Navaris Shoe Drip Tray Review – 3-Pack Litter Box Mat for Cat Owners?

Navaris Set of 3 Shoe Drip Trays - Multi-Purpose Boot Tray for Rain Boots, Winter Boots, Sneakers - Indoor and Outdoor Use in All Seasons - Gray, S
Navaris
- PROTECT YOUR FLOORS: Rainy and snowy days are unavoidable, but bringing dirt, mud, water and gravel into your home is not. Protect your home and floors from dirt, snow, salt and ice with this shoe drip tray.
- RAISED EDGE: Each tray features a raised edge, which helps contain any mess from every day dirt, rain drops, cat litter boxes, potted plants and more. The surface of the mat allows shoe soles to dry faster.
- DETAILS: You will receive a set of 3 gray shoe trays measuring 13.8" x 10.6" x 1". Each tray is suitable for one pair of boots or shoes. They are made of sturdy plastic and easy to clean.
- ALL WEATHER USE: The tray can be used both indoors and outdoors. Keep one in the entryway, another in the mud room and one outside to catch water from rain or snow and dirt.
Quick Verdict
Pros
- Three trays per pack means you can stagger them at multiple entry points or use one as a dedicated litter box mat
- Raised 1-inch edge genuinely contains tracked litter, water splashes and mud — no edge-spill after two weeks of testing
- Sturdy plastic construction doesn't warp or crack underfoot; solid feel when you step on the rim
- Versatile enough for boots, sneakers, cat litter boxes, dog food bowls, potted plants and outdoor use
- Easy to hose off or wipe down — litter dust wipes away in seconds with a damp cloth
Cons
- 13.8" x 10.6" surface is tight for larger men's boots or oversized snow boots — toes may still overhang the edge
- No drainage holes means standing water stays until you wipe or tilt the tray — a minor inconvenience after heavy rain
- The gray plastic shows dust and fine litter particles fairly easily, requiring weekly wiping to look clean
- Packaging arrived with a strong new-plastic smell that lingered for about three days in a closed hallway
Quick Verdict
The Navaris shoe drip tray is a straightforward, no-frills floor protector that does exactly what the listing promises. After two weeks of real-world use — boots by the back door, sneakers by the front entry, and one acting as an impromptu cat litter mat — I'm giving it a solid 4 out of 5. The three-pack pricing is fair, the raised edge actually contains messes, and the versatility as a litter box tray is a genuine bonus for cat owners. It's not perfect: the size runs small for big boots, and there's no drainage. But as an affordable floor guard, it earns a recommendation.
What Is the Navaris Shoe Drip Tray?
Navaris sells a set of three gray plastic boot trays, each measuring 13.8 inches by 10.6 inches with a 1-inch raised edge. The trays arrive flat-packed in a tight cardboard sleeve, and yes — the moment you open it, you get a lungful of that new-plastic smell. Three days in a ventilated hallway fixed that, for what it's worth. Each tray is a single-piece injection-molded plastic shell: smooth bottom, shallow well, raised perimeter rim. Nothing fancy. The design is clearly borrowed from the classic nursery potting tray, repurposed here for footwear. The listing goes wide on use cases — boot tray, litter box tray, dog food mat, plant saucer, paint tray — and honestly, most of those are plausible.

On a cat site, the litter box angle caught my eye. The description explicitly calls out "litter box tray for your cat," so that's where I focused part of my testing. More on that below.
Key Features
- Set of 3 trays, each 13.8" x 10.6" x 1" — fits one pair of standard boots or shoes
- 1-inch raised edge contains water, mud, gravel, scattered litter and melting snow
- Smooth plastic surface allows shoe soles to dry faster and wipes clean in seconds
- Sturdy ABS plastic resists warping and cracking under normal foot traffic
- All-weather use: rated for indoor entryways, mudrooms, porches and outdoor spaces
- No drainage holes — standing water stays until manually wiped or tilted out
- Available in gray; set ships together in one package
Hands-On Review
I placed the first tray by my back door, right where winter boots pile up after grocery runs. By day three, the tray had caught a full day's worth of slush, salt residue and what I can only describe as an unreasonable quantity of sand. The raised edge held everything in — no spillover onto the hardwood, which was my main concern. I tilted the tray and dumped the sludge into the trash. Wiped the surface with a damp cloth. Done. The second week I moved it to the front entry and used it for sneakers. Same result: contained, easy to empty, easy to clean.

The third tray got the cat test. I swapped out the old litter mat — the one that's always migrating across the floor — and put the Navaris tray under the box instead. The dimensions were just barely sufficient for a standard uncovered litter box. The rim caught the litter that usually scatters onto the floor, and since the surface is smooth plastic, I could lift the whole tray, carry it outside and hose it down without anything soaking through. That was genuinely convenient. What surprised me was how well it worked as a transitional tool: when it was time to scoop, I just lifted, scooped over the tray, and wiped the rim. No kneeling on the floor.

Here's the thing nobody mentions: the gray plastic shows everything. Fine gray dust from shoes, the beige granules from litter, pet hair — it all shows up within a day or two. If you're the type who wants surfaces to look clean at a glance, you'll be wiping these down more often than the listing implies. For me, that's a minor trade-off. For someone who wants low-maintenance, this might be a con worth factoring in.
Who Should Buy It?
Cat owners looking for a cheap, easy litter box mat that can be hosed off and reused will find a lot to like here. The raised edge is genuinely effective at containing scattered litter, and the plastic wipes clean without special tools. Entryway-focused households in wet or snowy climates will also appreciate the tray's ability to catch salt, sand and slush before it reaches the floor. It's a good fit for renters or anyone in multi-season climates where boot storage is a daily issue. Budget-conscious shoppers who want three trays for the price of one mid-range competitor will get genuine value.
Skip this if you need something for oversized work boots, hunting boots or tall winter footwear — the 13.8-inch length won't accommodate them. If you live in a perpetually wet climate and expect large volumes of standing water, the lack of drainage holes will frustrate you. And if pristine aesthetics matter more than function, the dust-revealing gray surface will require more upkeep than you'd like.
Alternatives Worth Considering
If you want deeper trays with drainage capability, the Rubbermaid Boot Tray with Drainage Grid offers a removable insert that lifts out for cleaning — but you'll pay roughly double per unit. For cat owners specifically, the Petmaker Cat Litter Mat is designed around the litter scatter problem with a textured surface, though it doesn't double as a boot tray the way Navaris does. A budget alternative, the Simplehuman Boot Tray, comes in a two-pack with a brushed steel finish that hides dust better — but again, higher price point and no cat-specific use case in the marketing.
FAQ
Each tray measures 13.8 inches long by 10.6 inches wide by 1 inch tall. That's sufficient for one pair of standard sneakers, rain boots or smaller winter boots, but larger sizes may overhang.
Final Verdict
After two weeks of real use — slush, salt, sneakers and yes, scattered litter — the Navaris shoe drip tray earns its place in a practical home. It's not glamorous. The plastic smell fades, the size runs small for big boots, and you'll be wiping it weekly if you care about appearances. But as a floor-protection tool that cat owners can repurpose as a litter box mat, it delivers genuine value per dollar. The three-pack means you can stage them across your home without buying multiples. Will I keep using mine? Yes — but I'll be moving the litter box tray to a smaller space and keeping the entryway trays on rotation. That's the honest answer.