Your cat will hide it from you.
Cats evolved to hide weakness. She will purr, eat, and greet you at the door long after something is wrong inside. By the time you see a clear sign at home, the problem is rarely new.
300+ cat parents already on the waitlist

The most common feline conditions are also the quietest.
These are the diseases that catch cat parents off guard. They are common, and cats are very good at hiding them. Each tends to be diagnosed late, when the treatment window is narrower and the cost is higher.
Chronic kidney disease1
By the time it's visible at home, the kidneys have usually lost more than two thirds of their function. Caught early, cats often live for years. Caught late, the window can be months.
Arthritis in older cats2
It is the most underdiagnosed problem in cats. A sore cat jumps less, plays less, grooms a little less. Owners read it as "she is just getting older" and it goes uninvestigated for years.
Hyperthyroidism3
The most common hormonal disorder in older cats. Weight loss, restlessness, a louder cry. Easy to miss day to day. Clear in the data.
Diabetes4
Often noticed only when a cat starts drinking and urinating noticeably more. The earlier signs sit in subtle shifts to appetite, weight, and activity that build for months before they look obvious.
Dental disease5
Cats keep eating through serious dental pain. The clue is rarely the mouth itself. It shows up as slower meals, less grooming, and a quieter cat at the food bowl.
Heart conditions6
Many cats with heart disease show nothing visible until a crisis. The earliest hints are small: a little less activity, a little more rest, a breathing rate that crept up over weeks.
The shared pattern: the earliest signals are tiny shifts in movement, sleep, weight, and grooming. The exact behaviors a cat is wired to mask, and the exact behaviors a busy person rarely tracks day by day.
One visit a year. One stressed cat. The rest is guesswork.
A vet visit is a snapshot. Your cat is keyed up the moment she goes in the carrier. Her heart rate is high, her breathing is shallow, and any quiet pattern she has at home is gone. The vet sees fifteen tense minutes. You are left filling in the other 364 days from memory.
A stressed snapshot. Vitals skewed by fear. Owner reporting from memory. One window into a year of life.
Your cat acting like herself. The patterns the clinic never gets to see. The shifts that show up slowly, over weeks.
Notice the shifts a person can't.
Cats rarely get sick overnight. They drift. A little less movement. A bit more sleep. Grooming that fades over weeks. Those drifts are visible in the data long before they look like anything from across the room.
Continuous, at-home behavioral monitoring closes the gap between annual visits. You stop relying on memory. Your vet stops working from guesswork. You act earlier, while there is still time for the easy answer.
For cats, the difference between "early" and "late" is often the difference between years and months.
Know before they show it.
Ayro learns what healthy looks like for your cat and quietly watches for the changes you would never catch on your own. So when something starts to shift, you find out while there is still room to act.
300+ cat parents already on the waitlist
Sources. 1 Cornell Feline Health Center and the International Renal Interest Society, on chronic kidney disease prevalence in older cats. 2 Hardie et al., 2002, Journal of the American Veterinary Medical Association, on degenerative joint disease in cats over 12. 3 Peterson, 2012, Journal of Feline Medicine and Surgery, on hyperthyroidism prevalence. 4 AAHA and ISFM diabetes guidelines, on rising incidence with feline obesity. 5 Cornell Feline Health Center, on the prevalence of dental disease in adult cats. 6 Paige et al., 2009, JAVMA, on subclinical hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in apparently healthy cats.