Some cats leap onto a new tree the first day; others need a nudge. This guide keeps things positive and low-stress so your cat chooses the tree on their own. No forcing and no frustration.
Cats are routine-driven. If your cat loves window watching or being near you, put the tree in that zone.
Do this now (2 minutes):
Make the tree the source of good things.
Timing: Reward any interaction such as a sniff, a paw on the base, a jump to the first perch. Small wins stack up.
No picking up and placing. Let your cat choose.
If your cat walks away, that’s okay. End on a success (even a sniff) and try again later.
Give the “okay to scratch here” signal.
Surface match tip: If your cat loves horizontal scratching, add a low scratcher next to the tree, then gradually shift attention to the vertical sisal post.
Kittens: Keep early victories easy—lower perches, 3–5 minute play bursts, soft landing mats around the base.
Seniors or mobility limits: Prefer wide, low steps and ramps. Avoid big jumps; create a smooth step-up route (base → mid perch → favorite perch).
Helpful picks:
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Day 1–2: Explore
Day 3: First climb
Day 4: Build confidence
Day 5: Make it a habit
Progress isn’t linear. If your cat stalls, roll back one step and repeat the easy win.
Move the tree to a favorite zone, schedule play before meals, and end play on the tree. Try a new texture (sisal vs carpet).
Lower the goal to the base or first perch and reward tiny steps. Improve stability (grip pads, corner placement, shims) → Click Here
Shorter sessions, calmer rewards. Skip catnip for now. Use gentle target taps instead of fast toy motions.
Give two routes up/down and two perches at similar heights to reduce guarding. Add a second scratcher nearby.
Anywhere from a single session to a couple weeks. Most cats build a habit in 5–10 short sessions when the tree is placed well and rewards are consistent.
Both—it depends on the cat. If it causes zoomies, skip it during training and use silvervine or food rewards instead.
Make the couch less fun for a week (double-sided tape) and prime the sisal post with scent + sound. Reward the first scratch on the tree like it’s a jackpot.
Yes—choose low-jump designs with wide steps and place them in social zones. Add rugs at landing zones and check stability weekly. If you’re looking for cat trees for senior or older cats, checkout our recommendations here → Click Here
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