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Depends on Setup โ„น๏ธ

Can a Cat ๐Ÿฑ Live in a 75 Gallon Glass Tank?

Enclosure suitability guide for housing Cats in a 75 Gallon Glass Tank.

Enclosure Type
glass tank
Floor Space
6.25 sq ft
Dimensions
48"L ร— 18"W ร— 21"H
Verdict
Depends on Setup โ„น๏ธ
๐Ÿ’ฐ Typical Price: $120โ€“$280

Our Verdict

Based on the floor space and enclosure type analysis above, this enclosure is depends on setup โ„น๏ธ for a Cat.

Pros & Cons of the 75 Gallon Glass Tank

โœ… Pros

  • Large floor space โ€” exceeds hamster ideal benchmark
  • Deep enough for serious burrowing setups
  • Looks premium
  • Works well as adult bearded dragon enclosure

โŒ Cons

  • Very heavy (~140 lbs empty)
  • Expensive new
  • Difficult to move or reposition
  • Mesh lid must be sourced separately

What Cats Need in an Enclosure

Cats are free-roaming companion animals and should never be permanently confined to a cage or small enclosure. Crates are acceptable for short-term transport or recovery only. Providing vertical territory โ€” cat trees, wall shelves, window perches โ€” is far more important than square footage.

Recommended Setup for Cats

Cat tree (72"+ height)Essential for climbing, scratching, and territory. Place near a window.
Wall-mounted cat shelvesAdds vertical territory without floor space. Great for multi-cat homes.
Window perch / bird feederEnrichment and stimulation for indoor cats.
Scratching posts (sisal)Minimum one per cat plus one extra. Tall enough to stretch fully (32"+).
Covered litter box areaCats prefer privacy. One box per cat plus one. Away from food and water.
Hidey holes / cat cavesSafe retreat spaces reduce anxiety, especially in multi-cat homes.

โš ๏ธ Things to Avoid for Cats

  • Permanent caging or crate confinement
  • Single-level homes with zero vertical territory for active breeds
  • Placing litter boxes next to food bowls
  • Under-litter-boxing a multi-cat home (causes stress-related elimination issues)