The debate is eternal: dog person or cat person? But when you're in an apartment, the question isn't just about preference. It's about your floor space, your neighbors, your schedule, and your wallet.
Here's everything you need to know β no sugarcoating.
The Core Differences That Matter in an Apartment
| Factor | π Dog | π Cat |
|---|---|---|
| Noise level | MediumβHigh (barking) | Low (occasional meowing) |
| Space needed | Medium (+ outdoor access) | Small to medium |
| Alone time tolerance | Low (2β4 hrs max for some) | High (8+ hrs fine) |
| Daily time commitment | 2β3 hours minimum | 30β60 minutes |
| Monthly cost | $100β300+ | $50β100 |
| Lease issues | Common (size/breed restrictions) | Less common |
| Odor | More noticeable | Manageable with litter |
| Neighbor impact | Significant | Minimal |
The Dog Reality Check
Dogs can absolutely live in apartments β but they need more from you. Before getting a dog in an apartment, be honest:
- Can you walk them 3 times a day, including early morning and late night?
- Is your building dog-friendly, and does your lease specify allowed breeds/sizes?
- Can you afford a dog walker ($15β30/visit) for long work days?
- Are your neighbors close enough to hear barking through the walls?
The apartment-friendliest dog breeds are calm and quiet: Cavalier King Charles Spaniels, French Bulldogs, Basset Hounds, Shih Tzus. Avoid high-energy breeds like Huskies, Border Collies, and Dalmatians in small spaces.
The Cat Reality Check
Cats are arguably the best apartment pet in existence. They're quiet, clean, don't need outdoor time (indoor cats live longer), and are perfectly happy in a studio as long as they have vertical space β shelves, cat trees, window perches.
The challenges to plan for:
- Litter box odor β a good box + daily scooping keeps this minimal
- Scratching β provide scratching posts or your furniture suffers
- Two cats are actually easier than one if you're away for long hours β they entertain each other
π‘ The "floor space" myth
Cats don't care as much about floor space as they do about vertical space. A 400 sqft apartment with cat trees, shelves, and a window seat can make a cat happier than a large open-plan space with nothing to climb. Dogs genuinely need more floor area and outdoor access.
Cost Breakdown: 1 Year of Ownership
| Expense | π Dog | π Cat |
|---|---|---|
| Food | $400β800/yr | $200β400/yr |
| Vet (routine) | $300β500/yr | $200β400/yr |
| Grooming | $200β600/yr | $0β100/yr |
| Supplies/toys | $100β300/yr | $50β150/yr |
| Dog walker (if needed) | $1,500β3,600/yr | N/A |
| Litter (cat only) | N/A | $150β300/yr |
| Total estimate | $1,500β5,000+ | $600β1,350 |
The Verdict: Who Should Get Which
Neither answer is wrong. Both are great pets. The difference is what your life actually supports right now β not what you wish your life looked like.
Still torn? Let the quiz decide.
My Pet Generator analyzes your lifestyle, schedule, and personality to match you with the right pet β dog, cat, or something you haven't considered.
Take the Free Quiz β