• Voor 17 uur besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden!
  • Specialist sinds 2011
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Rat Toilets – cleaner, fresher, and easier to clean

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Rat toilets, litter, and practical litter corners for a fresher rat cage. Help your rats use designated potty spots and make cleaning easier.
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  • Voor 17 uur besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden!
  • Specialist sinds 2011
  • Delivery from our own stock
€10,99 €8,95
Order now
In stock
  • Voor 17 uur besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden!
  • Specialist sinds 2011
  • Delivery from our own stock
€12,95
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Choosing rat toilets – toilet corner, litter, and hygiene at DRD Rodent Shop

Rat Toilets – designated pee spots, fresher cage, and easier cleaning

Domestic rat – choosing a toilet and toilet corner for a fresher rat cage Rat toilets help keep the rat cage fresher and more organized. Rats are smart animals and often choose recognizable urination spots, especially in corners, on platforms, or near favorite resting places. Therefore, when selecting a rat toilet, DRD looks not only at the tray itself, but primarily at placement, toilet filling, ease of cleaning, urination habits, and the combination with bedding and pee pads.

DRD chooses toilet solutions that work logically in a real rat cage: a clear toilet corner in the spot where your rats already like to urinate, suitable rat bedding , highly absorbent toilet filler, and, where necessary , pee pads on platforms or favorite resting spots. This makes cleaning easier without having to completely clean the entire cage every time.

 

In short

Rat toilets help to make solid urine spots clearer and remove wet spots faster.

Preferably place the toilet in the spot where your rats already like to urinate on their own.

Combine litter boxes with low-dust bedding, litter, and pee pads for a fresher cage.

Regular potty spot

Many rats choose their own favorite spots to urinate. By placing a toilet there, you make that spot more distinct and easier to keep clean.

Fresher cage

A toilet helps to collect urine and wet litter in one place. This allows for faster spot cleaning and keeps the base fresh for longer.

Smart combination

Toilets work best in combination with toilet filler, pee pads, low-dust bedding, and a cage layout that suits your rats' behavior.

Why a toilet is useful in the rat cage

Rats are neat and intelligent animals, but that does not mean a rat cage stays clean on its own. Many rats do choose recognizable spots to urinate or leave droppings. You can use this behavior to your advantage by placing a litter box in the right place. The litter box then becomes a clear zone for urine and droppings, allowing you to clean more quickly.

A rat toilet is especially helpful for daily checks. Instead of having to search everywhere through the cage, you can see where the most mess is more quickly. This allows you to replace wet toilet filler more often, while the rest of the bedding remains pleasant for longer. That is practical for you and nicer for your rats.

A toilet is also useful in multi-level cages. Rats do not always urinate only on the floor. Sometimes they choose a platform, corner, hanging spot, or fixed route. In that case, an extra toilet or a combination with pee pads can make a big difference.

Choosing a rat toilet: what to look for?

A good rat toilet suits the size of your rats, its location in the cage, and your cleaning routine. Therefore, do not choose based solely on shape or color, but primarily on size, entry, stability, and how easy it is to empty and clean. A toilet that is too small, too light, or inconveniently placed will not be used as effectively.

  • Choose a toilet that is spacious enough for adult rats.
  • Look for an entrance that is easily accessible.
  • Ensure that the toilet is stable or can be securely fastened.
  • Choose a shape that fits your rats' favorite pee spot.
  • Use a recognizable toilet filling that differs from the base.
  • Check if the toilet is easy to remove from the cage and clean.

Are you unsure whether it is better to use one large toilet or several small ones? Then first check where your rats are already urinating. Those spots often tell you more than the cage layout on paper.

Where do you place a rat toilet?

The best place for a rat toilet is usually not the spot you find most attractive, but the place your rats already use. Observe for a few days where wet spots appear. These are often corners, areas under platforms, regular routes, or sheltered spots where rats feel safe.

  • Place the toilet on an existing urination spot for the greatest chance of use.
  • In larger cages, place multiple toilets if necessary.
  • Use a toilet or urinal on platforms when urination occurs frequently.
  • Do not place the toilet in a spot where it is constantly knocked over or gets filled with bedding.
  • Keep the entrance clear so your rats can easily get inside.
  • Only move the toilet step by step if you want to control the peeing spot.

Practical tip

At the start, place a little used toilet paper or a few droppings in the toilet so that the spot has a familiar smell.

Do not immediately clean everything completely odorless; a little recognition helps rats find the place again.

Do your rats keep using a different corner? Then that is often the better place for the toilet.

Which toilet filler do you use for rats?

Rat litter must be highly absorbent, low-dust, and easy to replace. It is helpful if the litter is different from the base bedding. This makes the toilet more clearly recognizable for your rats, and you can see more quickly what needs to be replaced.

Absorbent toilet filler

An absorbent litter helps to soak up urine and bind wet spots. Replace the filler regularly, especially when the litter box is the primary urination site. This may be necessary sooner with multiple rats than with a small group.

Low dust and odorless

Rats have sensitive airways. Therefore, choose a low-dust litter and avoid strongly perfumed materials. A fresh cage is achieved primarily through good absorption, ventilation, and regular cleaning, not by masking odors.

Different structure than the base soil

Preferably use a different texture in the toilet than on the rest of the floor. This makes the difference between “floor” and “toilet” clearer. This can help when your rats need to learn where the toilet corner is intended.

Can you house-train rats?

Rats can often learn to use certain spots as a toilet more frequently, but complete housebreaking is not always realistic. Some rats use a toilet very neatly, while others continue to urinate on platforms, in hammocks, or along favorite routes. The goal, therefore, is not “perfectly housebroken,” but a cage that is smarter and easier to keep clean.

  • First observe where your rats urinate on their own.
  • Place the toilet in that spot instead of a random place.
  • Place a few droppings or a small amount of used litter in the toilet.
  • Clean up accidents calmly and consistently continue to offer the same toilet area.
  • For stubborn urine stains, if necessary, use an extra toilet or pee mat.
  • Expect improvement, but no perfect control in every rat.

Would you like to learn more about this? Then also read the information page on litter training rats .

Hygiene & cleaning of rat toilets

A rat toilet only works well when it is checked regularly. Urine, droppings, and food remnants can accumulate quickly, especially with multiple rats. By cleaning the toilet more often than the entire cage, the cage stays fresher and you don't have to replace everything at once as often.

  • Check the toilet daily for wet spots, odor, and old food residue.
  • Replace wet toilet filler sooner than the base bedding.
  • Clean the toilet bowl before adding new filling.
  • Allow cleaned parts to dry thoroughly before returning them to the cage.
  • Do not use strong perfumes or aggressive odor masking in the cage.
  • Also check platforms, hammocks, and pee pads, because rats do not always use just one spot.

For the broader cleaning routine, you can look further under rat care and the information page Cleaning a Rat Cage .

Checklist: how to choose the right rat toilet

The toilet is spacious enough for adult rats.

The entrance is easily accessible and not too narrow.

The toilet is located in a spot where your rats already like to urinate.

The toilet filler is low-dust, absorbent, and easy to replace.

The toilet is easy to remove from the cage and clean.

You combine toilets with urinals, floor covering, and good ventilation where necessary.

Handy shopping routes for toilets, urinals, and hygiene

A rat toilet works best when it is part of the overall cage layout. With these routes, you quickly create a logical combination of toilet, bedding, urination spots, and cleaning.

Toilet & bottom

Create a distinct toilet corner with a matching toilet, absorbent filling, and a low-dust base.

Rat Toilets
Rats Bedding
Bedding & Nesting Material

Pissing spots & plateaus

Use pee mats or extra litter boxes in places where your rats like to lie or urinate.

Rat Pee Mats
Rat Platforms & Ladders
Rat Hammocks

Cleaning & care

Keep toilet areas, cage corners, and resting places fresh with a regular cleaning routine.

Rat Care
Rat Health
Rat Cage Accessories

Learn more about potty training and cleaning

Do you want more guidance on potty training, toilet training, and cleaning? These information pages align well with this category:

FAQ – frequently asked questions about rat toilets

Can you house-train rats?

Rats can often learn to use certain spots as a toilet more frequently, but complete house training is not achieved with every rat. The main goal is for urine and droppings to end up in recognizable places more often, making the cage easier to keep clean.

Where do you put a rat toilet?

Preferably, place the toilet where your rats already like to urinate. This is often a corner, a spot under a platform, or a regular route. If you use multiple levels, an extra toilet at a favorite urination spot can be handy.

Which toilet filler is suitable for rats?

Choose a low-dust, absorbent toilet filler that is easy to replace. It is helpful if the filler in the toilet is different from the base floor covering, so that the toilet area remains clearly recognizable.

Why do rats pee next to the toilet?

Sometimes the litter box is not located in a place your rats find logical. Rats can also have multiple urinating spots, for example on platforms or near hammocks. Move the litter box to the actual urinating spot or use an extra litter box or pee pad.

How often should you clean a rat toilet?

Check the litter box daily. Replace wet litter and old food remnants on time. How often you clean the entire litter box depends on the number of rats, the litter, and how intensively the litter box is used.

Do you need pee-mats in addition to a toilet?

Pee mats are handy on platforms, in corners, and on favorite resting spots where a toilet won't fit. A toilet primarily catches the obvious urine spot; pee mats help in places where rats like to lie down or urinate in between.

DRD selects toilets that suit rat behavior and your cleaning routine.

At DRD Knaagdierwinkel®, we view toilets as part of the entire rat cage. A toilet must not only fit in the cage but also logically connect to your rats' urination area, bedding, litter, platforms, and resting spots. This way, cleaning becomes a manageable daily routine rather than a major chore.

Are you unsure whether to choose a corner toilet, an extra toilet on a platform, toilet fillers, or pee pads? Then check out the Ratten Webshop or contact us via Service & Contact . We are happy to help you decide.

Rat toilets and litter for a fresher cage
Smartly combines with bedding, pee pads, and cleaning products
Specialist since 2011
Ordered before 17:00, shipped the same day from our own stock

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