Cat Won’t Use Its Bed? Why, and How to Fix It

You bought a soft, well-reviewed bed, and your cat sniffed it once and went back to sleeping on your laundry. It is one of the most common complaints cat owners have, and it almost never means you bought the wrong bed. It usually means the bed is in the wrong place, or it does not smell right yet. Here is how to fix it.

It is probably the location, not the bed

Cats choose where to sleep based on warmth, height, and safety, in that rough order. A great bed shoved into a cold corner on the floor breaks all three. Before you give up, move the bed to a spot your cat already naps in on its own. A sunny windowsill, the arm of the couch you sit on, a shelf with a view of the room. Nine times out of ten, the bed starts getting used once it moves somewhere the cat already liked.

Make it smell familiar

A new bed smells like the factory, not like home. Rub it with a blanket or piece of clothing your cat already sleeps on, or leave the bed near where they nap for a few days so it picks up the household scent. You can also add a small amount of catnip or a treat inside to create a positive first association.

Do not force it

Picking your cat up and placing it in the bed over and over tends to backfire. Cats want the choice to be theirs. Set the bed up, make it appealing, and let curiosity do the work. Pressure just teaches the cat that the bed is a thing that gets it grabbed.

Match the bed to the cat

If you have tried moving it and scenting it and the cat still refuses, the style might genuinely be wrong. A cat that likes to hide will ignore a flat open mat but adopt an enclosed cave. A cat that sprawls will reject a tight donut. Watch how your cat sleeps and match that shape. Our guide to the best cat beds sorts options by sleep style if you need to switch.

Give it time

Cats are suspicious of new things by design. Two or three weeks is a fair trial before you conclude a bed is a failure. Many beds that seem rejected in week one become a favorite by week three, once the cat has watched it long enough to decide it is safe.

When it is worth a second look

Sudden changes in where your cat sleeps, or avoiding a spot it used to love, can occasionally signal discomfort or a health issue, especially in older cats. If the change is abrupt and comes with other signs like hiding or less appetite, it is worth a vet conversation rather than a new bed.

Frequently asked questions

Why does my cat sleep on the floor instead of the bed?

Often the floor is cooler or the bed is in a spot the cat does not feel safe. Try moving the bed to a warmer, higher, quieter location the cat already favors.

How long before a cat accepts a new bed?

Give it two to three weeks. Cats warm up to new objects slowly, and many beds that look rejected early become favorites once they smell familiar.

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