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Pet Furniture New Arrivals – Cat Trees, Cat Beds & Pet Side Tables

New drops from Eureka's pet furniture line. Updated regularly as new pieces launch.

Your Cat Needs Furniture. So Do You. These Do Both.

A cat tree that's also a bookshelf. A side table that's also a cat bed. Every piece in this collection pulls double duty, so you're not sacrificing floor space or style just to keep your cat happy. Real wood, real furniture, real home.

What's in This Collection

Eureka's pet new arrivals are updated regularly across three main categories:

Cat Trees & Towers: Multi-level structures built for climbing, scratching, and lounging. Designed to fit into a living room without dominating it.

Cat Bed Side Tables: End tables with a built-in enclosed cat bed at the base. Functional for you, comfortable for your cat, and compact enough for most rooms.

Owner & Pet Shared Furniture: Pieces like bookshelf cat trees that serve a real storage or furniture purpose for the owner while giving cats their own space within the same footprint.

Why It Looks Different From Other Cat Furniture

This collection is held to the same design standards as the rest of Eureka's home furniture line: solid wood construction, clean silhouettes, and walnut or neutral finishes that work with the room rather than against it. The result is pet furniture that earns its place in your home, not just tolerates it.

Built for Cat Owners Who Want Both

Most cat furniture is designed around what cats need. This line starts there, then asks what you need too: storage, a side table, a bookshelf, a piece that fits the room you've already built. That's the brief every new piece is designed against.

Find Your Next Piece

Browse the full pet new arrivals collection above. Free shipping to the contiguous 48 states on every order. New pieces added regularly, so check back to see what's new.

FAQ


What's the Difference Between a Cat Tree and a Cat Tower?

The terms are often used interchangeably, but cat trees tend to be wider with multiple platforms spreading outward, while cat towers are typically taller and more vertical. Both give cats space to climb, scratch, and rest at height. The right choice depends on how much floor space you're working with.

How Tall Should a Cat Tree Be?

Most cats prefer to be as high as possible, so taller is generally better. A cat tree in the 60" to 76" range works well for most rooms and gives cats a meaningful vantage point. For multi-cat households, the number of separate perches matters just as much as overall height.

What Material Is Best for Cat Furniture?

Solid wood frames are the most durable and easiest to clean. Sisal rope is the best material for scratching posts, as cats are naturally drawn to it and it holds up far longer than carpet. For sleeping areas, removable cushions with washable covers make day-to-day maintenance much easier.