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We have a lot of stray cats in my neighborhood and they possess an uncanny ability to know when a car has been cleaned for them to sit on and enjoy.

Needless to say, the dirty, dusty paw marks they leave behind is a hassle to clean.

The ideal solution would be to use a car cover, but to use it on a daily driver is highly impractical.

Are there any proven cat-repellent products that are specifically designed for cars? The last thing I want to do is apply some generic household product and damage the paintwork.

A quick Google search reveals that some products and techniques do exist, but they are either impractical, provide limited protection or difficult to get hold of.

I'm open to humane suggestions. No ethylene glycol. No spiked tuna, etc.

Zaid
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21 Answers21

92

Place a cardboard box next to your car. If science has told us anything, it is "if they fits, then they sits".

Cats in a box

Bacon Brad
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Just as it is common for people to hang plastic owls in trees to scare off birds, you must scare away the cats with a natural fear.

As a popular YouTube video illustrates, cats have a very real fear of Cucumbers.

enter image description here

Now I'm not suggesting that Cucumbers are a natural enemy of cats, or that you place cucumbers all over your car. Extrapolating the color and shape of the cucumber to a real animal seems to point to a snake.

Rubber snakes are cheap and easy to keep in your car. Placing rubber snakes on the hood and trunk of your car should scare away cats. They can't see the snake from the ground, so they don't have time to decide it is fake. As soon as they jump and see it, they will quickly run away.

enter image description here

JPhi1618
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48

Put catnip on the hood of a neighboring car...

PeteCon
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If you do not want cats (whether stray or otherwise) on your vehicle, conceal it either in a garage or car cover. They can get the car cover as dirty as they want to, but they will not get it onto the vehicle itself. While you say it is impractical, what's more impractical, washing your car every other day or taking two minutes to take the cover off and put it on. To me the choice is obvious.

Pᴀᴜʟsᴛᴇʀ2
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34

A little easier to do than building your own. This should keep them away, just remember not to set it off yourself when you leave for work.

Orbit 62100 Yard Enforcer Motion Activated Sprinkler

enter image description here

ScareCrow Motion Activated Animal Repellent

enter image description here

enter image description here

15 Reasons You Need A Scarecrow Motion-Activated Sprinkler

Then put a few of these in a safe (dry) location.

enter image description here

21

Sometimes cats will seek out the highest vantage point, so you could try providing a higher perch in the near vicinity (but make sure your car isn't a direct spring-board to the new perch). Perhaps wrap the perch with twine/rope, newspaper, paper bags, cardboard boxes, computer keyboards with fake hands on them, catnip, or other stuff cats like to trample.

Note: I'd avoid any tactics that 'scare' the cat away, or risk trading paw prints for claw marks.

MooseLucifer
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20

I think the real problem is them getting in it

If you have left your windows open at night and have the joy of cat urine in your car you will understand.

If you have heard of story of a cat climbing into an engine compartment at night to stay warm, you will understand.

Cat Repellent

There are quite a few products that can repel cats, natural and synthetic.

You can use these in your wheel wells to prevent them from climbing into the engine compartment and you can roll up your windows at night to keep them out of your car. If your windows are broken, you have bigger problems to solve.

DucatiKiller
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19

There are devices on the market that emit ultrasonic waves that drive cats away. From https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/Cat_repeller#Ultrasonic_devices:

Many retailers sell devices which exploit the discomforting effects of in-air ultrasound. These devices are usually combined with a motion sensor which is triggered by movement within the sensors range. This causes the device to emit high frequency noise which is uncomfortable to the cats, and inaudible to most humans (although they can still experience unpleasant subjective effects and, potentially, shifts in the hearing threshold[1]).

These devices work effectively as long as the cat is able to hear. Obviously, older cats with hearing loss may be immune to its effects.

Lynn Crumbling
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12

Aim a light sprinkler on your car.

Cats don't like slippery surfaces and most dislike water (especially when they are trying to relax)

zoplonix
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Are you a software guy? Check out the Kurt Grandis video below. Kurt built a Robotic Squirt Gun to keep Squirrels out of his Bird Feeder. Its a way cool project. I think that would work even better for cats on the car. I'm wondering if you can squirt the cats before they get to the car, but that depends on where its parked, etc... I guess you could also use a large puff of air instead of water. I think that would do the trick, if your neighbors could stand the weird noises from an air cannon at 2AM...

Video here.

zipzit
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I didn't see this suggested so I thought it would be interesting. If you have keyless entry you could always look into wiring a train horn to your car. For example, United Pacific Economy Horns on Summit:

enter image description here

anytime you saw a cat near or around your car you could hit lock and it would fire the horn and send them through the sky.

If you don't have an alarm system you could always look into purchasing one like Viper's 1-Way Keyless Entry System:

enter image description here

and connect the train horn to the aux side. Positive note, if you ever had someone try to break into your car at night you would surely be awaken by the horn.

Hᴇʀʙɪᴇ
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11

You can try putting cayenne pepper on & around your car, maybe mixed with a little water so it doesn't blow away. That's supposed to work well to keep animals out of a garden or flowerbed


There are motion activated air sprayers like this PetSafe Ssscat Cat Spray Control System that should be great to put by your wipers or wherever area of the car that's visited most.

There used to be a model that would beep first, and then spray air, so you could "train" them to avoid just the beep & use less or no air (no refills to buy). And it should be possible to attach an air compressor (set very low, maybe 10psi)

ssscat

How it works:

Ssscat’s automatic spray system combines spray technology with a motion detector to protect indoor areas and objects within a one meter radius. When your pet is within the one meter radius, the system will detect their movement and send out a burst of spray in their direction. Since the spray is harmless, odorless, and stainless, you won’t have to worry about damaging either your pet or your home. Because the spray catches your cat off guard, he will turn away and learn to avoid that area.

  • Adjustable motion detector angles between the detection of the motion and spray from side-to-side.
  • You can also adjust the direction of the spray up and down.
  • Ssscat repels cats and other small animals up to one meter away.
  • The scentless spray is enough to annoy him, but your nose won’t notice.
  • Ssscat can also be used for other small animals such as rabbits, dogs, and ferrets.
  • Uses 4 AAA batteries (not included).

Taping it to a weighted bag should keep it from blowing away outside, something like a bean bag gps mount would be an expensive alternative to a soft bag with something in it.

I've tried this indoors and it did work well, too well in that it would go off whenever I walked too close to the sensor.


Or, just use a Glade Sense & Spray air freshener. It has a motion detector & should only spray once every 30min if it detects motion. The scent will probably keep cats & other animals away.


Or you can make a motion activated water sprayer from existing relatively cheap products, like a Raid Auto-Trigger sprayer and the above mentioned Glade sprayer.


Or use an Arduino based more versatile one (for maybe ~$45 US according to the parts page)

Xen2050
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Cats like sunshine and warm surfaces.

Rinse the car with cold water to keep the temperature down, make sure you park in the shade and then hope.

Me, I just live with the paw prints.

Separatrix
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Old fashioned stimulus response might do the trick. The cat probably won't like the clunky noise your auto-unlock makes (if your car has this feature). If you wait until the cat is on your car then unlock the doors and repeat this over a few days, then the cats might not like your car so much.

Rimian
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I use a cheap $60 (over the internet) ultrasound emitter that triggers on motion, and shuts off within 15 seconds of no motion. I have one in the front yard and one in the backyard. Works on dogs, cats, squirrels and some birds.
One negative thing is they cannot tolerate the rain and humidity of central Florida at all. I have to bring them inside if it is rainy or foggy.

7

EZ-PZ gang! MOTH BALLS are your answer! Cheap, easy and they work. A neighborhood cat was using my side yard as a litter box, so I sprinkled a few moth balls on the grass and voila, no more cat waste. Apparently, they just hate the smell. You could leave a few in a tupperware container and then close the container when you go to work.

5

Buy some products intended to stop cats weeing in the house, for example lion urine. Like these:

Or search for topics entitled: How to stop my cats urinating on the skirting boards of my house.
Cats compete for territory by group weeing on things they think is theirs, so you may find you are in the same topic as cats weeing on walls.

Xen2050
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bandybabboon
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I have similar problem as yours. My solution is : put several dolls (animal shaped, e.g. dog, should be scary enough) on the car's area where they usually come and sit (on my case, it's on the front part, above the machine's cap, I'm not sure what it's called in English).

So far it's effective to keep the cats away.

p.s. the drawback is, my neighbor usually laugh when passing and seeing this.

4

Tie a Dog next to your car ! (if you have one)

catcalls
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Paint your car a color cats don't like or park it in your garage. Alternatively you could call animal control and tell them stray animals keep loitering on your property "don't mention cats".

Carfield
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According to this article, there are three traditional methods:

  1. Substance coverage. The trouble with this is that, as you remarked, in general, these products risk damaging the car's paint as much as or more than the cat's scratches.

  2. Lurking and frightening. This includes things like blasting the horn with your key or drenching the cat with a sprinkler. The danger is that the cat make worse scratches when jumping than it would otherwise have made.

  3. Booby traps. This includes motion sensitive devices and upside mousetraps, etc. Concerning #2 and #3, he writes,

I don't recommend either of these scenarios — stalking the cats or setting out harmful contraptions — since they'll probably only make things worse: As the cats jump, they'll leave nasty gouges and scratches on your paint job. And their owner's bound to be upset with you if she finds out.

Instead, get yourself a portable car storage unit with a door that you can zip up quickly and simply.

anonymous2
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