10 Tips To Train Your Cat To Sleep All Night

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Does your cat have an annoying habit of waking you up at night by stepping on your face, pawing at your head, sliding under the covers, meowing, or howling? This can be a real problem. Sleep deprivation caused by pets has both physical and mental effects lasting for weeks or even months.

In this article, you’ll learn how to get your cat to sleep at night so that you, too, can get a good night’s sleep.

To understand why our cats do what they do, we have to look back at their ancestry.

The ancestors of our house cats (the North African wildcat) preferred to live solitary lives, were nocturnal or crepuscular hunters. These behavioural traits are retained by many pet cats today, affecting their sleeping and activity habits.

Today’s housecat is crepuscular, meaning that they are most active in the hours right before the sun rises and just after it’s dipped under the horizon each evening.

That means that it’s perfectly normal for your cat to wake you up early in the morning or skitter around the house in the evening—click here to learn more about cat zoomies—but you can work with your cat to establish a sleep cycle that works for both of you.

How To Get Your Cat To Sleep at Night?

Fortunately, you can use a variety of methods to encourage your cat to sleep according to a schedule that benefits both you and them.

Once you’ve established the cause of your cat’s nocturnal activity, you’ll want to take steps to help them sleep at night. Your particular approach will depend on your cat’s unique situation, but the following tips will help to get you on the right track.

1. Create a Cat-Friendly Home Environment

Design an enhanced and stimulating indoor environment that will increase activity, decrease mental monotony, and prevent behaviour problems. Enriched surroundings should provide opportunities for climbing, playtime, exploration, and problem-solving without owner involvement.

A healthy, stimulating environment should include scratching posts, cat trees, toys, and places to hide.

2. Provide Appropriate Bedding for Your Cat

Unlike dogs, cats do not like to nap at ground level, even if offered comfortable beds in baskets on the floor. They like to embrace hideaways and occupy nooks as places for concealing themselves for uninterrupted rest.

Your cat should have varied bedding areas around the house but away from the litter box, food, and water. For anxious/fearful cats, provide additional hiding opportunities with igloo-type beds or those with high sides.

A cat-safe heated bed or pad may be required when temperature regulation is diminished as the cat ages or during illness/recovery.

Read More: The 13 Best Cat Beds (Purchased and Tested)

If your cat insists on sleeping in your bedroom, place a cuddler, blanket, or your scented shirt close to your bed.

3. Respect the Importance of the Cat’s Sense of Smell and Pheromones

Cats use a variety of olfactory and chemical (pheromones) signals to both communicate with other cats and evaluate their environment.

Use a feline synthetic pheromone product such as Feliway in rooms where your cat spends most of their time and when moving to a new environment. This can help to increase their sense of security.

Avoid cleaning areas that have been facially marked by your cat, provide lots of horizontal or vertical scratching objects and scatter dried catnip as an attractant.

4. Establish a Sanctuary Room and Set of Routines From the First Day Your Kitten Joins the Family.

Most cat owners feel that kittens need to be near them at night, especially the first time they arrive. This can set an adverse pattern for nocturnal games, excitement, and no sleep whatsoever!

Cats are inherently active at dawn and dusk, despite that your kitten can learn to adjust its sleeping habit to fit in with your lifestyle.

There is nothing harsh in putting a kitten to bed in a cosy, warm and secure environment until you wake up in the morning, as long as the room contains essential basic needs including a comfy bed to ensure a restful night.

5. Interactive Playtime and Hunting Games Should Be Part of Your Daily Routine, Particularly Before Bedtime.

Providing a dedicated space for your cat to rest may encourage healthier sleeping habits.

Appropriate play should mimic predatory behaviour sequencing and involve:

  • Staring
  • Stalking
  • Chasing prey
  • Chittering
  • Pouncing
  • Prey in the mouth
  • Prey manipulation
  • Killing bite

Cat toys such as DaBird or Cat Catcher are most tactual and exhilarating. Set up a weekly enrichment schedule that contains novelty items and experiences to help your cat be calmer and avoid midnight zoomies or spurts of energy at inappropriate times.

6. Don’t Be Your Only Cat’s Source of Food!

Hide food in various places around the house or nearby new objects so your cat can ‘hunt’ for their food. Use Doc & Phoebe’s Indoor Hunting Cat Feeder to increase the difficulty of seeking food and enhance investigative abilities.

Create homemade food puzzles from egg cartons, toilet paper rolls or cardboard boxes. Cat treat dispensing balls with a hole that distributes dry food is an alternative challenge comes nightfall.

Along with puzzle feeders, toss food all around the house to promote foraging opportunities whilst building problem-solving skills.

Make use of technology such as timed automated feeders to spread your cats feed over the day and dispense food early morning while you’re asleep.

Also Read: The 10 Best Cat Slow Feeders & Puzzle Feeders

7. Cat Enclosures

Provide outdoor access if possible, by procuring or building a purpose-built outside enclosure or offer access via secured garden to eliminate misplaced play or predatory attention seeking response for assertive cats.

Discover a step by step DIY instructions of how to build a cat enclosure attached to an existing structure.

8. Clicker Training

Clicker training particularly for an indoor cat will give something exciting to do besides eat as well as catnip and make the cat more interested in you. You may even see a side of your cat that you have not seen before which will similarly impress relatives and friends. Primarily it will make significant changes in your cat’s attitude and daily habits reducing the need for continual attention.

9. Hire a Cat Minder

Outside activities help with physical and mental stimulation as well as offer alternative interests that can change certain behaviour.

If you are working long hours and your cat is kept indoors, hire a cat minder few days per week to spend time with your furry companion playing games, learning new tricks, along with going for adventuresome leash cat walks.

Arrange home visits based on your cat’s circadian rhythm, most cats are crepuscular (especially those with free outdoor access), however some cats are diurnal (ours for example). Companion cats can adapt their activity patterns to the presence and owner’s lifestyle during daylight.

10. Train Your Cat To Be Quiet

If your cat inclines to caterwaul (loud, howling noise), it’s possible that at some stage your cat has learned that if it vocalises, you will provide food or attention. This type of caterwauling is a learned behaviour. You will need to train your cat by ignoring the behaviour when it takes place by offering rewards when the cat is quiet (it may take a little time and lots of patience).

11. Cat Massage

Cats who like being handled and stroked will benefit from a relaxing therapeutic massage prior to bedtime to help them ease and doze into the night.

Cats often adjust their activity patterns to the presence of humans; however, some individuals will exhibit nocturnal activity which is problematic for owners.

Before You Start Training Your Cat To Sleep Through The Night, Rule Out Any Medical Conditions

While cats are naturally most active in the evenings and early mornings, some cats also have trouble sleeping at night due to emotional or physical problems.

Infection, disease, and pain can modify normal patterns of sleep and activity in cats. Rule out any medical issues by taking your cat to the vet for a comprehensive health check.

Reasons Your Cat May Have Trouble Sleeping at Night

While it is normal for cats to be most active in the early morning and evening, cats may have trouble sleeping at night due to health or stress issues.

There could be several causes for changes in your individual cat’s sleep schedule. Let’s go over a few of the reasons why your cat might wake you up at night.

1. Chronic Stress

Like medical causes, chronic stress can produce a range of non-specific signs, including poor sleep. In addition to having sleep issues, stressed cats may also vocalize excessively, appear restless, or overgroom. This type of stress is common among multi-cat homes, which often force unrelated individuals to compete for limited resources.

2. Boredom

An indoor lifestyle of confinement and dullness with no environmental enrichment can predispose cats to sleep all day and seek their owner’s attention at night.

3. Restlessness/Insomnia

Many cats experience restlessness at night-time despite their love and need for lengthy sleep. These cats usually roam around the house in the middle of the night, play with toys, toilet paper, knock items off of shelves, and try to elicit a response from the owner while they’re asleep.

This behaviour is usually attributed to your cat’s nocturnal or crepuscular nature, but it’s not always healthy. Sleeplessness can extend to daytime restiveness. If your cat exhibits a sleep disorder, a lengthy behavioural consultation and examination by a veterinarian is essential.

4. Environmental Changes

Cats are territorial and their acute sense of smell is a primary means by which they value their surroundings. Relocation to a new home can trigger emotional distress, loss of appetite, and sleeplessness in some cats due to the perception of a new environmental security threat.

5. Cognitive Dysfunction in Older Cats

how to help cats get along two cats lying on a bed

Whether you’re planning to bring home a new cat or want to keep the peace in your feline family, there are a few tips that will help you to create a harmonious, happy feline household.

Age-related deterioration in brain function can result in behavioural changes, such as confusion, poor memory, and altered sleep patterns. The sleep/wake cycle signs include frequent waking during the night, increased siestas during daylight hours, and increased night vocalisation. It is estimated to affect more than 50% of cats over the age of 15 years.

Cat parents will have to figure out what natural or social needs are not being met, address the problem, or accept the reality that their cat’s biological clock will not line up with them and accommodate to the cat’s preference.

If your cat’s sleep problem is too much to handle and you have tried everything, contact a Cat Behaviorist or an Applied Animal Behaviorist in your area.

Frequently Asked Questions

How do I stop my cat from waking me up at 4am?

Instinctively cats are active at dawn plus dusk specially during spring and summer when its main prey of small creatures are active in addition there’s extended daylight hours. The 4am wakeup call is the time most humans have their deepest sleep but the time your cat is most likely to seek attention.

To stop your cat from pouncing on you while you are fast asleep, keep your cat stimulated during the day and avoid over-stimulation before bedtime.

Avoid getting up to feed or play with your cat since it may reinforce the behaviour. An automatic cat feeder or a sanctuary room may be the solution in your household.

Why won't my cats sleep at night?

Many external and internal environmental factors can influence sleep in cats while changes in sleep behaviour can indicate illness, pain, or distress in a cat.

What can I give my cat to sleep at night?

Valerian herb has been used by humans as a treatment for insomnia, it has a similar effect on felines helping them relax and sleep better.

Melatonin is a hormone supplement used to treat a range of conditions. It is commonly used for sleep and behavioural disorders in humans, cats, and dogs. In dogs it is also used for treatment of hair disorders like alopecia and for separation anxiety. In cats it can be utilized for sleep deprivation, cognitive dysfunction, mood stabilisation and to supress the heat cycle.

The ASPCA compiled a list of sleep aids that may be beneficial for your cat.

Consult your natural vet or animal health practitioner prior to administration of ANY supplements, herbs, or medication for correct dosage as well as in case of contraindications.

How to make a cat sleep instantly?

There is no realistic method to get a cat to sleep instantly, instead cat parents will have to figure out what natural or social needs are not being met, address the problem, or accept the reality that their cat’s biological clock will not line up with them and accommodate to the cat’s preference.

View Sources
Cats.com uses high-quality, credible sources, including peer-reviewed studies, to support the claims in our articles. This content is regularly reviewed and updated for accuracy. Visit our About Us page to learn about our standards and meet our veterinary review board.
  1. Allen, M. (n.d.). Common Cat Sleep Disorders. Retrieved October 09, 2020, from Pet Carerx.com: https://www.petcarerx.com/article/common-cat-sleep-disorders/893

  2. Animal, P. (n.d.). Mood Food. Australia: Natural Pet Health. Retrieved October 10, 2020

  3. Animale, C. S. (2019). Feliway Optimum. (CEVA, Compiler) France. Retrieved October 14, 2020

  4. Caney, S. M. (August, 2019). Routine blood and urine panels: what’s to be gained? 5(Issue 8). (I. C. Care, Compiler) UK: Feline Focus. Retrieved October 12, 2020

  5. Care, I. C. (2018, October 14). Helping your new Cat or Kitten settle in. Retrieved October 12, 2020, from ICatCare:

  6. Clinic, M. (2014, June 03). Are your pets disturbing your sleep? You’re not alone, Mayo Clinic study finds. Retrieved October 09, 2020, from Mayo Clinic: https://newsnetwork.mayoclinic.org/discussion/are-your-pets-disturbing-your-sleep-youre-not-alone-mayo-clinic-study-finds/

  7. Cohen, A. (n.d.). The Dawn Patrol. Retrieved October 15, 2020, from Humane Society

  8. Fraser, A. F. (2012). Feline Behaviour and Welfare. (S. Hulbert, Ed.) CAB International. Retrieved October 08, 2020

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  11. Ryan, L. (March, 2020). Feeding cats for the future: an opportunity for creativity. 6(Issue 3). UK: International Cat Care. Retrieved October 15, 2020

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About Melina Grin

Melina discovered her passion for helping animals during her childhood. After working as a nurse in the veterinary field, she became interested in feline behaviour, bodywork therapies, and energy medicine. Melina has extensive experience dealing with cat behavioural and training issues, and she is highly skilled in nursing and rehabilitating her clients' beloved pets. She believes a holistic approach, considering both the pet and the guardian, is the best way to improve a pet's health and overall well-being. Melina is the proud founder and director of Pet Nurture, a Unique Mobile Animal Wellness Centre specializing in cats based in Sydney, Australia.

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9 thoughts on “10 Tips To Train Your Cat To Sleep All Night”

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  1. Sharon

    Has anyone actually had good personal results with Valerian or Melatonin for their cats? If so, what form of it did you use? Dried? Capsules? Liquid? In food? Treats?

    Reply
    1. Avatar photoMelina Grin Post author

      Hi Sharon, we used dried Valerian and had positive calming results, we also use Silver vine also known as Matabi sticks with varying results from one individual to another. Hope this helps, Melina

  2. Sharon

    Thanks Melina. My 14 year old cat Boo, due to Hyperthyroidism, recent deafness and seperation anxiety from the sudden death of his littermate/brother, is expressing anxiety with extremely loud howling during most of his waking hours. He is on Methimazole but after 5 months on it, he continues to howl. Our vet says it’s not due to a physical ailment but maybe some dementia. Gee, can it get any worse for my poor little guy?
    We are giving him a lot of attention and have tried calming him in various ways all to no avail. I prefer not giving drugs so this is our last try for something else. Praying for a miracle.

    Reply
    1. Avatar photoMelina

      Ohh Sharon, I’m so sorry to hear that, Boo is experiencing grief in conjunction with health issues. Anecdotally cats can grieve between few weeks to six months with individuals manifesting diverse behavioral changes. If you have a holistic vet nearby, it’s worth consulting with them regarding natural therapies which aren’t contraindicated with Hyperthyroidism. Sending healing thoughts to you and Boo, Melina

    2. Lynn

      Sharon, do check out Dr. Lisa Newman’s holistic products and recommendations at http://www.holisticanimalcareshoppes.com/ She offers all sorts of herbal, naturopathic and homeopathic remedies that she formulates, and carries really good food options as well. All 5 of my cats (not all at once! LOL My 2 pairs + a recent rescued kitten) so far have all benefitted from support of various conditions over the last 19 years. I’m especially grateful for the help 2 of her products are providing to my middle-aged shelter cat who I figured out has Hyperesthesia syndrome! Such a BLESSING that she got relief and no longer lives with such fear, anxiety and pain. Dr Newman’s whole team is highly trained in knowing what remedies help with what challenges. Her Calm and Relax formula is amazing – be aware they are temporarily low on stock because of ingredient supply issues, but I think that will be improving soon! Wishing you equally impressive results!

  3. Michael Redmon

    I’ve got an Adult Maine Coon Cat that I’ve had for ten yrs. I’ve got him from my Veterinary, @ the age of 4-yrs. old in humid age. I found out, that his recent owner’s had his front paws declaw. That made me feel real sorry for him, and I cried like mad
    because of it. Now, I’ve found out in a lot of states, it’s against the law to “Declaw” a Cat’s Paws. I wouldn’t do any harm at all
    to hurt my cat. Except, maybe take him to the “Vet” when he needs to go. And lots of times I run the “Vacuum Cleaner” which
    he hates. Getting back to the “Vet” it’s about time for for his yearly (“Rabies Shot’s”). And he’s going to try his best to hide under my bed, or keep from going. Every time I get his Cat Cage out of the closest, he knows what that means.

    Reply
  4. Patty Wilhoite

    I have a 26 year old black cat. She’s on prednisolone for IBS. She has been on this medication since 2017. All of a sudden 3 months ago, she started waking me up every 2 hours during the night. It’s gotten worse. Sometimes it’s every hour or less. I can no longer get a full night’s sleep. I tried sprinkling melatonin on her food, but she won’t eat it. Any suggestions to get her to sleep through the night again?

    Reply
    1. Avatar photoDr. Chris Vanderhoof, DVM, MPH

      Hi Patty,
      Wow, 26! That’s pretty amazing. For this recent issue you’re experiencing, I’d say there can be several possibilities in terms of underlying causes. For a kitty of this age especially, we should think about some medical changes that may cause restlessness or discomfort.

      Some possibilities might include hypertension, overactive thyroid (hyperthyroidism), joint pain and quite a few others. Getting an updated veterinary exam, checking bloodwork and a blood pressure can be helpful because if there is a medical cause that is found, a more direct treatment for an underlying medical disorder can actually lead to improvement.

      We can also see a condition called cognitive dysfunction, which is similar to dementia in people. We can have a number of behaviors with this condition but this can include restlessness and difficulty sleeping at night. This is a diagnosis of exclusion though, so we’re more likely to arrive at a diagnosis of cognitive dysfunction after checking for other medical disorders that may cause similar behaviors.

      There is a medication called selegiline which is approved for dogs but used off label in cats for cognitive dysfunction. In my own experience it is used uncommonly, but there have been reports that it may be helpful for some cats and can be worth discussing with your vet.

      Melatonin can be a good place to start. With our kitties, the form any medication or supplement takes can make a big difference. If the powdered form was not successful, there are other forms you can look into. There are a number of supplement forms online that include chew treat forms and oral drops. Compounding pharmacies, which you would need to work through your vet to utilize, can develop oral forms in a variety of flavors and can even put melatonin into a topical/transdermal form.

      I don’t always find that melatonin is successful for everyone. If we’ve checked over other medical/health conditions, there are sedatives that can be tried to help with sleeping at night. Gabapentin and trazodone are just two examples. They are only available as prescriptions and whether they are appropriate or not will depend on your kitty’s health condition.