







🐾 Elevate your cat care game with the litter that’s flushable, fresh, and fuss-free!
Tuft & Paw Really Great Cat Litter is a premium, unscented tofu-based cat litter made from soybean byproducts. It features fast clumping, is 100% flushable, dust-free, and low tracking thanks to its unique pellet shape. Enhanced with natural charcoal for odor control, this litter is designed for easy maintenance and a cleaner home environment, trusted by cat behaviorists and thousands of cat parents across North America.








| Scent Name | Unscented |
| Material Type | Soybean |
A**X
DEFINITELY A WINNER
I empathize with everyone else who has tried 'every type of litter.' I have. Clay is a heavy smelly dusty dirty misery. The crystals were dusty and tracked like crazy, and so did all the 'natural' corn/walnut shell/et al products. Pellets are a huge improvement - but the wood pellets I tried disintegrated so readily that dust built up in the box within a couple days. Zeolite pellets were great - but you need the specialized box and pads - which weren't bad, BUT, a strong ammonia odor becomes prevalent after a couple weeks. SO at my son's suggestion I tried tofu pellets. I've sampled four brands, and they all performed about the same - dust is MINIMAL, tracking MINIMAL, odor MINIMAL (I have not used a scented variety), CLUMPING is great due to the starches added to these products - please note that the starches will cause the clump to stick to the box till the clump has a chance to dry a bit, after which the clump will pop off. But every clump diminishes the amount of litter left in the box, so be ready to replenish regularly! Tofu litter IS Expensive!!! I had to adjust my budget. But I am happy with the overall performance. Maybe it costs the companies a lot to source, produce & market. Anyway, this litter is a medium grey due to charcoal added for odor control so it does not look as 'pretty' as the whitish brands - but the charcoal is a good functional addition so I accepted the color.
C**S
Low dust, little tracking, easy clumping
Low dust, little tracking, easy clumpingMy cat has asthma, so I'm extremely cautious as to the litter I choose. It must be unscented and low-dust. Additionally, it should track. It should be easy clumping and, ideally, flushable. This litter fits all the above.The size of the litter tightness of the litter bits mean there's virtually no dust. Since it isn't small particles, it tends not to track. It absorbs well, making very tight clumps that don't fall apart. My building management doesn't want animal waste thrown down the garbage disposal, so they want us to use flushable litter. It does a minute a so for the litter to break apart in the toilet so don't flush it immediately. Once it breaks apart, it flushes easily and cleanly.The litter is lightweight weight making it easy to carry the bags or reposition the litter box. The texture is like long-grain rice, which is why it does such a good job of avoiding dust and tracking.Although a bit pricey, it's an excellent litter. I like the fact that it's tofu/soy-based, making it biodegradable as well if that's a concern.
C**R
A nice balance of between clay litter and pine
I have had cats of my own for many years but have recently started fostering, mostly mamas with tiny kittens. Most of my adult cats have used clay litter because I scoop regularly and it clumps really well, but it has its problems. It's dusty, tracks everywhere, and it's really REALLY not safe for little kittens with their small digestive tracts which are at a high risk of blockage if they eat clumping litter. Even the ones that claim to be dust free (like World's Greatest) are really dusty in my opinion.The group I foster with recommends pine litter because it's safe for kittens and cats after surgery, but it's really not scoopable at all and the odor control is non-existent. The pellets are far to large to sift through a scoop, and it breaks down into sawdust when wet, so I can only scoop out the poop and the worst of the sawdust patches and it also tracks everywhere, even worse than the clay litter. I end up having to dump the whole litter box on a weekly basis. I've even tried alternatives like wheat (sticky) and for a while I was going to a feed and seed store to get a corn based animal feed that made a decent litter, but not really scoopable.So when I saw ads for Tuft and Paw I was really skeptical. Their website is all subscription based and I didn't want to commit to that, so when I found it on Amazon so I could buy it once to try I decided to give it a shot.The Pros: It has pretty good odor control, it clumps well so it can be scooped thoroughly, and it doesn't track very much AT ALL (I even felt brave enough to put a litter box on carpet when I ended up needing to separate some fosters from the normal bathroom location). Best of all, it really is as close to dust free as I've seen with ANY litter. MUCH better than anything else I've tried. It's biodegradable and flushable, and I haven't seen any digestive tract issues, though I'm still not using it for the tiniest kittens or just after surgery.The Cons: It is expensive, but since I'm not having to dump the whole box at one time I'm not going through near as much of it as I do the pine litter. Still it's a lot more than what I've been spending on clay. The long thin granules clump well and aren't too sticky, but they do take much longer to sift than the regular clay because it takes more work to get them to line up with the slots on my scoop.I do not have the tuft + paw litterbox or scoop, so maybe that would be a better design to work with the shape of the litter. So overall a good choice and the only one I have ever been brave enough to use on carpet.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
1 month ago