Collection: Beds

A bed that actually gets used is one that fits your pet's sleeping style — and most pets don't sleep flat on a flat cushion. They burrow, curl, or wedge themselves into corners.

The pet beds here are sized around those habits, and break down into three useful piles:

  • Cave and tunnel beds — for small dogs and cats who like to disappear into something enclosed
  • Donut and bolster beds — raised rims so the dog can rest a chin on something
  • Calming fleece — thick pile that mimics the warmth of a litter pile, often recommended for anxious pets and rescue dogs still learning to settle

Most beds are machine-washable and hold their shape after dozens of washes. If your pet still sleeps on the couch despite owning a bed, the bed is probably the wrong shape for them.

Browse by size and style below — the right one usually halves how often they migrate to your couch. Pair with a cozy fleece sweater for senior pets that get cold during naps.

FAQ

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What size pet bed should I get?

Measure your pet from nose to base of tail when they're stretched out, then add 4-6 inches for cats and small dogs (8-10 for medium dogs). Most pets prefer a bed that lets them stretch, even if they normally sleep curled up. Each product page has a size chart with breed examples.

They're not a cure, but the deep-pile fabric and raised rim create a "den" effect that many anxious dogs and cats settle into faster. Vets often recommend them as part of a broader anxiety plan, alongside training and (if needed) medication. Most useful for rescue dogs in the first weeks at a new home.

Most are — check the product page for specifics. The calming donut beds have removable covers (cold wash, gentle cycle, air-dry to keep the pile from flattening). The cave and tunnel beds are typically washable as one piece.

A cave bed is a single enclosed dome — your pet enters through a front opening and stays inside. A tunnel bed has openings on both ends, so it doubles as a play space cats can run through. Cave beds suit pets that want privacy; tunnels suit kittens and small dogs that want both.

Yes — the fabric is densely woven enough to handle normal kneading and the occasional claw catch. The honey-pot and cozy gingham styles are particularly resilient. If you have a serious scratcher, the calming fleece line is the most claw-tolerant.