She files her own claws now.

Hide a treat. Walk away. Come back to smooth nails. The KittyPedi turns your cat's digging instinct into automatic nail care.

Shop The KittyPedi

Hide a treat. Walk away. Smooth claws.

The wooden box that files your cat's nails using her own digging instinct. No clippers in the drawer. No vet bill every six weeks. No towel burrito at 9 pm on a Tuesday.

She thinks she's hunting. You stop bleeding.

KittyPedi nail file box demo

You stopped trimming three weeks ago.

The clippers are still in the kitchen drawer. The last attempt left two scratch lines down your forearm that haven't fully healed. She hides under the bed the moment she sees the towel come out.

So the nails grow. The couch loses another inch of stuffing. Until the next $70 vet bill forces a fix.

Add up what nail-day actually costs you. $40–60 every six weeks at the vet — that's $320–480 a year. $25–40 at the mobile groomer plus travel. $30–80 wasted on clippers, Soft Paws, and grooming bags that never worked. Gabapentin sedation at $20–40 a month for the cats who refuse to be held. Hundreds of dollars a year — and the fight still happens every time.

This is the alternative.

It physically cannot cut your cat.

Cats in the wild keep their claws short by clawing through bark, rocks, and rough surfaces while hunting. Indoor cats lose access to that — which is why their nails overgrow.

The KittyPedi recreates that surface, exactly. Cat claws are keratin. The pads underneath are flesh. 100-grit cat-safe sandpaper sits at one specific abrasion threshold — rough enough to wear keratin, soft enough that the pad feels nothing more than texture.

Each digging stroke removes 0.1 to 0.2 mm of tip. The mechanism never reaches the quick. There is no blade. No lever. No force that travels deeper than the surface of the claw.

It is not a careful trim. It is a geometric impossibility of injury — recreating millions of years of evolved feline behavior.

Same paw. Twenty-one days apart.

By week three, her claws are visibly shorter. The first time she jumps on your lap and you don't flinch. The first time her claw catches your sweater and pulls free instead of snagging.

Pays for itself in one or two skipped vet visits. After that, your cat files her own nails for years.

30 days. Or every cent back. If her claws aren't visibly shorter, full refund — keep the box, no return shipping needed. Verify it yourself: phone-photo her right front claw on day one and again on day twenty-one. Hold them side by side. The picture decides.

Before and after macro of cat claws showing sharp tips filed smooth