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Cat Scratcher Placement: Where to Put It So Your Cat Actually Uses It

by WeBoost Marketing 03 Jul 2026

Cat scratchers are often bought after the sofa has already suffered. I see this all the time with cat owners. The cat has picked one corner of the couch, or one rug near the hallway, and by the time the new scratcher arrives, everyone is hoping the cat will somehow understand the plan.

Usually, they don’t.

Not because cats are being naughty. Most of the time, the scratcher is just sitting in a place that makes sense to us, not to the cat. A neat corner near the wall may look tidy, but if your cat never walks past that corner, wakes up there, plays there, or marks that area, there is no real reason for them to use it.

So the first rule is simple: don’t start with where the scratcher looks good. Start with where your cat is already trying to scratch.

Your Cat Has Probably Already Chosen the Spot

Before moving anything, look at the damage you already have.

If the sofa arm is scratched, that tells you your cat probably likes a tall, firm surface. If the rug is being pulled up, they may prefer horizontal scratching. If the marks are near a doorway, that spot may be part of their daily route through the home. Cats do a lot of quiet “mapping” with their bodies. They sleep in certain places, walk the same paths, pause near certain corners, and scratch where the spot feels useful.

Scratching is not only about claw care. It is also stretching, scent marking, and releasing energy. A 2024 Frontiers in Veterinary Science study on unwanted scratching in domestic cats looked at 1,211 cats and linked unwanted scratching with environmental and behavioural factors, including play patterns and night activity. That is a helpful reminder for owners: this is not just a “buy a product and fix it” problem. It is a home setup problem.

Put the Scratcher Where the Habit Already Exists

Sofa Scratching Needs a Sofa-Side Answer

If your cat scratches the sofa, put the scratcher beside the scratched part of the sofa. Right beside it.

I know that sounds a bit annoying, because nobody really wants a scratching post sitting next to their best-looking couch. But at the beginning, you are not decorating. You are redirecting a habit.

A cat who has been scratching that sofa corner for weeks already has a routine. Maybe they wake up, walk over, stretch, scratch, then look for breakfast. Maybe they do it when you sit down in the evening because the lounge room is the social centre of the house. If the new scratcher is across the room, you are asking the cat to break the routine and invent a new one. That is a big ask.

For a sofa scratcher, height matters. The post should let your cat stretch their front legs properly. It also needs to stay steady when they pull. A light, wobbly post can put a cat off very quickly.

Don’t Move It Too Soon

Once your cat starts using the scratcher, leave it there for a while. Let the new habit become boringly normal.

After that, you can move it a little if needed. Not across the room in one go. Just a small shift every few days. Cats often cope better with tiny changes than sudden ones.

Cat scratching the mat under a cat scratcher after resting near the sofa

Put One Near the Sleepy Stretch Zone

A lot of scratching happens just after sleep. Watch your cat in the morning or after an afternoon nap. Many cats wake up, arch their back, stretch the front legs, spread the toes, and then scratch the nearest good surface.

If the nearest good surface is your bed base, that is what they use.

This is why I like placing a scratcher near a favourite nap spot. Beside the sofa. Near the window bed. Close to the bedroom doorway. Somewhere your cat naturally passes through when they are still half sleepy and ready to stretch.

It does not always need to be a huge post. Some cats will use a simple cardboard board in a quiet room. Others prefer an angled scratcher because it lets them lean into the movement. The “best” option depends less on what looks impressive online and more on how your cat already uses their body.

Don’t Crowd the Food or Litter Area

People often try to make one “cat corner” with everything in it: food, water, litter tray, bed, toys, and scratcher. It looks organised, but cats do not always love that setup.

Scratching is active. Toileting needs privacy. Eating should feel relaxed. If all of these things are pushed into one small space, some cats will still manage, but many will avoid one of the resources.

If you use an extra large cat litter box, give the scratcher some distance from that area. The litter zone should feel clean and private, not like a play station.

The same goes for feeding. If your cat eats wet cat food in the kitchen, do not put a cardboard scratcher so close that it gets damp, sticky, or smells like dinner. Nearby can work. Right next to the bowl is usually not ideal.

For homes using tofu cat litter australia products in the laundry or bathroom, I would place the scratcher just outside the room or along the route out, rather than beside the tray itself. That way, your cat can still scratch as part of their movement through the house without mixing every daily activity into one corner.

A Small Placement Guide I’d Actually Use

This is not a strict rulebook. It is more like a practical way to read your cat’s behaviour.

What your cat does What it may mean What to try
Scratches the sofa arm after waking Wants a tall, stable stretch Place a vertical post beside that sofa arm
Pulls at rugs or mats Prefers horizontal resistance Try a flat cardboard board near the rug
Scratches near doors Marks a route or transition point Add a slim post near the doorway
Scratches after zoomies Needs to release energy Put a board along the running path
Scratches when guests visit May be excited or unsettled Place a sturdy option in a familiar room
Multiple cats use one lounge area One scratcher may not be enough Use two options in separate spots

Make the First Few Uses Easy

When your cat touches the scratcher, even briefly, reward the moment. A soft “good girl” or “good boy” is enough for some cats. Food-motivated cats may respond better to a tiny piece of freeze dried cat treats.

Keep it low-key. The goal is not to make your cat perform. You are just helping them realise, “Oh, this surface works.”

A wand toy can help too. Drag it lightly across the scratcher and let your cat pounce or hook their claws into it. Catnip may work for some cats, but not all. And please don’t grab your cat’s paws and scrape them on the post. Some tolerate it; many hate it. If the first experience feels forced, the scratcher can become something they avoid.

If They Still Choose the Sofa

Go back to the basics.

Is the scratcher tall enough? Is it heavy enough? Is the surface similar to what your cat already likes? Is it truly beside the problem area, or just “near enough” from a human point of view?

You can make the sofa less satisfying for a short period with a smooth cover or pet-safe double-sided tape. At the same time, make the scratcher more obvious and rewarding. This works better than scolding, because scratching is normal behaviour. Your cat needs an acceptable place to do it.

Final Thoughts

Good scratcher placement starts with observation. Look at where your cat sleeps, stretches, walks, plays, and already leaves claw marks. Then place the scratcher inside that routine, not outside it.

Once the location makes sense to your cat, everything becomes easier. For a calmer home, healthier claws, and fewer sofa battles, explore Petroom’s range of cat scratchers and choose one that fits the way your cat actually lives.

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