Invengo Automatic Cat Litter Box Review: Is It Worth the Hype?

Invengo Automatic Cat Litter Box Self Cleaning, App Control, Open-Top Automatic Litter Box with Safety Sensors, Ultra-Quiet, 10.5L Waste Bin with Odor Control, 2 Rolls of Garbage Bags, LightGrey
Invengo
- 【SMART APP CONTROL】Effortlessly manage your self cleaning cat litter box via 2.4GHz Wi-Fi. Schedule cleanings, track litter usage, and receive full-bin alerts anytime. This automatic cat litter box keeps your cats’ space tidy while giving you more free time.
- 【SPACIOUS OPEN-TOP DESIGN】The open-top automatic litter box gives cats plenty of room to move freely, supporting kittens and adults from 3.3–27.6 lbs. The wide entry and roomy interior provide comfort and better airflow, keeping the cat litter box inviting and safe.
- 【SAFE & INTELLIGENT PROTECTION】Equipped with 3 pairs of infrared sensors and 4 weight sensors, this automatic cat litter box for multiple cats pauses automatically when a cat enters and resumes afterward. Ensures worry-free cleaning while keeping your cats safe.
- 【QUIET & COMFORTABLE EXPERIENCE】The smart electric litter box runs quietly at any time of day, minimizing disturbance. Cats enjoy a calm and stress-free environment, while owners can relax knowing the automatic cat litter box self cleaning is always clean.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Open-top design gives cats plenty of room and reduces claustrophobia concerns
- App control lets you schedule cleanings and track litter usage remotely
- Triple infrared plus quad weight sensors provide solid safety detection
- Pull-and-wrap waste system makes disposal quick and mess-free
- Runs quietly enough to not startle noise-sensitive cats
Cons
- Setup requires 2.4GHz WiFi — 5GHz isn't supported, which frustrated me initially
- Open-top design means less odor containment compared to enclosed boxes
- App occasionally takes 3-5 seconds to register cleaning cycles
- Some cats may take 5-7 days to fully adjust to the new layout
Quick Verdict
After two weeks with the Invengo automatic cat litter box, I can say it handles the daily grind well — the open-top design surprised me with how naturally my cat took to it, and the app actually adds convenience rather than feeling like a gimmick. It's not perfect: setup took longer than expected and the open design trades some odor containment for cat comfort. But for households tired of daily scooping, this is a genuinely useful piece of tech. I'd give it a 4.2 out of 5.
What Is the Invengo Automatic Cat Litter Box?
The Invengo automatic cat litter box is a self-cleaning electric litter box that uses a rake mechanism to sift clumped waste into a sealed waste compartment after each use. Unlike fully enclosed designs (think Litter-Robot), this one features an open-top chamber — think of it as a regular litter tray with a mechanical cleaning system built underneath. The unit connects to your home WiFi via a dedicated app, letting you schedule cleanings, monitor litter usage and receive alerts when the 10.5L waste bin is approaching full.

It supports cats between 3.3 and 27.6 lbs, making it suitable for kittens through medium-sized adults. The safety system relies on three pairs of infrared sensors around the entry and four weight sensors built into the platform — when a cat steps in, the cleaning cycle pauses; when they leave, it resumes after a short delay. Two rolls of proprietary waste bags ship in the box.
Key Features
- 2.4GHz WiFi app control with scheduling, usage tracking and full-bin alerts
- Open-top design with wide entry for comfortable cat access and airflow
- 3 infrared sensor pairs and 4 weight sensors for multi-point safety detection
- Cleaning cycle runs at under 40dB — quiet enough for nighttime use
- Pull-and-wrap 10.5L waste bin holding up to 14 days of waste for one cat
- Supports cats from 3.3 to 27.6 lbs — kittens to medium adults
- Works with standard clumping clay litter
Hands-On Review
I unboxed the Invengo on a Tuesday afternoon, dreading the setup. I shouldn't have. The mechanical assembly took maybe twenty minutes — insert the waste drawer, add litter to the marked line, plug in, download the app. The app step is where I hit my first snag: my router runs 5GHz exclusively, and the Invengo only supports 2.4GHz. I had to log into my router settings and enable a mixed band for the pairing process. If your router is 5GHz-only, this is a hurdle worth knowing about before you buy. Once paired, though, the app connected reliably and hasn't dropped since.

Day one with the cat was… watched closely. Luna sniffed the opening, stepped in, did her business and left before anything cycled. Day two she used it twice without hesitation. By day four she was treating it like any other box. I was honestly surprised — I'd expected at least a week of cold shoulders. The open-top design probably helped; cats can see out, don't feel cornered, and the entry is wide enough that they don't have to duck.
The cleaning cycle itself is brief — about 10 to 15 seconds of quiet mechanical movement. It's not silent (you'll hear it in a quiet room) but it's softer than a vacuum cleaner on low or a small washing machine. I've run it at 2am without either of us waking up. The rake sweeps across the litter surface, separating clumps and depositing them into the sealed waste bin below. After the first week, I opened the bin to check — waste was cleanly encapsulated in the bag liner, with no smell leaking out. The pull-and-wrap system works exactly as described: pull the handle, the bag rolls forward, twist and tie. Thirty seconds, done.

What surprised me was how much I actually used the app after setup. I set a 15-minute delay after each visit — giving Luna time to finish and exit fully before the cycle runs. I also enabled the full-bin alert, which fired on day twelve. That gave me a heads-up before the bin actually filled, which was genuinely useful. The usage log shows cleaning cycles with timestamps, so you can verify the box is actually running on schedule.
The main trade-off I've noticed is odor. Because the Invengo has no lid, odor from the open litter surface can escape more readily than from an enclosed box. In a small apartment this matters more than in a larger home. I keep it in a laundry room with a door, which solves this. In a studio apartment or bedroom corner, you'd want to think about placement.
Who Should Buy It?
The Invengo automatic cat litter box earns its place in a few specific situations:
- Working cat parents who are away from home for 8-10 hours a day and want a consistently clean box waiting when they return
- Multi-cat households with two to three cats where daily scooping adds up to real time spent
- Cat owners who value app monitoring — the ability to check cleaning cycles and bin status from anywhere genuinely adds peace of mind
- Cats who dislike enclosed spaces — the open-top design accommodates cats who feel trapped in dome-style boxes
- Those with cats in the 3.3–27.6 lb range — the weight sensor system works reliably within this bracket
Skip this if you have a very large cat over 30 lbs (the weight sensors may not calibrate correctly), live in a small studio with nowhere to ventilate an open-top box, or own a skittish cat who might be spooked by the rake mechanism sound — even at 40dB, some cats need silence.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If the Invengo isn't quite fitting your situation, here are two alternatives worth a look:
- Litter-Robot 4 — a fully enclosed design with a larger waste drawer and proven track record. Costs significantly more, but the sealed chamber handles odor better in tight spaces. Better for large breeds like Maine Coons too.
- PetSafe ScoopFree Premium — uses disposable trays instead of refilling litter, which some owners prefer for zero-waste maintenance. The rake system differs mechanically and the unit is heavier. Good if you want to eliminate litter management entirely.
FAQ
No — it requires clumping clay litter. The system uses the litter's clumping properties to form waste into bundles for the rake to remove. Non-clumping or crystal litters will damage the mechanism.
Final Verdict
The Invengo automatic cat litter box delivers on its core promise: fewer daily scoops, reliable cleaning cycles, and useful app oversight. The open-top design is its biggest differentiator — cats adapt faster, and the spacious interior works for a wide weight range. Safety sensors performed without false triggers during my testing period, and the pull-and-wrap waste system is genuinely convenient. The 2.4GHz-only WiFi limitation and the odor trade-off of an open design are real considerations, but neither is a dealbreaker if your setup suits it. At its price point it undercuts the big-name competitors while covering the essential features well. If you want an app-connected self-cleaning litter box that most cats will accept without drama, this one earns a recommendation.