






Small Animals Playpen Pop up Small Pet Cage Enclosure Hutch Kennel Tent Chick Run Brooder Box Coop Portable Foldable Outdoor Yard Fence for Kitten Ferret Puppy Guinea Pig Rabbit Hamster Chinchillas
Product Dimensions : 29 x 17 x 58 inches; 4.06 Pounds
Item model number : 2201-small-animals
Date First Available : April 29, 2025
Manufacturer : EighteenTek®
ASIN : B0F6TVMQS3
Best Sellers Rank: #68,160 in Pet Supplies (See Top 100 in Pet Supplies) #53 in Cat Playpens
Customer Reviews: 4.3 4.3 out of 5 stars (257) var dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction; P.when(‘A’, ‘ready’).execute(function(A) { if (dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction !== true) { dpAcrHasRegisteredArcLinkClickAction = true; A.declarative( ‘acrLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault”: true }, function (event) { if (window.ue) { ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrLinkClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } } ); } }); P.when(‘A’, ‘cf’).execute(function(A) { A.declarative(‘acrStarsLink-click-metrics’, ‘click’, { “allowLinkDefault” : true }, function(event){ if(window.ue) { ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”, (ue.count(“acrStarsLinkWithPopoverClickCount”) || 0) + 1); } }); });
【Upgraded Durability】Engineered with heavy-duty metal frame and anti-chew reinforced mesh, this playpen combines anti-tear Oxford fabric with protected seams to ensure long-lasting durability.
【Instant Setup, 2-in-1 Spacious】Pop-open rectangular or octagonal design playpen that require zero assembly – simply unfold within seconds. When need to store it, the collapsible playpen folds flat easily and stored into a compact carry case, making it ideal for indoor/outdoor use. The spacious 2-in-1 design gives more space for small animals to roam.
【Breathable and Visibility】Four zippered openings allow pets to convenient access. The mesh walls promote continuous airflow and maintain good visibility to look at small animals.
【Extra Leak-Proof Pad, Easy Cleaning】The wipe-clean detachable extra leakproof PE pad simplify deep cleaning, ensures animals’ habitat fresh, tidy and comfy.
【Universal Small Pet Habitat】From energetic ferrets to delicate baby ducks, this versatile enclosure safely houses hamsters, chinchillas, guinea pigs, rabbits, reptiles, kittens, chicks and puppies.
4 reviews for Pet Playpen Pop up Small Pet Cage Enclosure Tent Chick Run Brooder Coop Foldable Kennel for Kitten Ferret Puppy Guinea Pig Rabbit Hamster Chinchillas(No Divider, Unified Space)
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$72.17
Nichole L Grundstrom –
Used for foster kittens
I purchased this for baby kittens. Very sturdy, easy to fold and put away, easy to unfold and set up. Comes with a nice bag that has a handle to take on-the-go if needed. I had it set up in the house mostly, but used it in the yard also. Worked great either way. One end has see through screens, and the zip top is also see through, and roll up doorways on each end with Velcro at the top to hold doors open. The two sides are great. One side had the litter box and one side for bedding/toys. Big enough for room to play and for a litter box in this situation. I will use it many times for fosters to come.
EmClaire –
A great post-surgery kennel, maybe forget the litter box plan
This little two-room bubble did a great job for us after spay surgery for our 6-month-old kitten. Let me correct that: it did a great job after the SECOND surgery she needed when too much activity broke some of her stitches from the original spay procedure (we tried to keep her down, but she was just too determined to play hard).The first kennel we used, in the days after the original surgery, was a full-height dog kennel. It kept her from running, but allowed more jumping room than was safe. And, of course, she got away from us a few times early on. When we found she was going to need stitches redone we knew we’d have to tighten up her confinement, in the most tolerable way we could. We looked at a lot of low-headroom soft-side kennels before choosing this one. We did consider the modular tunnel-type of enclosure, but none of those would accommodate a litter box and we could see that any kind of an interesting spatial arrangement would not work in our space. This one seemed a good way to give her some sense of space without taking up too much of the family room. Considering she’d have only about 4 – 5 days of close confinement left when we’d receive the shipment, we felt OK with choosing this design for the short term.I read a lot of reviews saying that the enclosure seemed flimsy– too flimsy to be useful. For our purpose, the flexible structure worked well. Our little girl tried to break out, of course, but couldn’t do any real damage and couldn’t go anywhere so long as her overhead and side zippers were shut. The kennel held its shape the whole time, except when our shut-in’s brother decided to dive on it from a tabletop– and even then it sprang back into form before he could find his legs and streak out of the room in panic. It was hysterical– you should have been there.In the end, we left the litter box out of it. If the kennel had featured a zippable divider (we knew it wouldn’t, from one of the reviews) we would have been able to do litterbox maintenance with the cat secured in the other “room”. Instead, we brought her out and carried her to well-controlled areas for meals and litter breaks.All in all, the kennel did what it said it would and I’d recommend it for small animals (my little girl is 6 lbs.). I wish I’d had one last year when I was raising too many kittens at once. In that scenario, a litter box inside would have worked fine until they were big enough to jump up and get past me. So it’s good, but it could really use an interior zipper door.Our baby tolerated her cell pretty easily, with the aid of a calmative from the vet. For the last two days of her kennel term, we skipped the calmative and she still stayed pretty mellow in there so long as she wasn’t alone. I could scratch her head and her back through the overhead mesh and she had room for her ball-track scratch pad. We put a water bowl, a small kibble bowl and some cushy, blankety stuff in the “back room”, which she did use as a private place to sleep.So this enclosure worked for us and worked for our young lady, and I’d recommend it for kittens, young cats, very small dogs… for brief confinement as needed.
KMC61 –
Great for resident cats or small dogs and for fosters
This pop-up is a game changer. I have two resident cats, but I also foster kittens.When there is a storm warning, I have to bring my resident cats into the basement. However, it’s an unfinished basement, so they can’t wander around down there, or they might get stuck in the crawl space, or in the basement ceiling/floorboards. By putting them in this tent, they have space to stretch out, use the litter box, and not be terrified.When I foster, I’m able to have the kittens confined to the room where I am, without the need for constant supervision. They have one room for the litter box, and another for the food, and they can play in either of the rooms. One room has mesh, so they can see the outside world, and the other has opaque sides for privacy.There also is an included waterproof hard bottom for each room, and a case for carrying the tent.
Mikayah –
Great idea, but needs improvement.
This was a really great idea to have a two-room fold up playpen. I bought the “medium size” to house three kittens and it kinda worked out well. They never escaped so that was a plus. I used the mesh windows side for their eating and sleeping area, and the windowless side for two litter boxes. I didn’t like how there wasn’t any way for the second room (where i had the litter boxes) to get ventilation. I didn’t want the kittens sleeping on the non-ventilated side because they would need air flow. It would have been nice if at least the top of both sides had the mesh roof. It got hot, stuffy, and stinky on the non ventilated side which was a bummer. Also, for $96 a removable floor or octogen shaped pads on the floor would have made cleaning up litter and ripped newspaper a lot easier. I actually made two octogon-shaped cardboard floors out of a home depot moving box and put it inside a clear garbage bag to waterproof the cardboard so i could wipe up messes and dump spilled litter and dirty newpaper more efficiently. Whenever my kittens would jump up when I opened the roof they would very easily pull and collapse the whole side in, so it wasn’t as sturdy as I had hoped. So to sum things up, it contained the kittens well and the mesh stood up to their sharp nails, but the downside was there was no ventilation at all in one of the rooms, a pain to clean up debris off the floor, and the walls could be pulled in by the kittens fairly easily when they got exited as I unzipped the roof. Probably worth $30-$40, but NOT $96 ( this was the price after taxes). I would honestly buy it again if at least BOTH rooms had the same ventilation. Like I said before at least the kittens couldn’t escape (especially when they had poopy-paws!) So disappointed that it didn’t work out, and I can’t find any other two room playpens similar to this one….had to return it because it was just too aggravating and disappointing for the amount of money spent.