Best Cat Litter Boxes: What Actually Works

Choosing a litter box sounds simple. It’s just a box for poop, right?

Turns out it’s more complicated than you’d think.

I’ve been through this whole journey with Didi. Here’s what actually works.

## The Three Types

### Open Boxes

The classic plastic tray.

**Good:** Cheap ($10-20), easy to clean, cats can see around them

**Bad:** Litter goes everywhere. I mean EVERYWHERE.

My floor was a disaster zone until I got a litter mat.

### Covered Boxes

Box with a dome lid.

**Good:** Litter stays inside, gives privacy, dogs can’t get in

**Bad:** Can trap smell inside. Cats hate stinky boxes. Also some cats feel trapped.

Pro tip: If you get one, scoop it twice as often.

### Self-Cleaning

The robot ones that rake themselves.

**Good:** Less work for you

**Bad:** $200-500, breaks sometimes, some cats are terrified of the motor noise

My friend’s cat wouldn’t go near one for weeks. Waste of money.

## What Size?

Bigger is better. Always.

Your cat needs room to turn around and dig. If the box is too small, they might… find other places.

Didi used to hang her butt over the edge. Upgraded to XL size. Problem solved.

## How Many?

One box per cat, plus one extra.

Two cats = three boxes.

I know, it sounds like a lot. But it prevents so many problems.

## My Recommendation

For most people: Get a large open box with high sides. Simple and effective.

For small apartments: Covered box, but clean it more often.

Skip the $400 robot unless your cat is chill with motor sounds.

The $15 box works for 90% of cats. Don’t overcomplicate it.

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