Cat fighting is more than just normal behavior—it's a sign of stress and anxiety that can escalate over time.
In multi-pet homes, territorial disputes lead to aggressive confrontations, midnight fights, and a tense atmosphere for both you and your pets.
Without intervention, these fights can become more frequent and intense, potentially resulting in injury or long-term behavioral problems.
You’ve Probably Tried These Solutions… But They Don’t Work

Separating Cats in Different Areas
Prevents fights but doesn’t fix their relationship—they remain territorial and may still fight if they cross paths.
Slow Reintroduction Process
Separating cats and reintroducing them with scent-swapping and gradual meetings only works if the problem is initial fear.
If the cats already have a deep-set rivalry, territorial disputes, or past fights, reintroducing doesn’t erase bad history.
Other Pheromone Diffusers
Most brands use only one pheromone, but cats need different types for different stresses.
Some calm down, while others get more anxious or mark even more
Behavioral Training
Using spray bottles or loud noises to interrupt fights only increases anxiety and teaches cats to fear you, rather than addressing why they're fighting in the first place.