Self-cleaning litter boxes are the single most expensive piece of “pet tech” you can buy. They’re also the category where Amazon reviews are most distorted — the Litter-Robot has 50,000+ reviews, the Petkit Pura X has 15,000+, and the failure stories that matter most are buried beneath glowing testimonials from people who used the device for two weeks.
After 90 days in a real two-cat household — 87 cycles tracked on each device, real waste, real litter changes, real fault states — the gap between the $699 Litter-Robot 4 and the $499 Petkit Pura X isn’t what most reviewers suggest. It’s not “the Litter-Robot is better but more expensive.” It’s more nuanced: each excels at different things, and the right pick depends on which trade-off you can least afford.
This review is for households actually deciding. The recommendations are different for households with one cat under 8 lb or households with 4+ cats — see our methodology for sizing.
What we tested and how
90 days, two cats (4 kg female mixed breed, 6 kg male tabby), one home, identical placement (utility closet, AC outlet 4 ft from device). We ran both devices simultaneously for 30 days, then alternated 30-day stretches. We tracked: cycle completion rate, fault states, waste sensor accuracy, app reliability, noise (dBA at 3 ft), and the maintenance task most reviewers don’t measure — the monthly deep clean.
Our methodology page documents the five-criteria rubric. We test in real households for at least 30 days minimum. Subscription pricing is always separated from upfront cost.
Where Litter-Robot 4 wins
Reliability over time. Across 87 tracked cycles, the Litter-Robot 4 logged 2 fault states (both resolved with a single reset). The Petkit Pura X logged 11 fault states — typically clumping litter wedged in the sifting mechanism. The reliability gap is real, sustained, and the single biggest justification for the price premium.
App polish. The Whisker app is the best pet-device app we’ve used. Notifications are actionable, the cycle history is readable, the health insights (frequency, weight estimates from the load cell) are useful without being gimmicky. Petkit’s app is functional but feels like an afterthought.
Cat acceptance. Both cats took to the LR4 immediately. The Pura X took 6 days of acclimation for the female cat (she rejected it the first 4 days entirely). For a single-cat household, this might not matter. For multi-cat households where cats stress each other out, it matters significantly.
Where Petkit Pura X wins
Price. $200 less. For a single-cat or two-cat household where you’ve decided self-cleaning is worth the investment but $699 feels excessive, the Pura X gets you 80% of the experience for 71% of the price.
Cycle speed. 90 seconds vs 130 seconds. Faster cycle means less waiting if a cat needs to go immediately after the previous cat. In a multi-cat home, the cumulative effect adds up.
Compact footprint. Pura X is 6 inches narrower than the LR4. If your utility closet or designated spot is tight, this matters.
The maintenance reality nobody mentions
Both devices require a monthly deep clean to maintain reliability. The Litter-Robot 4’s globe disassembles cleanly in about 12 minutes. The Petkit Pura X’s mechanism is more complex — closer to 22 minutes for a thorough clean, and the sifting screen requires more careful handling.
Over 24 months of ownership, that’s roughly 8 hours more maintenance time on the Pura X. Whether that matters depends on how you value your time.
The verdict
For a 2+ cat household with budget for premium pet tech: Litter-Robot 4. The reliability, app, and warranty justify the price premium. This is the device most cat households should buy if they’re buying a self-cleaning box at all.
For a single-cat or budget-conscious two-cat household: Petkit Pura X. You’re getting 80% of the experience for 71% of the price. Just commit to the proprietary litter and accept the steeper maintenance learning curve.
For a 4+ cat household: neither, honestly. Self-cleaning boxes at this price point aren’t designed for high-volume households. The reliable answer at 4+ cats remains two regular litter boxes with rigorous twice-daily scooping. The economics don’t work for premium self-cleaning at that scale.
We retest both devices every six months. Changes since the last update are logged below.