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 vet flagging cognitive stimulation for an 8-year-old indoor Burmilla is a really useful nudge — Burmillas are intelligent, curious cats and without enough mental input they can go flat quite quickly. Window perches are genuinely one of the best enrichment additions you can make: birds, passing traffic, light changes, and the odd squirrel give a cat's brain something real to process for hours. The two things that matter most are suction cup strength and a weight rating that suits your cat. So — how heavy is your Burmilla, what kind of windows do you have (double-glazed smooth glass, textured, or older single-pane), and is this just for her or do you have other cats who might want a turn?
She's about 4.5kg, we have modern double-glazed windows with smooth glass, and it's just her. The vet said she seems understimulated and spends a lot of time sleeping in the same spot.
inparticular.ai
4.5kg on smooth double-glazed glass is a very workable combination — modern glazing is actually ideal for suction cup perches because the surface is consistent and non-porous. For a single cat at that weight who needs reliable daily use, I'd go with the K&H Pet Products EZ Mount Window Bed Kitty Sill. It mounts directly to the glass with heavy-duty suction cups rated well above 4.5kg, the hammock-style bed is padded and warm which older cats appreciate, and the footprint is generous enough that she can stretch out properly rather than just perch awkwardly. It's one of the most consistently well-reviewed window perches on Amazon UK and it genuinely holds — there are very few reports of it dropping even after months of use, which matters a lot when you're trying to build her confidence in using it regularly.
That sounds good. Will she actually use it, or will she ignore it like she ignores her cat tree?
inparticular.ai
That's the right question to ask. The difference between a window perch and a cat tree is location — the tree is static enrichment, but the window is live TV for a cat. The key is placement: put it on a window where she already likes to sit nearby, ideally one with bird or garden activity. In the first few days, leave a treat or a pinch of catnip on it and don't force anything. Most cats who are understimulated and drawn to windows take to a properly placed perch within a week. Burmillas in particular tend to be quite visually engaged, so once she discovers there's something worth watching, you'll likely find her there most mornings.
Perfect. I'll give that a go. Is there anything else I should add alongside it?
inparticular.ai
For cognitive stimulation specifically, a bird feeder placed just outside that window is probably the highest-value addition you can make — it costs almost nothing and turns the perch into an activity hub. Beyond that, a simple puzzle feeder for her meals will complement the window enrichment nicely, because it addresses stimulation at a different time of day. But start with the perch and get her settled on it first. One change at a time tends to work better with cats, especially at 8 when routines matter more to them.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.