This is a specific conversation about Cat window perches — giving indoor cats a view — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A three-legged cat needs a perch that gives them a little more room to distribute their weight and settle without wobbling — standard narrow perches can be genuinely tricky for tripods. Window perches are honestly one of the best enrichment upgrades for indoor cats: birds, movement, sunlight, all the good stuff. The key things to nail are suction cup strength, a weight rating that comfortably exceeds your cat's actual weight, and a platform wide enough that they can brace and balance easily. How heavy is your tabby, what kind of windows do you have (smooth glass, double-glazed, textured?), and is this just for them or will other cats be using it too?
She's about 4.5 kg, so roughly 10 pounds. Standard double-glazed smooth glass windows. It's just her — she's a rescue tabby, five years old, missing her front left leg.
inparticular.ai
Perfect, that's really helpful. A missing front leg means she'll be pushing off and steadying herself with her remaining front leg more than a four-legged cat would, so width and surface grip matter a lot. How high up the window are you thinking of mounting it — near the sill, mid-window, or up high? And does she have good confidence with jumping, or does she tend to be more cautious about getting up and down?
She's actually pretty bold for a tripod — she jumps fine, just sometimes misjudges the landing on smaller surfaces. I'd want it fairly low, maybe 60–70 cm off the floor, so she doesn't have far to travel if she does slip.
inparticular.ai
That makes a lot of sense, and keeping it lower is smart. The misjudging on smaller surfaces is exactly the thing to design around — she needs more platform area, not less. Given her weight, her front-leg compensation, and the smooth double-glazed glass, I'd go with the K&H Pet Products EZ Mount Window Scratcher Perch. It's significantly wider than most suction-cup perches — around 48 cm across — which gives her proper room to plant herself. The surface is a sisal-and-carpet mix that provides grip, so she's not sliding when she lands or shifts position. The suction cups are heavy-duty and rated well above her weight, and the design spreads the load across four cups rather than two, which gives you a much more stable platform on smooth glass. It also doubles as a scratcher, which is a nice bonus. It's available on Amazon UK and straightforward to fit.
That sounds really good actually. Is the height of the perch itself adjustable, or is it fixed once it's up?
inparticular.ai
It's fixed once mounted — you choose your height when you stick it up, and it stays there. The suction cups do release cleanly if you need to reposition, so you can move it without drama if the first spot doesn't work for her. I'd suggest marking your intended height with a small piece of tape before committing, and making sure the glass is completely clean and dry first — that's the single biggest factor in suction cup reliability. Given she's cautious about landings, you might also want to put a folded blanket or low cat bed on the floor directly beneath it for the first few weeks while she's getting used to it.
Really practical advice, thank you. I'll go with that one.
inparticular.ai
Great choice for her. The extra width will make a real difference — she'll settle into it and you'll see her using it confidently pretty quickly. Enjoy watching her bird TV.