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    Best scratching post for Ragdoll kittens

    This is a specific conversation about Cat scratching posts — ones they'll actually use — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A Ragdoll outgrowing their first post at 7 months is completely normal — they're one of the slowest-maturing breeds and can keep growing until they're 4 years old, so a kitten post was always going to be a short-term solution. Most cats ignore scratching posts because they're too short, too wobbly, or the wrong material. Cats need a post tall enough for a full stretch and solid enough that it doesn't rock when they lean into it. Before I point you in the right direction: roughly how big is your kitten now, does he or she scratch vertically or horizontally, and what are they currently going after around the house?
    She's already about 5kg and still growing. Definitely a vertical scratcher — she goes for the sofa arms and the side of the bookcase. The old post just tips over when she tries to use it properly.
    inparticular.ai
    That tipping is exactly why she's ignoring it and going for the furniture instead — she's learned the post isn't trustworthy. At 5kg with more growth ahead, she needs something built like it means it. What's the surface she seems most drawn to — the sofa fabric, or the wooden bookcase edge?
    Mostly the sofa, which is a woven fabric. The bookcase occasionally but the sofa is the main target.
    inparticular.ai
    Woven fabric scratchers tend to love sisal rope — it has a similar drag and texture to what they're already enjoying on the sofa, so it's a natural redirect. For a large-breed vertical scratcher who's still growing, I'd go with the Feandrea 71cm Tall Cat Scratching Post. It's 71cm high, which gives a full adult stretch even for a big Ragdoll, and the base is genuinely heavy and wide — it will not tip when she leans into it at full weight. The sisal wrapping is thick and tightly wound, so it lasts well rather than shredding apart in a few weeks. It's a straightforward floor post rather than a tower, which suits a cat who prefers vertical scratching on a static surface. You can find it on Amazon UK for around £25–30. Place it right next to the sofa initially — where she already wants to scratch — then you can gradually move it once she's using it consistently.
    View FEANDREA Cat Tree Multi-Level on Amazon
    That sounds good. Is 71cm actually tall enough for a full-grown Ragdoll though? I've read they can get huge.
    inparticular.ai
    Fair question. The average fully-stretched Ragdoll reaches about 70–75cm nose to tail base when standing on hind legs, so 71cm is right at the threshold. If she ends up at the larger end — some females stay around 6–7kg, males can hit 9–10kg — you might eventually want to look at a 90cm+ post when she's fully grown. But at 7 months, the Feandrea will serve her well through the rest of her adolescence and give you time to see how big she actually gets before investing in a second upgrade. It's a much better fit than anything marketed as a kitten post.
    Perfect, that makes sense. I'll grab that one. Thanks.
    inparticular.ai
    Good luck with it — put it right against the sofa arm for the first week or two and she should take to it quickly. Ragdolls are generally pretty willing to redirect once they have something that actually works for them.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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