How to Choose the Right Cat Bed for Your Cat

Walk into any pet store and the cat bed aisle looks like it was designed to confuse you. Donuts, caves, hammocks, heated pads, flat mats. The truth is that the right bed has almost nothing to do with which one looks nicest and almost everything to do with how your cat already sleeps. Here is how to narrow it down before you spend money on something that ends up as a rug.

Start by watching how your cat sleeps

Spend a few days paying attention to your cat’s default sleeping shape. It tells you exactly what to buy.

A cat that curls into a tight ball wants walls. A donut bed with a raised rim or an enclosed cave gives it something to press against, which is where it feels safe. A cat that sprawls flat on its side or back wants space, so a flat open mat or a large rectangular bed with low sides suits it better. Force a sprawler into a small donut and it will sleep next to it instead of in it.

Match the bed to your cat’s age and temperature

Kittens and young cats generate plenty of heat and rarely need a warm bed. Older cats are the opposite. Stiff joints respond to gentle warmth, so a senior cat often takes to a heated bed faster than anything else you can offer. If your cat is always hunting for warm spots, on the router, in a sunbeam, on top of the fridge, that is a clear vote for some kind of heat, whether a low-wattage heated bed or a no-cord self-warming mat.

Think about where it goes before you buy the size

A bed only works if it sits where your cat already wants to sleep. Measure that spot. A huge bed that cannot fit on the windowsill your cat loves is a wasted purchase. Cats also like height and a view, so a bed near a window or up off the floor usually beats one tucked in a corner.

Prioritize washable

Every cat bed gets fur, dander, and the occasional hairball. The single feature that decides whether a bed lasts a year is whether you can throw it in the machine. Beds with removable covers or fully washable construction stay usable. Beds that fall apart in the wash get thrown out. Check this before anything else.

What about material

Plush and shag fabrics feel cozy and most cats love them, but long-haired cats leave fur woven into them. Felt and wool caves resist odor and hold their shape but usually need hand washing. There is no perfect material, so weigh softness against how much cleaning you are willing to do.

Once you know your cat’s sleep shape, age, and the spot the bed will live in, the choice gets simple. If you want concrete picks sorted by exactly these needs, see our roundup of the best cat beds for every sleep style.

Frequently asked questions

What size cat bed should I get?

Big enough for your cat to curl up comfortably, but cozy enough to feel secure. For curlers, snug is good. For sprawlers, measure your cat stretched out and add a few inches.

Do cats even need a bed?

They will sleep fine without one, but a dedicated bed gives them a warm, safe spot of their own, which matters more for older cats, cold homes, or anxious cats that want an enclosed place to hide.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Scroll to Top