Cat breath

I'd ask a vet and consider what you're feeding them. When I was a boy, we had some free-roaming cats that laired with us. We fed them, but they still went out hunting at night because that was their nature. They bought back dead rats for us and no doubt they sometimes ate bits of dead rat. Their breath was fine, didn't smell at all. Maybe your cat is ill or maybe your cat's diet disagrees with it. It's probably worth getting some expert advice about it.
 
I'd ask a vet and consider what you're feeding them. When I was a boy, we had some free-roaming cats that laired with us. We fed them, but they still went out hunting at night because that was their nature. They bought back dead rats for us and no doubt they sometimes ate bits of dead rat. Their breath was fine, didn't smell at all. Maybe your cat is ill or maybe your cat's diet disagrees with it. It's probably worth getting some expert advice about it.

When dogs and cats eat raw bone* it scrapes against their teeth and cleans them which is why their breath is better.

*Cooked bones are brittle, harder to digest and are prone to splintering. This can prove lethal so never give your pet a cooked bone.
 
I brush my dog's teeth with poultry flavoured toothpaste and a normal economy brush (tends to have stiffer bristles). They love the taste of it so brushing is easy enough.
 
Winston gets his teeth brushed once a week with a soft rubber finger brush and Logic cat toothpaste. He is also fed raw, and as a result doesn't have stank (ham bone!) breath.
 
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