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    Best cat tree for Burmese in a rented flat

    This is a specific conversation about Cat trees — what makes a good one — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    So you're renting — which rules out wall-mounted options entirely, and that's fine, but it does mean the freestanding tree you choose has to work harder. The most important things in any cat tree are stability and height: it must not wobble when a cat launches off it at full speed, and cats feel safest when they can get genuinely high up. Cheap trees fail on both counts and get ignored within a week. Before I point you in the right direction — how big is your Burmese, and how active and climby would you say they are? And how much floor space can you realistically spare?
    She's a four-year-old Burmese, pretty standard size — maybe 4kg. She's incredibly active, always jumping and climbing. I'm in a one-bed flat so space is limited, maybe a 60–70cm footprint at most.
    inparticular.ai
    Perfect — Burmese are one of the most athletic cat breeds going, so she'll use every inch of height you give her and she'll test the stability properly. At 4kg she's not huge, but the force she'll generate launching off a high platform is what matters, not her resting weight. For a compact footprint in a rental, I'd look at the Feandrea 67-inch cat tree — it comes in around 60×60cm at the base, hits about 170cm tall, and the base is genuinely weighted and solid. It won't shift when she launches off the top platform, which is exactly what you need. Can I ask — does she tend to scratch sisal, or does she go for other textures?
    View FEANDREA Cat Tree Multi-Level on Amazon
    Sisal definitely — she destroys sisal scratching posts. She mostly ignores the carpet ones.
    inparticular.ai
    Good, because the Feandrea 67-inch is wrapped in sisal on the posts, not carpet, which is the right call for a serious scratcher. The platforms have plush on them for resting, but the scratch surfaces are proper sisal throughout. That combination works well for active cats who scratch hard and sleep hard in roughly equal measure. The assembly is straightforward and takes about an hour — importantly for a tenant, it's entirely freestanding with no fixings needed at all. It's available on Amazon UK, usually around £80–100 depending on the variant, and the reviews specifically from people with larger active cats are consistently good on stability. That's the one I'd go for in your situation.
    That sounds great. Is there anything I should do to make it more stable once it's assembled?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — a couple of things. First, place it in a corner if you can, even just loosely near a wall. The tree won't touch the wall but the psychological security of a corner placement can help a nervous cat commit to the high platforms. Second, tighten every bolt properly during assembly and then go back and re-tighten everything after about a week of use, once the wood and fittings have settled. Loose bolts are the number one reason these trees develop wobble over time. If you do both of those things, this tree will stay solid for years — and for a rental, it leaves no marks and no fixings at all.
    Perfect, that's really helpful. Thanks.

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

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