How To Spot The Difference Between Calico and Tortie Cats

35 comments

Calico and tortoiseshell cats are best known for their beautiful multicolored coats of black, orange and white - and their “tortitude”.

Both “calico” and “tortoiseshell” are terms that refer to the color and pattern of a cat’s coat and do not actually refer to the cat’s breed. So a domestic shorthair cat can be a tortoiseshell just as much as a Japanese Bobtail can be a calico cat!

To the untrained eye, these gorgeous mosaic-furred felines can be easily confused for one another.

So, how can you spot the difference between a calico cat and a tortoiseshell cat? Read on!

Tortoiseshell Cats

A longhaired tortoiseshell cat

Tortoiseshell Cats, often called “torties” for short, have a combination of two colors, normally black and orange displaying in a patchwork or mosaic. Their mottled coats are as a result of what genetics call Lyonization.

These colors can come in various shades of dilution, from soft grey to brown, ginger, cream, amber, red, and cinnamon - called dilute torties. A dilute tortie may have blue and cream fur instead of black and orange. 

However, tortoiseshell cats have no white at all.  

 

Calico Cats

Calico cats are also referred to as “tricolor” or “tortie-and-white” - and sometimes even "piebald" cats! Why? Because calico cats have the same black and orange color as a tortoiseshell cat - but with white, too!

A longhaired calico cat sprawled out on an ottoman.

This is the main difference between a calico cat and a tortoiseshell cat. And it all comes down to genetics. Calico cats have an additional genetic condition at work called "piebalding" in which white (i.e. unpigmented) skin and fur is expressed. These patches of white may be rather small and interwoven, or relatively large and cover almost the entire body.

Even a cat with mottled tortoiseshell patches will be considered a calico if she has significant amounts of white in her coloring thanks to her genetics! 

Like torties, calico cats can also come in dilutes.

A dilute calico cat curled up with its cute toe beans showing.A dilute calico with cute pink toe beans.

 

"Torbie" or Tortoiseshell Tabbies

You may have heard the term “torbie” being tossed around, too. Torbie is short for “tortoiseshell tabby”,  and is a patched tabby, or one with brown tabby patterns instead of black fur.

A calico cat with gray tabby stripes looking at the camera.

Did you know that almost ALL calico and tortie cats are born female? Male tortoiseshell or calico cats are possible, but extremely rare. The allele that determines tortoiseshell expression is carried on the X chromosome, of which females have two (XX), one expressing orange and one expressing black, simultaneously.

Males only have one X chromosome (XY), and the allele is not carried on the Y chromosome - so they are normally either all orange, or all black. Rarely, a male can inherit two X chromosomes along with the Y chromosome (XXY), which would then undergo Lyonization just as in a female cat. This is known as Klinefelter Syndrome, which renders the cat sterile and can cause cognitive and developmental issues as well as other medical difficulties. 

Updated 4/21/23

Sources: bio.miami.edu/dana/dox/calico.html, https://letstalkscience.ca/educational-resources/stem-in-context/science-behind-calico-cats-colours

 


35 comments


  • Karen

    I rescued my Torbie 7 years ago at 7 weeks. She is a darling girl with a ‘tude! If I tell her no loudly and point a finger, she’ll take a swing at me. She head butts to be petted. She also carries on full conversations with me, answering when I ask her how breakfast etc was. She has been amazing company, especially during our Covid lockdown.

    She was the runt of her litter, always hiding. She still does. If someone comes to my door, she’s under the bed instantly, even if my daughter comes to visit.

    I love her to bits!


  • Marion Faint

    Love all the cat chat.I used to breed Siamese and Burmese and loved all the. babies.Now retired I have rescue cats,The last one is Maia arrived just before ‘Lockdown’
    She is a calico cat, and I must say that of all the cats that I have been privalidged to live with SHE is amazing!
    and without doubt the most clever and best company ever


  • Vicki Simpson

    I have 3 tuxedo, polydactyl females. One just had 6 kittens and every one of them is also polydactyl. The males are tuxedo, females are tortie/calico? Very little white, but some. I have been trying to decide what they are.. The paws have white on the toes, a splash on the face. They are 5 weeks old today, were born July 4th. The first food I gave them (softened cat chow with a little canned kitten food), they jumped in it and ate like they’d been doing it before. Drank water, too. I was surprised but pleased. The mother is still nursing also. They are so lively and cute and FEARLESS! One of my nosey pugss has gotten his butt kicked a couple of times by the mother, but the kittens will find him asleep and snuggle up to him. I just love them all!!. Thanks for listening/reading.


  • Vicki Simpson

    I have 3 tuxedo, polydactyl females. One just had 6 kittens and every one of them is also polydactyl. The males are tuxedo, females are tortie/calico? Very little white, but some. I have been trying to decide what they are.. The paws have white on the toes, a splash on the face. They are 5 weeks old today, were born July 4th. The first food I gave them (softened cat chow with a little canned kitten food), they jumped in it and ate like they’d been doing it before. Drank water, too. I was surprised but pleased. The mother is still nursing also. They are so lively and cute and FEARLESS! One of my nosey pugss has gotten his butt kicked a couple of times by the mother, but the kittens will find him asleep and snuggle up to him. I just love them all!!. Thanks for listening/reading.


  • Jamie Hill

    hi


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