shes a female around 2-3 years of age and we have never ever had any problems with her peeing, she usually goes inside the litter box. We took her to the doctor and they ave her antibiotics so we dont think its a urinary track infection. The only reason i know is the new changes in our household which was nothing big. My grandmother moved into a room she barely ever goes into, and my brother from colllege came back for winter break in my room. We put her into the laundry room to make sure she doesnt pee on the beds, but riht when we take her out she does it again. I cant ever give away this cat, so please someone give me answer on how to solve htis problem
also, we have had significant changes with the cats such as that we got a dog and moved houses. We also have another male cat as long as weve had the female.




4 Responses to “How can i make my female cat stop peeing on beds in the house?”

  1. J C

    it can take more than one round of an antibiotic, or even a different (stronger) antibiotic to get rid of a UTI. Taking her back to the vet to be rechecked would be a good thing to do. And be sure you are cleaning the areas she’s peed in with an enzymatic cleaner like Nature’s Miracle or Simple Solution. She may be smelling the spots where she had gone before, and is re-marking them. The trick to using these things is that you need to *saturate* the area that she peed – it needs to thoroughly soak through every layer of the mattress and box spring. Get a gallon – pour it on the area. Wait about 3 days, and then repeat. It may smell when it’s wet, but that’s just it’s way of working.

    Again, clean thoroughly to destroy the smell, and get her rechecked by the vet.

  2. Felepe

    good question

  3. lilumdog

    Have a few litter boxes in obvious places and keep a water spray bottle around. Each time she pees spray her and put her in the litter box. Cats are smart and after you catch her 2 or 3 times they should stop

  4. Callie

    infection versus inflammation versus behavioral.
    Go back to vet and discuss.
    If behavioral (due to Grandma and brother back from college)–meds can be used (elavil, buspar) but must be prescribed by a vet. Also check out feliway diffusers and mists (pheromone therapy available over the net).
    Really need a vet to figure out if infection versus inflammation or behavioral to get you on the right path–good luck!

Leave a Reply

XHTML: You can use these tags: <a href="" title=""> <abbr title=""> <acronym title=""> <b> <blockquote cite=""> <cite> <code> <del datetime=""> <em> <i> <q cite=""> <strike> <strong>