This is a specific conversation about Dog crates — the right size and type — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Switching from a wire crate to a wooden enclosure is a popular move once a dog is settled and past the chewing-everything stage — and a 5-year-old Pomeranian sounds like a good candidate. Size is still the most important factor even with furniture-style crates: too large and you lose the snug den feeling that makes crates calming; too small and it becomes a squeeze. Material matters too — wooden enclosures suit home use beautifully but aren't ideal for travel or dogs who still chew. To point you to the right size, can you tell me roughly how much your Pomeranian weighs, and do you need the crate purely for home use, or does it occasionally need to travel?
She weighs about 3.5kg and it's purely for home use — she just sleeps in it at night and sometimes naps in there during the day by choice. The old wire crate works fine but it looks terrible in the living room.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — a 3.5kg Pomeranian who already uses her crate voluntarily is exactly the dog a wooden enclosure works best for. At that weight you're looking for something in the small/XS range, roughly 60cm wide internally, which gives her enough room to stand, turn, and curl up without feeling exposed. One more quick question: does she have any history of chewing wood or furniture, or is she generally past that?
No, she's never been a chewer at all. Very calm dog.
inparticular.ai
In that case a wooden enclosure is a completely safe choice for her. My recommendation is the Zoovilla Pet Crate End Table — the small size suits a Pomeranian well, it has a removable tray for easy cleaning, and the slatted sides give enough ventilation while still feeling enclosed. Crucially, it looks like actual furniture rather than a cage, which is clearly the goal. The door latches securely but isn't complicated, so she won't feel trapped. It's widely available on Amazon UK and has a solid track record with small breeds. Because she's already crate-comfortable, the transition should be straightforward — just leave the door open for a day or two so she can investigate at her own pace before you start closing it at night.
That sounds ideal. Should I put her existing bedding inside to help her settle into the new one?
inparticular.ai
Absolutely — that's exactly the right instinct. Her current bedding carries her scent, which makes the new enclosure feel familiar immediately rather than strange. Don't wash it beforehand; the worn smell is the point. If she has a favourite blanket or toy, put that in too. Most dogs who are already comfortable with crating accept a like-for-like swap within a day or two when the scent cues are there.
Great, thank you. I'll order the Zoovilla one.
inparticular.ai
Good choice — it should look much better in the living room and she'll barely notice the difference. The small size is the right call for her weight; don't be tempted by the medium just because it looks more spacious in photos. Enjoy the upgrade.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.