Helping your indoor cat get enough exercise and activity is a challenge year-round, but in the winter it can be especially tough. Cold weather and short days make your kitty want to get cozy, sleep all day and nosh on comfort food as much as you do. That makes it all the more important to help your cat stay active during the winter months.
This guide to cat exercise and cat activity will help your indoor cat stay fit and healthy in the winter and throughout the year.
1. Schedule Playtime
Cats do best with a predictable routine, says Atlantic Veterinary Hospital. Be intentional about including playtime with your cat in your schedule. Per Cat Wisdom 101, cat exercise should add up to about 30 minutes a day, so setting aside 10 to 15 minutes to play with your kitty two or three times each day will ensure they get enough activity to stay healthy. Enlist other family members to spread the playtime around. Interactive play is a fun way for the entire family to build a bond with your cat.

2. Make Meals Fun
Cats are natural-born hunters, so give them something to hunt! Dividing up their meal and hiding it in small portions around the house will engage their scenting abilities and predatory instincts, and it will boost their physical activity level far above what feeding them in a single bowl will do. While conventional wisdom says to feed cats several small meals a day, a study cited by ScienceDaily found that cats tend to be more satiated and less prone to obesity when they eat only once a day. So feed your kitty at a time when you can help them search, and encourage them to keep hunting until they've found and eaten all of their meal.
3. Get Creative

Cats are easy to entertain — you don't need to pile up expensive toys to keep your feline friend active and engaged. A cardboard box, a paper bag, a cotton swab on a string or a few pingpong balls in an empty bathtub are all easy ways to engage your cat with items around the house. On days you need to get work done, scatter a few boxes around your home office, toss in a few crumpled up pieces of paper, and let your cat enjoy batting them around and hopping from box to box while you work.