The Best Automatic Cat Litter Boxes

With these high-tech cat boxes, gone are the days of bending over, scooping, and covering your nose. Welcome to the future.

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Featured in this article

Best Overall

Whisker Litter-Robot 4
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Best Upgrade

Whisker LitterHopper Attachment
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Runner-Up

Petkit PuraMax 2
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Best for Helicopter Parents

Petkit Purobot Ultra
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Photograph: Molly Higgins

Not Recommended

PetSnowy Snow+ Self-Cleaning Litter Box for $680: This box looks like something from Kubrick’s visions of space travel, or if Eames started making plastic litter boxes. It takes up quite a bit of horizontal floor space, so it may not be ideal for those in cramped apartments looking to conserve space. The globe is inside the box, hidden from view, and the cat has to climb up, go under a curtain, and enter the globe from the right side while inside. Unlike all others on this list, this globe is closed during cleaning, which could cause injury if the machine malfunctioned and didn’t sense a cat. The box also doesn’t tell you when the litter’s low or needs to be refilled. My cats had a really hard time using it—they just couldn’t understand that it was a litter box. Older cats could have a tough time jumping into it and the smaller opening could be a problem if you have bigger cats. It might be great for someone who wants to keep things tidy—it’s extremely clean, smells good, and hugely reduces litter tracking. However, we just can't recommend the box since the opening closes during cleaning, which is not safe (see intro).

The Pet Zone Smart Scoop for $166: This is probably the least “smart” automatic litter box we've tested—it's a typical rectangular plastic box with an automatic arm that acts as a rake and scoops the clumped (soiled) litter into a small bin on the other side. Once the cat leaves, it begins a 15-minute countdown and the rake slides over the length of the box, (ideally) scooping up the waste and lifting it into the receptacle. You’re only allowed to fill the litter box with about an inch and a half of litter, which my cats didn’t like (they prefer a few inches to really bury it). The rake doesn’t stop when it's in the cleaning cycle—even if something jumps in. Luckily my cats were never brave enough to try this, but when I stuck my hand in there during cleaning, the rake continued on without stopping, which is potentially dangerous. My cats tend to pee on the side of the litter box, which, because of the rake’s placement, means it misses an inch on either side—I still had to scrape the caked-on litter from the edges. It starts the cycle so soon after it detects use (and the cycle timing can’t be adjusted) that the litter didn’t have time to clump completely; the rake would immediately break it down into smaller clumps that would then be missed because they were too small. This box is the least expensive option on the list, and would work if you’re someone who really hates cleaning the litter box but doesn’t want to spend big bucks. For me, it’s not worth it, and I’d rather just scoop it myself.