You open the back door at 7 AM and your cat disappears into the garden — six hours later they reappear with muddy paws, a scratch on one ear, and the unmistakable smugness of a cat who has been somewhere you will never know about. If you have ever wondered where does my cat go outside, you are not alone. The UK is home to approximately 10.2 million pet cats, and around 90% of them have some level of outdoor access — yet the vast majority of owners have no idea where their cat actually goes, what they do, or what dangers they face during those unsupervised hours. GPS tracking studies reveal that the average UK cat roams between 40 and 200 metres from home, but some travel over a mile in a single outing. That gap between "probably in the garden" and "actually crossed four roads and entered a stranger's shed" is where the real risk lives.
The consequences of not knowing are serious. An estimated 230,000 cats are involved in road traffic accidents in the UK every year, and Cats Protection confirms that traffic remains the single biggest killer of young cats in Britain. Beyond roads, outdoor cats face fights with other cats (spreading FIV and FeLV), poisonous plants, antifreeze ingestion, getting trapped in sheds and garages, dog attacks, and even theft — pedigree breeds are increasingly targeted. Most of these incidents happen without the owner ever knowing until the cat comes home injured, ill, or does not come home at all. The difference between a safe outdoor cat and a vulnerable one is not whether they go outside — it is whether you know what they encounter when they do.
This complete guide uses the latest UK research, GPS tracking data, and veterinary advice to answer every question about where your cat goes outside — from how far they roam and which destinations they visit to the eight outdoor dangers every UK owner must know, twelve breeds that roam the furthest, and a time-of-day risk map showing when outdoor access is most dangerous. You will also learn how a lightweight CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera can reveal your cat's secret outdoor life from their own point of view — turning guesswork into footage. For the complete guide to choosing and using a collar camera, including setup, specs, and breed suitability, see our pet collar camera complete guide.
Table of Contents
- How Far Do Cats Actually Roam? The Science Behind Cat Roaming
- Where Does Your Cat Go? 8 Destinations Revealed by Tracking Studies
- 8 Outdoor Dangers Every UK Cat Owner Must Know
- Which Cat Breeds Roam the Furthest?
- When Is Outdoor Access Most Dangerous?
- How to Monitor Where Your Cat Goes — Methods Compared
- How to Make Your Garden Safer for Outdoor Cats
- Indoor Alternatives — When Keeping Your Cat In Is Safest
- The Complete Outdoor Cat Safety Checklist
- Frequently Asked Questions About Outdoor Cats
1. How Far Do Cats Actually Roam? The Science Behind Cat Roaming
The question "how far do cats roam" has fascinated researchers for decades — and GPS tracking technology has finally given us concrete answers. Multiple peer-reviewed studies, including the landmark Cat Tracker project that fitted GPS collars to nearly 1,000 cats across the UK, USA, Australia, and New Zealand, reveal a consistent pattern: most cats stay surprisingly close to home, but a significant minority travel far enough to encounter serious danger.
The average UK outdoor cat spends 79% of their outdoor time within just 50 metres of their back door. That is roughly the length of a swimming pool — barely past the garden fence. However, averages mask enormous individual variation. Some cats never leave the garden. Others cross multiple roads, visit neighbouring streets, and cover territories spanning 25 acres or more. The table below shows how cat roaming distance varies by type — and why knowing your specific cat's range matters more than knowing the average.
| Cat Type | Average Roaming Distance | Maximum Recorded | Key Factor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Neutered Male | 40–200 metres | 1+ mile (1.6 km) | Territorial patrol, reduced mate-seeking |
| Unneutered Male | 300–1,000+ metres | 3+ miles (5 km) | Mate-seeking drives 10× further roaming |
| Neutered Female | 30–150 metres | 800 metres | Smallest territories, garden-focused |
| Unneutered Female | 100–500 metres | 1.5 miles (2.4 km) | Roams further when in heat |
| Young Cat (Under 3 Years) | 100–400 metres | 2+ miles (3.2 km) | Exploratory phase, establishing territory |
| Senior Cat (8+ Years) | 20–80 metres | 200 metres | Reduced mobility, familiar routes only |
| Rural Cat | 200–1,000+ metres | 5+ miles (8 km) | Larger territories in low-density areas |
| Urban/Suburban Cat | 30–150 metres | 500 metres | High cat density compresses territories |
Pro Tip: GPS studies tell you what the average cat does — but a collar camera shows you what your specific cat does. Strap a lightweight CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera to your cat's collar for a single afternoon and you will learn more about their outdoor routine than years of guesswork. The 160° wide-angle lens captures everything they see, and at just 26.4 grams it is lighter than two £1 coins — over 90% of cats adjust within 5 minutes.
2. Where Does Your Cat Go? 8 Destinations Revealed by Tracking Studies
Collar camera footage and GPS tracking data from thousands of UK cats reveal eight common destinations that outdoor cats visit repeatedly. Understanding these destinations helps you predict where your cat goes, identify potential dangers on their route, and take targeted steps to keep them safer.
1. Neighbour's Gardens — Territorial Patrol
The single most common destination for outdoor cats. Your cat visits neighbouring gardens not for fun but for territory maintenance — spraying, scratching, and checking for intruders. GPS data shows most cats patrol 3–5 neighbouring gardens in a predictable loop, visiting the same spots at roughly the same times each day.
2. Sheds, Garages & Outbuildings — Shelter and Hunting
Cats are drawn to outbuildings for two reasons: warmth and mice. An open shed or garage is an irresistible combination of shelter and prey. This is also one of the most dangerous destinations — cats regularly get trapped when owners close doors without checking inside. Every spring, UK vets treat cats found severely dehydrated after days locked in a neighbour's shed.
3. Under Cars & On Driveways — Engine Warmth
In cooler months, cats seek out the residual warmth of recently parked car engines. They climb into wheel arches, under bonnets, and onto warm tyres. This is a leading cause of cat injuries in winter — a quick bang on the bonnet before starting your car can save a life.
4. Bird Feeders & Wildlife Hotspots — Hunting Grounds
UK cats kill an estimated 270 million prey animals per year, and bird feeding stations are prime hunting territory. If your neighbour has a bird table, your cat almost certainly visits it. Collar camera footage consistently shows cats spending long periods crouched near feeders, waiting for an opportunity.
5. Water Sources — Ponds, Puddles & Streams
Many cats prefer outdoor water sources to their indoor water bowl — running streams, garden ponds, and even rainwater puddles. While mostly harmless, standing water can carry leptospirosis and other pathogens, and garden ponds pose a drowning risk for kittens and elderly cats.
6. High Vantage Points — Walls, Fences & Rooftops
Cats are vertical thinkers. Elevated positions — fence tops, garden walls, shed roofs — give them a visual survey of their territory without the risk of ground-level confrontation. Falls from height are rare but do occur, particularly with kittens and older cats whose balance is compromised.
7. Other Cats' Territories — Social and Confrontational
Territory overlap is unavoidable in UK suburbs where cat density is high. Your cat may be entering another cat's core territory daily, leading to stand-offs, spraying contests, or outright fights. Cat fights are a primary transmission route for FIV (Feline Immunodeficiency Virus) and FeLV (Feline Leukaemia Virus).
8. Quiet Wild Patches — Hedgerows, Wasteland & Railway Embankments
Cats living near green corridors — hedgerows, allotments, railway embankments, canal towpaths — often venture into these semi-wild spaces for hunting and exploration. These areas offer rich prey but also expose cats to rat poison, discarded rubbish, and fast-moving trains.
3. 8 Outdoor Dangers Every UK Cat Owner Must Know
Knowing where your cat goes is only half the picture — understanding what they face when they get there is what keeps them alive. Cats Protection's outdoor safety guide and PDSA's guide to keeping cats safe outdoors identify the following as the most significant risks for UK outdoor cats.
1. Road Traffic — 230,000 Cats Per Year
Traffic is the number one killer of young cats in Britain. An estimated 230,000 cats are involved in road traffic accidents annually, and the true figure is likely higher — many injured cats crawl away and are never found. Cats do not understand traffic and cannot judge vehicle speed. Even quiet residential streets with 20 mph limits see regular cat casualties.
2. Cat Fights — FIV, FeLV & Abscesses
Territorial disputes between outdoor cats frequently escalate to physical fights, and bite wounds are the primary transmission route for FIV and FeLV — both serious, incurable viral infections. Even minor fight wounds can develop into painful abscesses requiring veterinary drainage and antibiotics. If your outdoor cat starts hiding more than usual, an undetected fight wound may be the cause.
3. Poisonous Plants & Garden Chemicals
Lilies are extremely toxic to cats — even brushing against pollen and then grooming can cause fatal kidney failure. Other common UK garden plants including foxgloves, daffodils, rhododendrons, and yew are also poisonous. Blue Cross's guide to hidden dangers warns that cats do not need to eat a plant to be poisoned — skin contact followed by grooming is enough.
4. Antifreeze — Sweet, Deadly, and Everywhere
Ethylene glycol (antifreeze) has a sweet taste that attracts cats. A single teaspoon can be fatal. Spills on driveways, leaking car radiators, and even decorative water features treated with antifreeze are all potential sources. Symptoms appear within hours — vomiting, lethargy, wobbling — and without immediate treatment, kidney failure follows rapidly.
5. Getting Trapped — Sheds, Garages & Skips
Curious cats enter open sheds, garages, skips, and even delivery vans, then get locked inside when the owner closes up. Without water, a trapped cat can survive only 3–5 days. Always check outbuildings before locking up, and ask neighbours to do the same.
6. Parasites — Fleas, Ticks & Worms
Every outdoor cat will encounter fleas at some point. Ticks — increasingly common across the UK — can transmit Lyme disease and other infections. Intestinal worms are picked up from hunting prey. Regular preventative treatment is essential for any cat with outdoor access.
7. Dog Attacks & Foxes
While most cats can outrun and out-climb dogs, surprise encounters in confined spaces — alleyways, gardens with no escape route — can result in serious injuries. Urban foxes are generally not a threat to healthy adult cats, but kittens, elderly cats, and cats weakened by illness are vulnerable.
8. Theft — Pedigree Breeds Targeted
Cat theft is rising in the UK, with pedigree breeds — Bengals, Ragdolls, Maine Coons, British Shorthairs — being specifically targeted. A microchip is the best defence, but it only works if the cat is found and scanned. Collar camera footage can provide evidence of theft patterns if your cat repeatedly visits an area where they are being lured.
Pro Tip: Most outdoor dangers happen in the first 30 minutes after your cat leaves the house — they cross roads, encounter other cats, and enter risky spaces before settling into their routine. A collar camera session during this initial exploration window reveals more about your cat's risk exposure than any amount of watching from the kitchen window.
4. Which Cat Breeds Roam the Furthest?
All outdoor cats roam, but breed significantly influences how far, how fast, and how boldly your cat explores. High-energy, curious, and athletic breeds consistently show larger roaming ranges in GPS studies — and they face proportionally greater outdoor risks because they travel further from the safety of home. If your cat's breed appears in the table below, monitoring their outdoor movements with a collar camera is especially important.
| Breed | Typical Roaming Range | Key Outdoor Behaviour |
|---|---|---|
| Bengal | 300–1,000+ metres | Athletic, high prey drive, scales fences easily — highest escape and road risk |
| Maine Coon | 200–600 metres | Large territory, confident explorer, targets wildlife — theft risk due to value |
| Siamese | 150–500 metres | Social, vocal, follows people — enters neighbours' homes uninvited |
| Abyssinian | 200–800 metres | Extremely athletic, climbs everything — highest fall risk from rooftops |
| Burmese | 100–400 metres | Overly trusting of strangers — highest theft risk of all breeds |
| British Shorthair | 50–200 metres | Stocky, slower reflexes — higher road risk despite shorter range |
| Ragdoll | 30–150 metres | Docile, poor survival instincts — vulnerable to dogs and foxes |
| Russian Blue | 50–200 metres | Nervous, easily startled — panics near traffic, bolts unpredictably |
| Norwegian Forest Cat | 200–600 metres | Born climber, hunts actively — targets birds and squirrels in trees |
| Savannah | 500–2,000+ metres | Wild hybrid, extreme range — often classified as escape risk |
| Turkish Van | 150–500 metres | Attracted to water — enters ponds, streams, garden water features |
| Cornish Rex | 100–300 metres | Thin coat, cold-sensitive — seeks warm engine bays in winter |
5. When Is Outdoor Access Most Dangerous?
The time of day and season your cat goes outside dramatically affects their risk level. PDSA's road safety guide for cats confirms that road accidents peak during specific hours, and Woodgreen Pets Charity recommends timing outdoor access to avoid the highest-risk periods.
| Time Period | Risk Level | Primary Dangers | Recommendation |
|---|---|---|---|
| Dawn (5–7 AM) | High | Cats most active + early commuter traffic | Supervise or delay outdoor access until after rush hour |
| Morning (7–11 AM) | Low–Moderate | School-run traffic settles; warm, good visibility | Safest window for outdoor access |
| Afternoon (11 AM–4 PM) | Low | Cats often resting; lower traffic on residential roads | Ideal for collar camera recording sessions |
| Dusk (4–7 PM) | Very High | Rush hour + fading light + cats' peak hunting instinct | Bring cats in before dusk — highest accident risk |
| Evening (7–10 PM) | High | Reduced visibility, cat fights more frequent | Keep indoors — most cat fights happen after dark |
| Night (10 PM–5 AM) | Very High | Near-zero visibility, foxes active, drunk drivers | Keep indoors — night access doubles road accident risk |
Seasonal Risk Factors
- Spring: Kittens exploring for the first time + nesting birds attract hunting cats + gardeners using pesticides
- Summer: Longer days mean more outdoor hours and more exposure — heatstroke risk in sheltered spots, open windows and doors increase escape risk for indoor cats
- Autumn: Antifreeze use begins as temperatures drop — Bonfire Night (5 November) causes panic bolting
- Winter: Cats seek car engine warmth, shorter daylight increases road risk, hypothermia risk for thin-coated breeds
6. How to Monitor Where Your Cat Goes — Methods Compared
Once you understand the roaming distances, destinations, and dangers your outdoor cat faces, the next question is practical: how do you actually find out where your specific cat goes? There are four main monitoring methods available to UK cat owners — each with different strengths. PDSA's guide to cat collars advises that any collar device must be lightweight, quick-release compatible, and comfortable enough for extended wear.
| Feature | CozyPaws™ Collar Camera | GPS Cat Tracker | Home Security Camera | Microchip Cat Flap |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Shows WHERE cat goes | ✓ Full POV route footage | ✓ Real-time location map | ✗ Garden only | ✗ Entry/exit times only |
| Shows WHAT cat does | ✓ HD video of every activity | ✗ Location dots only | ⚠ Limited angle | ✗ No visual data |
| Identifies specific dangers | ✓ Roads, fights, traps visible | ⚠ Route near roads | ✗ Cannot see beyond garden | ✗ No danger detection |
| Weight on cat | ✓ 26.4g — lighter than 2 coins | ⚠ 25–35g typical | ✓ Nothing on cat | ✓ Nothing on cat |
| Monthly subscription | ✓ £0 — records to microSD | ✗ £3–8/month typical | ⚠ Some require cloud plans | ✓ £0 |
| Works away from home | ✓ Travels with cat everywhere | ✓ Real-time anywhere | ✗ Fixed position only | ✗ Home only |
| Audio capture | ✓ Built-in microphone | ✗ No audio | ⚠ Basic audio | ✗ No audio |
| Battery life | ✓ 120 minutes per charge | ✓ 2–7 days typical | ✓ Mains powered | ✓ Battery or mains |
| Real-time tracking | ✗ Review footage after | ✓ Live location | ✓ Live view | ✗ Log only |
| Best for | Understanding behaviour and routes | Finding a lost or missing cat | Garden monitoring | Tracking in/out times |
The key insight is that these methods answer different questions. A GPS tracker tells you where your cat is right now — essential if they go missing. A collar camera tells you what your cat experiences during every outing — essential for understanding their routine, identifying dangers, and making informed decisions about outdoor access. For comprehensive protection, many owners use both: a CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera for periodic behaviour monitoring sessions, and a GPS tracker for real-time location when their cat is late coming home. For the full breakdown of camera specs, setup, and step-by-step usage, see our complete guide to pet collar cameras.
If your cat needs a secure carrier for vet visits or controlled outdoor adventures to new environments, pair monitoring with a CozyPaws™ Bubble Window Cat Backpack — it lets your cat experience the outdoors safely while you control the route.
Shop the CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera →
7. How to Make Your Garden Safer for Outdoor Cats
You cannot control what happens beyond your garden fence, but you can make your own outdoor space significantly safer. Cats Protection's garden safety guide and RSPCA's cat environment advice recommend the following measures.
Remove or Fence Off Toxic Plants
Check every plant in your garden against a toxic plant list. Remove all lilies immediately — they are the single most dangerous plant for cats in UK gardens. Fence off or remove foxgloves, daffodil bulbs, rhododendrons, and yew. Replace with cat-safe alternatives: lavender, catnip, catmint, and valerian.
Eliminate Chemical Hazards
Store antifreeze, pesticides, slug pellets, and weed killer in sealed containers inside a locked shed or garage. Switch to pet-safe slug pellets (ferric phosphate) and avoid cocoa mulch — it contains theobromine, which is toxic to cats. Rinse any chemical spills immediately.
Provide Escape Routes and Shelter
Ensure your cat has multiple escape routes — holes in fences, cat flaps, open windows — so they can flee from dogs or aggressive cats without being cornered. Provide a weatherproof outdoor shelter with a blanket for emergency warmth if they cannot get inside. A cat-height shelf on a fence gives them a vertical escape from ground-level threats.
Secure Garden Boundaries
Cat-proof fencing (angled roller bars or mesh toppers) keeps your cat within your garden and prevents neighbouring cats from entering — reducing fight risk, territory stress, and road exposure. This is the single most effective safety investment for any outdoor cat owner.
Cover or Fence Ponds and Water Features
Open garden ponds are a drowning risk for kittens and elderly cats. Install a mesh cover or create a gradual bank so a cat that falls in can climb out easily. Running water features with shallow basins are safer than deep, still ponds.
Pro Tip: Use collar camera footage to audit your garden's safety from your cat's perspective. A single recording session reveals blind spots, escape routes you did not know existed, fence gaps where they leave your property, and specific areas where they spend the most time. This POV footage is far more revealing than a walk-around inspection from human height — you will see exactly which fence panel they squeeze through and which neighbour's garden they visit first.
8. Indoor Alternatives — When Keeping Your Cat In Is Safest
For some cats and some locations, outdoor access is simply too dangerous — busy roads with no safe crossing, high local cat density causing constant fights, toxic neighbouring gardens, or a breed with poor road awareness like Ragdolls or Russian Blues. International Cat Care confirms that indoor cats can live full, enriched lives provided their environmental needs are met.
If your cat wants to go outside but outdoor access is not safe, the following indoor enrichment strategies satisfy their outdoor instincts without the risk:
- Window perch: A CozyPaws™ Cat Window Hammock gives your cat a permanent elevated vantage point with a view of the outside world — satisfying their territorial surveillance instinct without ever leaving the house
- Catio or enclosed garden: A secure outdoor enclosure lets your cat experience fresh air, sunlight, and outdoor sounds without any of the roaming risks
- Interactive play: Two 15-minute play sessions daily with wand toys, laser pointers, or puzzle feeders replicate the mental stimulation of hunting
- Tunnel enrichment: A CozyPaws™ Cat Tunnel Bed provides the hiding, ambushing, and exploring behaviours that outdoor cats express naturally
- Vertical space: Cat shelves, cat trees, and climbing walls compensate for the vertical territory — walls, fences, rooftops — that outdoor cats use daily
- Controlled outdoor access: Harness walks and backpack outings let your cat experience the outdoors on your terms — you choose the route, you control the risks
9. The Complete Outdoor Cat Safety Checklist
Before letting your cat outside — whether for the first time or the thousandth — run through this checklist. Blue Cross and Battersea both recommend these essentials for any cat with outdoor access.
Essential — Before Any Outdoor Access
- Microchipped: Legal requirement in England from June 2024 — all cats must be chipped by 20 weeks of age
- Neutered or spayed: Reduces roaming distance by up to 90% in males and eliminates mate-seeking behaviour
- Fully vaccinated: Core vaccines (FPV, FCV, FHV) plus FeLV if your cat has outdoor access
- Flea and worm treatment: Up to date — outdoor cats need regular preventative treatment year-round
- Quick-release collar with ID tag: Microchips require a scanner — an ID tag lets any neighbour contact you immediately
- Reflective collar: Essential if your cat goes out at dusk, dawn, or night — makes them visible to drivers
Recommended — For Safer Outdoor Access
- Microchip cat flap: Controls access — only your cat can enter, and you can lock it at night to prevent outdoor access during peak danger hours
- Monthly collar camera session: Strap a CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera on for a 2-hour afternoon session once a month to review your cat's outdoor routine and check for new dangers on their route
- Garden audit: Check for toxic plants, chemical spills, open sheds, and fence gaps every season
- Neighbour communication: Let neighbours know you have an outdoor cat — ask them to check sheds and garages before locking up
- Night curfew: Bring your cat in before dusk and do not let them out until after dawn — this single step reduces road accident risk by up to 50%
10. Frequently Asked Questions About Outdoor Cats
How far does my cat roam from home?
GPS studies show the average UK outdoor cat roams 40–200 metres from home, with 79% of outdoor time spent within 50 metres. However, unneutered males can travel over 1 mile, young cats in rural areas may cover 2+ miles, and certain breeds like Bengals and Savannahs consistently roam further than average. Your specific cat's range depends on their age, sex, neutering status, and local cat density.
Where does my cat go at night?
At night, cats patrol territory boundaries, hunt rodents (which are most active after dark), and interact with other cats. Night is also when most cat fights occur, as reduced visibility leads to accidental territory incursions. Road accident risk peaks between dusk and dawn because cats' eyes do not adjust quickly to sudden headlight glare, causing them to freeze rather than flee.
Do female cats roam less than males?
Yes. Neutered females have the smallest territories of any cat type — typically 30–150 metres from home. Neutered males roam 40–200 metres on average. The biggest difference is between neutered and unneutered males: neutering reduces male roaming distance by up to 90% because it eliminates mate-seeking behaviour.
Should I keep my cat indoors at night?
Yes. UK veterinary charities — including Cats Protection, PDSA, and Blue Cross — all recommend keeping cats in at night. Night-time outdoor access doubles road accident risk, increases fight injuries (most cat fights happen after dark), and exposes cats to foxes. A microchip cat flap set to lock at dusk and unlock at dawn automates this curfew.
How can I track where my cat goes?
Four main methods: (1) a collar camera shows exactly what your cat sees and does in HD video; (2) a GPS tracker shows real-time location on a map; (3) a home security camera monitors garden activity; (4) a microchip cat flap logs entry and exit times. A collar camera provides the most detailed behaviour insights, while a GPS tracker is best for real-time location if your cat goes missing.
Is a collar camera safe for my cat?
Yes, provided the camera is lightweight (under 30g) and attached to a quick-release collar that snaps open if caught on a branch or fence. The CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera weighs just 26.4g — lighter than two £1 coins — and mounts securely via a flush-fitting bracket that prevents snagging. Over 90% of cats adjust within 5 minutes of wearing it.
Do neutered cats roam less?
Significantly. Neutering reduces male roaming distance by up to 90% and eliminates the hormone-driven urge to seek mates — the single biggest cause of long-distance roaming in male cats. Neutered cats establish smaller, more predictable territories and are less likely to cross roads or enter unfamiliar areas. If your cat is not yet neutered, this is the single most effective step you can take to reduce their outdoor risk.
What are the biggest dangers for outdoor cats in the UK?
In order of severity: (1) road traffic — 230,000 cats per year; (2) cat fights spreading FIV and FeLV; (3) poisonous plants, especially lilies; (4) antifreeze ingestion; (5) getting trapped in sheds and garages; (6) parasites including fleas, ticks, and worms; (7) dog attacks; (8) theft of pedigree breeds. Most of these dangers occur without the owner ever witnessing them.
How do I know if my cat is safe outside?
Monitor their behaviour after outdoor sessions: a cat that returns home relaxed, eats normally, and shows no injuries is likely navigating their territory safely. Warning signs include unexplained scratches or bite wounds, limping, excessive hiding after returning, loss of appetite, or reluctance to go outside. A monthly collar camera session reveals whether your cat's route includes busy roads, aggressive cats, or other hazards you cannot see from your doorstep.
Can I train my cat to stay in my garden?
Not reliably through training alone — cats do not respond to boundary training the way dogs do. The only reliable methods are physical: cat-proof fencing with angled roller bars or mesh toppers that prevent climbing, or a fully enclosed catio. These keep your cat within a safe area while still allowing outdoor access, fresh air, and environmental stimulation.
Ready to See Where Your Cat Actually Goes?
Every time your cat walks through the cat flap, they enter a world you cannot see — roads, fights, gardens, sheds, and adventures that happen entirely without your knowledge. Until now.
- Guessing where your cat goes based on which direction they walked
- Finding out about dangers only when your cat comes home injured
- Wondering why your cat returns muddy, scratched, or stressed
- No idea whether your cat crosses busy roads daily
- 1080P HD footage showing exactly where your cat goes and what they do
- 160° wide-angle lens capturing everything in your cat's field of view
- Just 26.4 grams — lighter than two £1 coins, 90% of cats adjust in 5 minutes
- 120 minutes of continuous recording per charge
- No WiFi, no app, no subscription — records directly to microSD
CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera
- 1080P Full HD video with EIS stabilisation
- 160° fisheye wide-angle lens
- Built-in microphone for ambient sound
- 0.96-inch LCD preview screen
- USB-C charging — 60–90 minutes for full charge
- Adjustable collar strap fits 20–39 cm neck circumference
- Includes: camera, collar, USB card reader, charging cable, user manual
- 30-day money-back guarantee
- Free tracked UK delivery (4–7 working days)
Shop the CozyPaws™ Pet Collar Camera →
Questions? Contact us at support@thecozypaws.co.uk — we're here to help.


