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Cats · Crossbreed between the Donskoy, Oriental Shorthair and Siamese; before this, it was between the Balinese and Javanese

Peterbald

BuildOriental
CoatHairless, velour, brush,…
OriginRussia

Overview

The Peterbald is a cat breed of oriental build with a hairless, velour, brush, or straight coat coat. It traces back to Russia. It originated as a crossbreed between the Donskoy, Oriental Shorthair and Siamese; before this, it was between the Balinese and Javanese. Cats commonly live 12–18 years, so this is a long-term commitment.

Is the Peterbald right for you?

A good match if — you want an independent companion that settles into most homes; you want a cat that enjoys being handled and held; you're a first-time cat owner.

Think twice if — you have no time for the grooming this coat needs; you want a wash-and-go pet — hairless skin needs upkeep.

What a Peterbald needs from you

A Peterbald needs a moderate amount of space, daily feeding and litter care, and moderate day-to-day upkeep. With little or no fur, the skin needs regular bathing to manage oils, plus warmth in winter. On closeness, this breed is happy to be handled.

A note on this profile

Measured per-breed temperament scores for cats are still being added. The fit notes above are based on coat, build, origin, development and general care needs — not yet on a tested personality profile.

Key facts

Origin
Russia
Development
Crossbreed between the Donskoy, Oriental Shorthair and Siamese; before this, it was between the Balinese and Javanese
Wild hybrid
false
Body type
Oriental
Coat
Hairless, velour, brush, or straight coat
Pattern
All

What it needs from you (at a glance)

Space neededmoderate
Experience neededlow
Maintenancemoderate
Time per dayno data yet
Need for companymoderate
Handling / closenesshigh
Cost levelmoderate

What it costs

Scaled to this breed’s roughly 5 kg and a ~15-year life, keeping a Peterbald works out at about:

Setup & first year
$963 – $1,968
Over its whole life
$11,317 – $21,859

Rough cross-breed averages in USD — a planning guide, not a quote. Break it down by life phase in the Cost Calculator →