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Top Cozy Cat & Dog Beds & Furniture Deals

Top Cozy Cat & Dog Beds & Furniture Deals

Save on tunnels, towers, calming beds, and wall shelves for your furry friends.

Reviewed by Maggie Holt Published on May 21, 2026 1

The ZLAFM 5-in-1 wall shelves

I've got three rescue dogs who think they own every flat surface in the house. So when a product claims to give indoor cats their own vertical territory, I pay attention. These ZLAFM wall shelves are the kind of thing I wish I'd thought of myself.

The setup is modular — you arrange the shelves, perches, and scratching posts into whatever configuration works for your wall space. One buyer put them near windows so her cats could watch the bird feeder. Another reviewer tied a ribbon to one of the scratching posts and her cat apparently loved it.

"Training them early to stay off our furniture by giving them their own. We have two 7mo old kittens (sisters) that love relaxing/napping up high, chasing eachother, catching bugs and looking out the windows."

Multiple people noted the fabric is slippery, especially on the smaller landings. One reviewer's cat actually fell off — he was fine, but it's the kind of thing that makes me reach for the adhesive grip pads before I even install these. The reinforced wood goes on studs and holds up to 40 pounds, so stability isn't the problem.

They're not cheap at $70, but you're getting a full climbing system that takes up zero floor space. For anyone with a small apartment or a cat who needs to escape kids and dogs, these shelves solve a real problem.

The PetJett calming dog bed

This is a straightforward donut bed for small dogs under 25 pounds. One person sat in it themselves and said they needed one for their own bed. The raised rim is eight inches high, which wraps around a nervous puppy or senior dog who wants to feel hidden. It machines washes completely, and the bottom has that non-slip PVC stuff so it doesn't slide across hardwood.

One reviewer with a 22-pound Frenchton bought the small and said it barely fits — they admitted they should have looked at the measurements instead of just the weight limit. So measure your dog, don't guess.

The Globlazer 52-inch cat tower

Five cats. One tower. One reviewer bought it for her sister-in-law who has five cats, four of them young, and she said they all wanted the cubbies and had to work out a rotation. The base is longer than most towers, which helps with stability, and it comes with wall straps for extra safety. Assembly is simple — labeled parts, no frustration.

One buyer said their cats were literally climbing on it while they were still putting it together. It's $66 for a 52-inch tower with three condos and sisal posts. Under seventy bucks.

The Grelife cat tunnel bed

This one is a tunnel that can be shaped into a circle, an S-curve, or a semi-circle, with a removable cushion in the middle that's supposed to double as a bed. My cat Gus would probably ignore the cushion and sleep in the tunnel itself, which is what a lot of cats seem to do.

The review that caught my eye said the pillow is buttoned onto the tunnel and it's wobbly — her cat fell between the pillow and the edge, then flopped on top of the tunnel and got scared away. So as a bed, it's questionable. As a tunnel with toys attached, it's fine.

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