Breed and ancestry are often the starting point

Many owners begin with a simple identity question: what breed is my cat, or what breeds may be part of the mix? Breed analysis and ancestry context are often the most immediately understandable parts of a consumer DNA report.

These sections are especially useful for rescue cats, adopted cats with limited paperwork, and households trying to move beyond appearance-based guesses.

Some reports add health-marker screening

A broader report may include screening for selected inherited-condition markers. That can help owners understand whether follow-up questions with a veterinarian make sense, especially when there is little background information available.

Health results still need context. They are not a substitute for diagnosis, treatment, or clinical judgment.

Relatedness and family clues answer different questions

In a multi-cat home, the more relevant question may be whether two cats are likely siblings or share ancestry. That is where pages like ancestry and relatedness become more useful than a breed-only report.

The best way to judge what a test can tell you is to start with the report type, then read the limits before buying.