How to Teach Your Cat to Use a New Scratching Post Using Catnip

How to Teach Your Cat to Use a New Scratching Post Using Catnip

You’ve finally found the perfect Mewment scratching post—the one that matches your sofa and features premium sisal. You bring it home with excitement, but your cat ignores it completely, preferring to return to the shredded corner of your armchair. This "rejection" isn't a sign that your cat doesn't like the post; it’s simply a lack of an "invitation."

The secret to a successful introduction? The strategic use of organic catnip. Here is how to teach your cat to love their new scratcher.

1. The "Scent Invitation"

To a cat, a brand-new scratching post smells like the factory, the cardboard box, or the delivery truck. It’s an alien object. By rubbing high-quality organic catnip or silvervine into the fibers of the sisal or wood, you’re overriding those "new" smells with a scent that signals "joy" and "excitement." It’s an irresistible invitation to investigate.

2. Mimic the Scratching Action

Once your cat is attracted by the scent, they might just sniff it or rub their face on it. To encourage the action of scratching, you can gently scratch the post with your own fingernails. The sound of scratching triggers a cat’s mirror neurons, often prompting them to join in.

3. Rewarding the First Shred

The moment your cat digs their claws into the new post, celebrate! Use a verbal marker or a clicker, and offer a small Mewment treat immediately. You want to create a strong positive association: New Post = Good Scent + Satisfying Stretch + Tasty Reward.

4. Location Swap

Even with catnip, a post in the wrong place won't get used. Place the new, catnip-scented post directly in front of the piece of furniture they currently scratch. Once they have consistently chosen the post for 3–4 days, you can slowly move it a few inches each day to its permanent "Feline Chic" location.

The Mewment Approach

At Mewment, we believe in guiding your cat toward better habits with love and intelligence. A scratching post is a playground, not just a tool. By using catnip as a bridge, you’re making every "meow" count toward a more harmonious, scratch-free home.

Back to blog