The RSPCA and Catch Protection, the two most respected rescue organizations in the UK are urging the government to make it compulsory for cat owners to microchip their cats. Compulsory microchipping is being introduced for dogs in April 2016. They say it should also apply to the 10.5m cats in the country.

I know we are going over old ground but this is the first time that these two large rescue organizations have made a direct plea to the government to do what a lot of people consider to be common sense.
We know that micro-chipping helps reunite lost cats with their owners. That is the purpose of it and it works. It also encourages more responsible cat guardianship.
Cats Protection said that cat caretakers should be fined for failing to comply after receiving a warning. Dog owners will face a fine of up to £500 if they fail to comply with a notice which requires them to have their pet microchipped within 21 days.
Cats Protection said that it had to plant microchips in a 83% of unwanted or lost cats that it had re-homed. This obviously signifies that the vast majority of cats are not microchipped. The cost to the organization for microchipping cats that it rehomed is £900,000 a year.
The cost of microchipping is relatively low at £20-£30. Failing to microchip cats which have been lost and picked up by Cats Protection often means that the organization has to rehome them needlessly.
“When we take an unchipped cat into our care it can be very difficult to trace the owner and may well result in us re-homing a cat needlessly.”
Jacqui Cuff, the charity’s advocacy manager, referred to another benefit of cat microchipping. She said that compulsory microchipping will also help to regulate commercial cat breeding.
Cat Protection would like a fine for non-compliance with any law making it compulsory to microchip. That said they would like time to be given to the owner for her/him to get the cat microchipped and if she complied there would be no penalty.
In Britain about a quarter of households own at least one cat. In Spain and Belgium micro-chipping of cats is compulsory.
Despite the good sense of micro-chipping, the Department of Environment, Food and Rural Affairs said:
“We support micro-chipping as it can help reunite lost pets with their owners. We do not consider this should be made compulsory as cats do not present the same challenges as dogs if they stray.”
I find the government’s answer rather strange and poor. The answer is what I’d call human-centric. In other words they are thinking about the consequences to people when a companion animal strays. Dogs are more dangerous than cats and can seriously hurt people. Therefore micro-chipping dogs means that the owner can be apprehended if their dog attacks somebody. As it happens stray cats can also seriously harm people so the government’s argument from the human perspective does not stand up really.
However, if one looks at a law which makes microchipping compulsory from the perspective of the animal, it clearly makes sense to microchip cats. This is because the cat can be returned to their owner and an environment that they are familiar with. On many occasions it will also result in the cat not being euthanized because of the failure to find a fresh home. I realise that some cats in some homes are better off being rehomed.
The West (let’s say Europe and the UK) and the Australian continent are heading towards compulsory microchipping in my opinion. The only question is when. Personally I have always advocated an approach to cat ownership which is less laissez-faire than is currently in place in order to raise the bar in respect of cat ownership caretaking standards.

I feel so sorry for those who keep indoor cats and one just bolts out. They’re doomed to be killed.
Good points, Michele.
I, actually, think that mandatory microchipping makes better sense for here where free-roaming is illegal in most places. Should a cat be picked up by A.C. and taken to the kill shelter, the hope is that they will be scanned for a chip.
Just trying to make myself feel better, really. It’s more likely that they will be deemed feral and killed.
Next step may be compulsory microchipping of people. The Orwellian state marches on.
Even if microchipping cats became compulsory it would cost far too much time and financial resources to police it. As most dogs outside are on a lead or under the control of their owners, it makes random scanning for a microchip much easier than it would be with free roaming cat in the UK. Unless of course the intention is that cats and dogs will only be scanned during routine trips to the vet or if they become lost?
Responsible owners already neuter, vaccinate and microchip their pets. I don’t see that legislation would create a huge surge in uptake, especially where people keep their cats indoor only.
What happens when people plead poverty? Do the charities still end up footing the bill to microchip the cat for the owner or does the cat automatically get surrendered for re-homing?
Much as I support the idea of all pets being microchipped, I’m just not sure how easy it is to put into practise.
Perhaps it should apply to both. It’ll happen one day.
Not sure that I believe in any forcing except when it comes to neutering.