This is a specific conversation about Cat litter — what cats actually prefer — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Getting litter habits right from week one with a Bengal kitten is genuinely one of the best things you can do — these cats are smart and form strong preferences early, so a bad start can mean litter box reluctance that's hard to unpick later. Most cats, including kittens, do best with unscented, fine-grained clumping litter — despite what the scented packaging promises, the fragrance is for you, not them, and it often puts cats off. How many cats do you have at home, have you noticed any avoidance issues yet, and do you have specific requirements like dust-free or low-tracking?
Just the one kitten, got her three days ago. No avoidance issues yet but I want to make sure it stays that way. She's using the box but I'm using whatever came with her from the breeder. Main concern is dust because I have mild asthma.
inparticular.ai
Good that she's already using it — the breeder litter gives you something to work with. What were they using, do you know? That matters because if you switch abruptly to something very different in texture, she might hesitate even if the new litter is objectively better. The dust concern is also completely valid, both for your asthma and for her developing lungs.
They were using some wood pellet litter. I don't really want to stick with that — it doesn't clump and seems hard to manage.
inparticular.ai
Wood pellets are popular with breeders because they're cheap and absorbent, but you're right — no clumping makes daily maintenance much harder, and most cats actually prefer fine-grained clumping litter when given the choice. Since she's only been on pellets for eight weeks, now is exactly the right time to transition before a strong texture preference is locked in. I'd recommend transitioning over about ten days: start with 75% pellets and 25% new litter, then shift the ratio gradually. For the litter itself, my clear recommendation is Catsan Ultra Plus clumping litter — it's widely available, genuinely low-dust which matters for your asthma, fine-grained enough that kittens take to it easily, unscented, and it clumps firmly so waste removal is straightforward. It's a reliable, no-gimmicks litter that consistently gets chosen when cats are offered options.
That sounds good. How much litter should I put in the box for a kitten, and does box size matter at this age?
inparticular.ai
Box size matters more than most people realise, especially for Bengals who tend to be active diggers. At eight weeks she's small, so she needs a box she can actually climb into easily — low-sided entry is important right now. But buy for the adult cat she'll become, not the kitten she is today; Bengals get sizeable. Aim for a box that's at least 1.5 times her adult body length. For litter depth, 5–7cm is the sweet spot — deep enough for her to dig and bury properly, which is instinctive and important for her to do consistently, but not so deep that you're wasting litter. One box is fine for a single cat, but keep it in a quiet spot she can access easily without feeling cornered.
Perfect, this has been really helpful. I'll grab the Catsan Ultra Plus and start the transition this week.
inparticular.ai
Good plan. The gradual transition is the key bit — don't rush it and she should take to it without any fuss. One last thing worth knowing with Bengals specifically: they're fastidious about box cleanliness more than most breeds. Scoop at least once a day and do a full litter change weekly, and you're very unlikely to ever have an avoidance problem. You're setting her up well.