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A clean litter box is essential to the well-being of your cat (and your nostrils).
If the box is constantly full, your pet might avoid nature’s call as long as possible, which can result in serious health problems. Your cat may also be inclined to take their business elsewhere, which is stressful for everyone.
Scooping daily is the rule of thumb, but transferring those scoops to the trash gets messy. And for many, this is a chore that’s all too easily ignored—until the box turns seriously gross.
When I was much younger and living in my first apartment, I had a bad habit of not scooping. This led to my cat developing a UTI because he didn’t want to use his box. We got him back to full health quickly, but I was horrified that my laziness had caused my pet pain. Keeping the litter box as clean as possible at all times became essential to me, and now, the Litter Genie Plus makes an unpleasant—but vital—process infinitely easier.
The Litter Genie Plus is essentially a small diaper pail (it was, in fact, developed by the Diaper Genie folks). Instead of transporting clumps of cat excrement to the trash every day (which quickly stinks up a garbage can, even if you’re disposing of the waste inside smaller bags), you simply scoop directly into the 17-by-8-by-8-inch container’s bag-lined funnel. Pull the handle, and the mess vanishes into a smell-proof plastic liner below.
Once the bag is full, flip the pail open, cut off the top of the bag using the pail’s built-in blade, tie it shut, unfurl a new length of liner from the cartridge, and tie it off at the bottom.
A cartridge contains 14 feet of liner and is advertised to last about two months in a single-cat household. In my two-cat household, we usually need to empty the pail about once a week. Because the liners are thick and the cartridges are custom fit, the pail holds in odors extremely well.
If you can’t swing the liners financially, or you run out and have no replacements on hand, a kitchen trash bag works fine (though it does tend to let odors escape more readily, so you may want to change the bag more often). It’s worth it to comparison-shop for refill packs. I usually buy a three-pack of Target’s Up & Up Litter Pail Refills because they generally cost around the same as a two-pack of the official Litter Genie refills. But I often see the three-pack of the Litter Genie–brand bags on Amazon for around the same price.
Emptying a full Litter Genie isn’t pleasant—the bag gets heavy enough that you’ll marvel at the wonders of biology. But I’ll happily take five minutes of ick once a week over a daily dose. I needed to watch an instructional video the first couple of times I added a new cartridge, but it’s simple once you get the hang of it.
Still, there are three tweaks the Litter Genie Plus could make to improve its product. Here are three issues we’ve encountered, along with hacks for working around each one.