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 sprain changes everything about how you set up a perch — jumping is off the table for now, so whatever you get needs to be accessible from floor level without any leaping involved. Window perches are genuinely one of the best things for an indoor cat's wellbeing, and that doesn't have to pause during recovery — it just means we need to think carefully about height and access. Before I point you in the right direction: how heavy is your cat, what kind of windows do you have (double-glazed UPVC, older single-pane, that sort of thing), and is this a temporary setup while they heal or are you planning to keep it long-term?
She's about 5kg, we have standard double-glazed UPVC windows, and yes it's partly because of the sprain but honestly I'd keep a good perch permanently. She's been so bored stuck indoors.
inparticular.ai
5kg on UPVC is very manageable — most decent suction cup perches are rated well above that. The real question here is access. Since she can't jump right now, you'll need a perch that sits low enough to reach via a ramp or a series of low steps rather than a single leap. What's the windowsill situation — is there any existing sill she could step onto if the perch was positioned just above it, or are the windows pretty flush with the wall?
There's a small sill, maybe 5–6cm deep, not really enough to stand on. The window starts pretty close to the floor though, maybe 50–60cm up.
inparticular.ai
That's actually a helpful window height — it gives you good options. Here's what I'd recommend: the K&H Pet Products EZ Mount Window Bed. It mounts directly onto the glass with strong suction cups rated to 12kg, so your 5kg cat is well within range on UPVC. The key thing for your situation is pairing it with a low ramp or pet steps placed directly underneath — because the window starts at 50–60cm, you can position the perch just above the frame and use a single shallow ramp to bridge from the floor. K&H also make a dedicated window ramp that clips onto the perch itself, but a standard foam pet staircase at the same height works just as well and is often cheaper. The EZ Mount bed is padded, machine washable, and genuinely holds up to daily use — it won't shift once the cups are set. Long-term, it'll be her favourite spot. For now, it gives her stimulation without any strain on that leg.
That sounds ideal. Would she be able to use the ramp comfortably while she's still a bit stiff?
inparticular.ai
Yes, as long as the ramp angle is gentle — aim for no steeper than about 30 degrees. If your window starts at 55cm and the perch bed surface sits at around 65–70cm, that's a very shallow incline. You can also add a non-slip mat or small towel on the ramp surface so she doesn't feel unsteady. Most cats with minor sprains manage a low ramp within a few days of injury, but if she's still reluctant after a week, dropping the ramp angle a touch further usually does it. The main thing is she shouldn't need to push off with her back legs — walking up a gentle slope puts almost no stress on a forelimb sprain.
Perfect, that makes sense. I'll go with the K&H EZ Mount and sort out a ramp to go with it.
inparticular.ai
Good call. When you fit the suction cups, make sure the glass is clean and dry first — a quick wipe with a little rubbing alcohol before pressing them on makes a real difference to how well they hold. Press and hold each cup for about 30 seconds, then leave it for a few hours before letting her on. She'll be glued to that window once she discovers the birds.