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
Two kittens at four months — you're right in the thick of peak chaos energy. Before I get into recommendations, here's what actually matters in a cat tree: stability and height. A tree that wobbles when a cat launches off it gets abandoned fast, and cats feel safest when they can get up high. Cheap trees fail on both counts — the base is too light, the posts too thin. For two cats, you also need enough platforms that they're not constantly fighting over the same spot. So — how much floor space can you give it, and do you have a weight limit in mind budget-wise?
They're both small still, maybe 1.5kg each. I've got a corner in the living room, probably about 50x50cm floor space. I don't want to spend more than £60 if I can help it.
inparticular.ai
Good — 50x50cm is actually a workable footprint, and £60 is tight but doable if you're smart about it. At four months they're still light, but they'll double in size over the next six months, so you want something built for adult cats, not just kittens. What breed are they, roughly? Standard moggies, or something bigger like a Maine Coon or Ragdoll? That changes the answer a bit.
Just regular moggies from a rescue. They're pretty lively — constantly chasing each other.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — standard moggies will top out around 4–5kg each, which keeps your options open. And lively is the key word: you need multiple platforms at different heights so they can chase up and down without bottlenecking. Here's my recommendation: the Feandrea 67-inch cat tree, model PCT61H. It's around £55–60 on Amazon UK and consistently comes in at or under your budget. It's 170cm tall — genuinely high — with a wide, weighted base that doesn't wobble, three platforms at different heights, two condos, and sisal-wrapped posts throughout. The assembly is straightforward, the instructions are clear, and the structure stays firm even when two cats are tearing up and down it simultaneously. For two active moggies on a budget, it's the one I'd go back to every time. The only thing to watch: build it before you let the cats near it, tighten every bolt, and it'll last years.
That sounds good. Is it easy to put together on your own? I won't have anyone to help.
inparticular.ai
Yes — it's designed to be assembled solo. The base plate is heavy enough to stay put while you build upward, and the parts slot together logically. Budget about 45 minutes, lay everything out first so you can match parts to the diagram, and use the included tool properly rather than rushing it with a screwdriver. The stability of the finished tree depends on how tight you get those bolts at the base, so don't skip that step. People who find it wobbly have usually left those loose. You'll be fine.
Great, I think I'll go for that. Is there anything I should get alongside it?
inparticular.ai
Not really — the Feandrea comes with everything built in. If you want to extend its life, a can of compressed air or a fabric brush keeps the platforms from getting matted with fur, which matters for hygiene when you have two cats using it daily. And if one of the sisal posts ever gets shredded bare in a year or two, you can re-wrap it with sisal rope from a hardware shop for a couple of pounds rather than replacing the whole tree. But on day one, just build it, put it near a window if you can, and let them find it themselves — don't force them onto it.