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are calico cats only female

Calico cats are not only female, but they are almost all female—about 99.9% of calicos are girls, with very rare male exceptions.

Why most calicos are female

  • Calico coloring (patches of black and orange with white) is controlled by genes on the X chromosome.
  • Female cats are XX, so they can carry one gene for black and one for orange on their two X chromosomes, producing the classic tri-color pattern.
  • Male cats are usually XY, so they normally get either black or orange, but not both together in calico form.

Are there male calico cats?

  • Very rarely, a male cat is born with an extra X chromosome (XXY), a condition similar to Klinefelter’s syndrome in humans.
  • These XXY males can be calico, but they are estimated at roughly 1 in 3,000 calico cats and are usually sterile and may have some health vulnerabilities.

Quick genetics snapshot

  • To be calico, a cat needs:
    • Two X chromosomes (for both orange and black).
* A separate gene that adds the white patches.
  • That’s why people say “calico = female”: it’s not a strict rule, but a very reliable rule of thumb with rare genetic exceptions.

TL;DR: When people ask “are calico cats only female,” the practical answer is “almost yes”—they’re overwhelmingly female, with a tiny number of usually sterile XXY males.

Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.