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Home > Resources > Pet Care Library > Cat Articles

Training Your Cat: Walk on a Leash

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Responsible cat owners will find that teaching your cat to walk on a leash has important safety benefits. With the dangers of dogs, disease, cars and unwanted kittens, having your cat on leash when he's outdoors is a good way to ensure she live many happy, healthy years.

Leash training a cat is very similar to leash training a puppy. It takes time and patience. When people are leash training a struggling, pulling puppy, they persist with patience. They know eventually the puppy will learn.

With a cat, as soon as he objects, most cat owners give up. But your cat can get used to a leash. Your goal is to be able to take your cat outdoors on a leash and walk short distances using the command "heel."

What You'll Need

  • Your cat before mealtime
  • A harness (not a collar) and a short leash
  • A specific command (in this case, the word "heel"), preceded by your cat's name ("Scooter, heel")
  • Your positive signal (a clicker, or an upbeat word such as "yes")
  • The reward (his favorite food or special treats)
  • A spoon to hold the reward (you may want to tape the spoon to a stick or wooden dowel so you won't have to bend over)

Training Steps

1. Spend a week or two just getting the cat used to the harness. Put it on him when you feed him so he develops a positive association with his harness-good things happen when it is on. Remember to click the clicker (or use your positive signal) while the cat is eating with the harness on.

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