequent and you are not sure whether hairballs are the only issue, read Why Is My Cat Vomiting? for a broader look at what may be going on.

What is the best hairball remedy?

For most cats, the best remedy is a routine: regular brushing, better hydration, and daily digestive support that makes hairballs less likely to build up in the first place. There is no glory in chasing the occasional giant hairball across the floor. The better goal is fewer of them, less discomfort, and a cat that feels good day after day.

Frequently Asked Questions

What is the best hairball remedy for long-haired cats?

The best approach usually combines regular brushing, hydration, and digestive support that helps swallowed hair pass more smoothly.

Do indoor cats get more hairballs?

Many indoor cats do because they may groom often, shed indoors year-round, and have fewer environmental changes than outdoor cats.

Can stress make cat hairballs worse?

Yes, some cats groom more when they are stressed, which can increase the amount of hair they swallow.

When should I call the vet about my cat’s hairballs?

Call your vet if vomiting is frequent, your cat seems lethargic, loses weight, stops eating, or strains without producing a hairball.

Article review

How this Hemp Well article is reviewed.

Written by Thomas Bowers

Author bio: Hemp Well’s editorial team writes pet wellness articles using Hemp Well product knowledge, label directions, customer questions, and responsible hemp education.

Reviewed by Hemp Well Product & Quality Team

Reviewer bio: Reviewed for product accuracy, claim discipline, label consistency, and Hemp Well quality standards.

Last reviewed April 07, 2026

Veterinary note: This article is educational and is not a substitute for diagnosis, treatment, or advice from your veterinarian. Veterinary credentials are listed only when a specific veterinary reviewer is named.

Editorial policy, veterinary note & source citations

Editorial policy: Hemp Well content is written to help pet parents understand pet hemp products, serving-size considerations, product formats, quality standards, and safer shopping decisions. We avoid disease-treatment claims and update articles when product labels, regulations, or available guidance changes.

Veterinary note: Hemp Well educational content is not veterinary medical advice. If your pet has a medical condition, takes medication, is pregnant, intended for breeding, or symptoms worsen, consult your veterinarian before starting or continuing any supplement.

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