
1. Cats Actually Use It
Every mat I tried before, she walked around it. She found CoolPaws within an hour. On her own.
Cats seek cooler surfaces through their paw pads. CoolPaws is designed around that natural instinct.

I've spent three summers trying to keep my cat cool. Fans. Ice. Gel mats she walked around. Then I found CoolPaws. Here's why nothing else comes close.
Note: Please read this before the next heat wave hits.

Every mat I tried before, she walked around it. She found CoolPaws within an hour. On her own.
Cats seek cooler surfaces through their paw pads. CoolPaws is designed around that natural instinct.

My first mat was gel-filled. It looked fine, until I learned how easily a punctured or chewed gel mat can become a mess.
CoolPaws is pure cooling fabric. Nothing inside. Nothing to leak. Safe and cooling.

I mentioned CoolPaws at her next checkup. My vet nodded before I finished the sentence:
“That's the one we recommend.”
“Only one built around how cats naturally regulate their temperature.”

Over 10,000 cats across the United States use CoolPaws every summer. The most common thing owners say?
“She found it herself and never left.”

If your cat doesn't use it, doesn't like it, or you're not happy for any reason, you get your money back.
No complicated forms. Just contact us. 60 days.

Emergency vet care for heat stress can cost $2,000 to $4,700.
The CoolPaws mat: $49.99.
One is something you recover from. The other is something you help prevent.

The gel mat I had before hardened after one season. I threw it out.
CoolPaws washes in the machine. It comes out exactly the same. Two summers in, still working like day one.

Free delivery on every order. Most orders arrive within 2–6 business days.

Not at Walmart. Not on Amazon. The real CoolPaws mat is only available at CoolPaws.
If you've seen something similar elsewhere, it's not the same material.

Last year, the mats sold out before peak heat week.
If you can still see this page, stock is available now. It won't stay that way long.
THIS IS AN ADVERTISEMENT AND NOT AN ACTUAL NEWS ARTICLE OR VETERINARY ADVICE. ALWAYS CONSULT YOUR VETERINARIAN FOR MEDICAL CONCERNS ABOUT YOUR PET.