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🐱 Litter Box Count Calculator

Enter your number of cats and number of floors/levels in your home to get a recommended litter box count.

Recommended Litter Box Count
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Recommended Minimum Box Length
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N+1 rule: number of cats + 1 Β· We also recommend at least one box per floor, since cats may not want to travel between floors, and take the larger of the two figures.

A commonly cited veterinary-behaviorist guideline is that litter box length should be at least 1.5x the cat's body length (nose to base of tail).

This calculator provides a general guideline based on commonly published reference ranges β€” individual cats, breeds, and multi-cat household dynamics vary, so please consult a veterinarian or feline behavior specialist for advice specific to your cat.

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GUIDE

Learn more

01

Why "Number of Cats + 1"?

The "N+1 rule" for litter boxes (provide one box per cat, plus one extra) is a guideline widely cited by veterinary behaviorists and referenced throughout animal welfare and shelter medicine literature. Cats can experience sharing a litter box as stressful or treat it as contested territory, and having an extra box available is commonly believed to help reduce inappropriate elimination (accidents outside the box).

Number of CatsRecommended Boxes (N+1)
12
23
34

This calculator also factors in homes with multiple floors: regardless of cat count, it recommends at least one box per floor, since cats may not want to travel between levels every time they need to go. This is a general reference guideline, not a substitute for individual advice from a veterinarian or feline behavior specialist.
02

Box Sizing: The 1.5x Body Length Guideline

Box count matters, but so does size. A commonly cited veterinary-behaviorist guideline is that litter box length should be at least 1.5 times the cat's body length (measured from the nose to the base of the tail). A box that's too small can make it hard for a cat to turn around fully or dig/cover after eliminating, which can lead to litter box avoidance.

For example, a cat with a 18-inch (45cm) body length would need a box at least 45 Γ— 1.5 = 67.5cm (about 26.5 in) long. Many commercially sold litter boxes fall short of this, which is why some owners repurpose large storage bins or under-bed containers as litter boxes.

Frequently asked questions

I only have one cat β€” do I really need two litter boxes?
Under the N+1 rule, yes. The extra box means a clean option is always available between cleanings, and gives an alternative if one box becomes blocked or heavily soiled, which is believed to help reduce inappropriate elimination.
Why does the number of floors matter?
Cats may not want to travel to a different floor when they need to go. This calculator takes the larger of "number of cats + 1" and "number of floors" so that multi-level homes still have at least one box per floor.
Should I follow this calculator's result exactly?
This calculator gives a general guideline based on commonly published reference ranges β€” individual cats, breeds, and multi-cat household dynamics vary, so please consult a veterinarian or feline behavior specialist for advice specific to your cat, especially if you're dealing with litter box avoidance issues.