Cats usually start with weekly B12 injections for 6 weeks, then one dose a month later, with follow-up testing to set later timing.
If your cat has low B12, the usual answer is not “whenever she seems tired.” It’s a set schedule built around the cause, the lab result, and how your cat feels between doses.
For many cats, a vet starts with one shot each week for 6 weeks, gives one more shot a month later, then checks bloodwork again. After that, some cats stop, some stay on monthly shots, and some need weekly or every-other-week dosing for longer.
That range is why this question matters. A cat with a short bout of gut trouble may need a short course. A cat with chronic bowel disease or pancreatic trouble may need repeat shots for much longer.
How Often Can I Give My Cat a B12 Shot During Treatment?
The most common starter pattern is simple:
- One B12 shot each week for 6 weeks
- One extra shot 30 days later
- A recheck after the last dose to see whether the level held
That’s the usual opening schedule, not a forever rule. Once the recheck is back, your vet may move your cat into one of three lanes: stop for now, keep going monthly, or tighten the timing to every 1 to 2 weeks.
If your cat perks up after each shot, then fades before the next one, that pattern matters. It can mean the body is still burning through B12 or not absorbing enough on its own. In that case, the interval often stays shorter until the gut problem or pancreatic problem is under better control.
What Changes The Timing
Vets usually set the schedule around a mix of lab work and day-to-day signs. The most common drivers are:
- How low the B12 level was at the start
- Whether your cat has chronic vomiting, diarrhea, or weight loss
- Whether appetite improves only right after a shot
- Whether the low B12 came from bowel disease, EPI, pancreatitis, or more than one issue
- What the recheck shows after the loading phase
Why B12 Shot Timing For Cats Can Change
B12 deficiency in cats is often tied to disease in the small intestine or pancreas. That matters because the shot fixes the low vitamin level, but it does not erase the reason the level dropped in the first place.
Cats with chronic enteropathy, small-intestinal disease, or exocrine pancreatic insufficiency can keep losing ground after the first round of shots. Merck notes that almost all cats with EPI are cobalamin deficient, which is one reason these cats often stay on a tighter plan than a cat with a short-lived stomach upset. Merck Veterinary Manual’s EPI page lays out that link.
So if you’re asking how often a cat can get a B12 shot, the plain answer is this: as often as the treatment plan calls for, and no more often than that. Weekly can be right. Monthly can be right. “Just give one when she seems off” is not a good plan.
| Situation | Usual Vet Schedule | What It Often Means |
|---|---|---|
| New low B12 result | Weekly shots for 6 weeks | Body stores need to be rebuilt |
| One month after the weekly phase | Single follow-up shot | Bridges the gap before retesting |
| Recheck comes back normal | Monthly shots or stop, based on cause | Some cats hold their level; some do not |
| Recheck stays low | Weekly or every 2 weeks | The underlying disease is still active |
| Chronic enteropathy | Often monthly after loading, sometimes tighter | Gut disease can keep draining B12 |
| EPI | Often long-term dosing | Pancreatic disease can block normal B12 handling |
| Appetite lifts after shots, then drops | Weekly or every 2 weeks | Clinical response is fading before the next dose |
| Missed dose | Give when remembered, then reset the schedule | Do not stack two doses together |
What Current Veterinary Sources Say
The clearest published protocol for cats comes from the Texas A&M Gastrointestinal Laboratory’s cobalamin protocol: weekly injections for 6 weeks, one dose a month later, then retesting one month after the last shot. That same page notes that cats whose level stays low may need weekly or biweekly dosing to continue.
That’s why bloodwork still matters even when your cat seems brighter. A cat can look better after a few injections and still need more time on the same schedule. The shot is only one part of the plan. Food trials, gut treatment, pancreatic treatment, or both may still be needed.
Signs A Recheck Should Happen Sooner
Call your vet sooner than planned if you notice any of these:
- Appetite drops off before the next scheduled shot
- Weight loss starts again
- Loose stool or vomiting returns
- Your cat seems weak, flat, or less interested in food
- You missed doses and aren’t sure how to restart
A shorter interval can be useful, but only when it is tied to a clear reason. Guessing can blur the picture and make it harder to tell whether the disease itself is getting better.
Giving B12 Shots At Home
Many cats get B12 under the skin at home after a vet tech or vet shows the method. If you’ve been taught the technique, home dosing can be low-stress and quick. If you have not been shown how, don’t wing it.
VCA’s page on giving injections to cats shows the usual subcutaneous method: lift a tent of skin, place the needle into the loose tissue under the skin, and avoid giving extra medicine if you are unsure the full dose went in.
Home Shot Routine That Keeps Things Simple
- Set the same weekday and time for each dose.
- Use the dose and needle size your vet prescribed.
- Rotate injection spots so one area does not get sore.
- Mark each dose on a calendar right after giving it.
- If a dose is missed, ask whether to reset the schedule from that day.
| Home Check | What To Do | Why It Matters |
|---|---|---|
| Correct vial and dose | Match the label to the vet plan each time | Prevents mix-ups |
| Needle placement | Use the subcutaneous site you were shown | Keeps the shot where it belongs |
| Calendar tracking | Write down the date right away | Stops missed or doubled doses |
| Cat moves mid-shot | Pause and call the clinic if you are unsure | Avoids giving extra by guesswork |
| Mild sting | Watch for brief discomfort only | Short-lived stinging can happen |
| Ongoing symptoms | Book a recheck sooner | The interval or diagnosis may need work |
Can You Give A Cat B12 Shots Too Often?
B12 is a water-soluble vitamin, so overdosing problems are uncommon. Still, that does not mean extra shots are smart. More frequent dosing than your vet planned can muddy the recheck, hide a slipping disease pattern, and push you into a cycle of treating the number without fixing the reason behind it.
A better rule is this: give B12 on the schedule your cat has earned through bloodwork and symptoms. Not by guesswork. Not by habit. Not because the vial is sitting in the fridge.
What To Ask At The Next Vet Visit
If your cat is already on B12, these questions keep the plan clear:
- Was the first low B12 tied to bowel disease, EPI, pancreatitis, or something else?
- When should the next blood recheck happen?
- Should the next phase be weekly, every 2 weeks, monthly, or stopped?
- What signs at home mean the timing should change?
- Should oral B12 be an option later?
That gives you a real dosing plan instead of a loose guess. For most cats, that’s the difference between a short course and long-term maintenance.
References & Sources
- Texas A&M Gastrointestinal Laboratory.“Cobalamin Information.”States the common feline protocol of weekly injections for 6 weeks, one dose a month later, and retesting after the last dose.
- Merck Veterinary Manual.“Exocrine Pancreatic Insufficiency in Dogs and Cats.”Explains why cats with EPI often become cobalamin deficient and may need ongoing treatment.
- VCA Animal Hospitals.“Giving Injections to Cats.”Shows standard subcutaneous injection technique and notes not to give extra medicine when a full dose is uncertain.
