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
You've got a cat sharing space with ferrets — that means your cat tree isn't just about exercise and comfort, it's genuinely functional territory. Your DSH needs high platforms that ferrets physically can't reach, which rules out anything with low hammocks or ground-level entry points that a curious ferret could scramble onto. The most important things in any cat tree are stability and height — it must not wobble when your cat launches off it at speed, and the taller it is, the more genuinely secure your cat will feel. Cheap trees fail on both counts fast. Can you tell me a bit more about your setup? How big is your cat, how active is she, and how much floor space can you dedicate to the tree?
She's a pretty average-sized DSH, maybe 4.5kg. She's pretty active, loves to jump and she's definitely the boss in the house — the ferrets are a bit chaotic and she tolerates them but wants her own space. I've got a corner spot that's about 60x60cm.
inparticular.ai
That's a good-sized active cat and a very understandable situation — she wants height as a genuine refuge, not just enrichment. A 60x60cm footprint is workable for a tall tree if the base is weighted and wide enough. For ferret households the key structural detail is that the lowest usable cat platform needs to be high enough that a ferret can't hop or climb up to it. Standard ferrets top out at around 45–50cm vertical if there's nothing to assist them, so you want the first real resting platform at 60cm or above, with the tree going tall from there. What you don't want is a tree with a rope ladder or sisal pole that a determined ferret could use as a ladder.
That makes total sense. She does already jump up onto our wardrobe to get away from them, so she definitely uses height as an escape route. What would you actually recommend?
inparticular.ai
I'd go with the Feandrea 173cm Large Cat Tree — the PCT710G01 model. It's 173cm tall, has a solid weighted base that handles a 4–5kg cat launching off the top without budging, and the structure goes straight up with sisal poles and platforms that ferrets have no realistic route up. The lowest perch sits well above ferret-accessible height, and the top platform and condo sit high enough that your cat will genuinely use it as her safe zone rather than just tolerating it. The base footprint fits your corner spot, and the whole thing assembles solidly — it doesn't develop wobble after a few weeks the way cheaper trees do. It's consistently one of the better-reviewed tall trees in the UK and it's priced reasonably for what it is. That's the one I'd buy in your situation.
Does it come with a condo or enclosed space? She likes to sleep somewhere a bit hidden.
inparticular.ai
Yes — it has a condo box mid-height, which is ideal. It's enclosed on most sides with a single entry hole, so she can sleep in there completely undisturbed. Crucially it's positioned high enough on the structure that ferrets can't reach it, so she'll actually use it rather than just sitting on top of the wardrobe. It also has a top perch for when she wants to survey the room, and a hammock mid-way. Honestly for a cat in a multi-pet household who values her own space, having that enclosed sleeping option at height is the thing that makes this tree worth it.
Perfect, that sounds exactly right. I'll go for that one.
inparticular.ai
Good choice — it'll make a real difference having a dedicated high zone that's genuinely hers. One tip: place it in your corner so two sides are against the wall. It helps the tree feel even more secure and gives her a slightly sheltered spot, which cats in busy households tend to prefer. She should take to it pretty quickly once she works out the ferrets can't follow her up.