Why Does My Cat Meow After Using the Litter Box?

Your cat uses the litter box and then immediately meows loudly. Sometimes it sounds like an announcement. Sometimes it sounds like a complaint. In most cats, most of the time, this is communication — but it occasionally signals something that warrants a vet visit. Here’s how to read which you’re dealing with.

Quick answer

Post-litter-box meowing is most commonly a communication habit — the cat announcing their toilet activities, sometimes for praise, sometimes just because they always have. The concerning version is meowing during or immediately after using the box that sounds painful, urgent, or distressed, which can signal urinary issues, constipation, or anal gland problems.

Cat exiting litter box with tail raised, looking back with open mouth in a post-toilet meow, showing typical announcement vocalisation

Cause 1: Pure communication habit

Many cats meow after using their litter box because they always have, and because the household has inadvertently trained them to. If an owner ever responded to post-litter-box meowing — by coming to check, by praising the cat, by cleaning the box — the cat learned that meowing after the box produces a result. It becomes a routine communication: “I have used the facilities. Please be aware.”

This is the most common cause and requires no action beyond recognising it as a learned behaviour. If it bothers you, consistent non-response will eventually reduce it, but it’s rarely loud or distressing enough to be worth the effort of untraining.

Cause 2: Pride or announcement

Some cats appear genuinely pleased with themselves after a successful toilet visit and vocalise accordingly. This is particularly common in kittens and young cats who may associate litter box use with praise they received during toilet training. It is not a concern — it is a cat being a cat.

Cause 3: Litter box dissatisfaction

If the meowing sounds less like an announcement and more like a complaint — and if the cat exits the box quickly, seems reluctant to fully settle in it, or paws at the area around the box rather than covering — the issue may be the box itself rather than the elimination event.

Common litter box problems that cause post-box vocalisation

  • Not clean enough — cats are fastidious; a box that hasn’t been cleaned recently is uncomfortable and sometimes causes the cat to make this known
  • Wrong litter type — if you’ve recently changed litter brands, types, or scent levels, the cat may vocalise their disapproval
  • Wrong box size — a box too small for the cat to move and position comfortably causes discomfort they may vocalise
  • Wrong location — a box in a high-traffic, noisy, or exposed location may produce anxious vocalisation

Cause 4: Pain during elimination — the important one

This is the cause that owners must not miss. Post-elimination meowing that sounds distressed, urgent, or painful — particularly if accompanied by spending excessive time in the box, straining, or producing very small amounts — can signal:

  • Urinary tract infection — common in cats, particularly females; produces painful urination
  • Feline idiopathic cystitis (FIC) — bladder inflammation without infection, extremely common in cats, often stress-related
  • Urinary blockage — particularly in male cats; straining without producing urine is a medical emergency
  • Constipation — painful defecation produces vocalisation during or immediately after straining
  • Anal gland impaction — discomfort after defecation
Emergency: male cat straining in litter box A male cat who is repeatedly entering the litter box and producing little or no urine, crying while straining, or appearing distressed may have a urinary blockage. This is a life-threatening emergency that can cause death within 24–48 hours without treatment. Go to a veterinary emergency clinic immediately — do not wait for morning.

Cause 5: Cognitive changes in senior cats

Older cats sometimes vocalise more generally — including around the litter box — as part of feline cognitive dysfunction syndrome (the equivalent of dementia). This is typically accompanied by other signs: increased vocalisation at night, apparent disorientation, changes in social interaction. If your senior cat’s vocalisation has increased generally, raise it with your vet.

How to tell which cause you have

  • Sounds like an announcement? Habit or communication — benign
  • Sounds like a complaint? Check the box — cleanliness, size, location, litter type
  • Sounds distressed or painful? Watch for straining, blood in urine/stool, reduced output — vet today
  • New behaviour in a senior cat? Discuss with vet — possible cognitive changes or pain

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