Why cat litter smells worse in summer — and 7 fixes that actually work

Every July the same email lands in my inbox: “My litter box was fine all winter. What changed?” Nothing changed — except the weather. The box that behaved itself through a Canadian January turns into a problem the first humid week of summer, and it happens in Toronto condos and Montréal walk-ups alike.
Here is the 60-second science of why, and the seven fixes we actually recommend — most cost nothing.
— Jing, Mississauga, ON
The short answer
Warmth and humidity speed up the bacteria that break urine down into ammonia, and humid air holds that smell in your home longer. The fix is not a stronger perfume — it is faster scooping, the right litter depth, better airflow, and a litter whose odour control is actually verified, not just printed on the bag.
What summer does to a litter box
Cat urine itself is nearly odourless when fresh. The smell arrives when naturally occurring bacteria break down urea into ammonia — and like most biology, that process runs faster in warm, humid conditions. A clump that would sit politely for hours in a dry winter apartment starts broadcasting much sooner in July. Humidity adds a second problem: moist air slows evaporation and keeps odour molecules hanging around, so the same box simply smells “more” in summer. If your home also runs warmer near the box — a sunny corner, a bathroom without ventilation — you have built a small ammonia greenhouse.
Seven fixes, in the order I would do them
Scoop twice a day in July and August
The single biggest lever. Ammonia production compounds with time-in-box; halving the wait roughly halves what your nose deals with. Morning coffee, evening dishes — attach it to habits you already have.
Keep litter at the right depth — 5 to 7 cm
Too shallow and urine hits the pan bottom, where it spreads and stews. Too deep and clumps bury themselves and get missed. A consistent 5–7 cm lets clumps form fully so you remove the whole problem, not half of it.
Move the box out of heat and dead air
Away from sunny windows, radiators of the shower steam, and unventilated closets. A spot with gentle air movement — not a gale, just circulation — clears odour instead of concentrating it. If you use a hooded box, take the hood off for the summer: hoods trap heat and humidity right where you do not want them.
Wash the box more often, and dry it fully
In summer, give the empty pan a wash with unscented dish soap at every full litter change. Skip harsh cleaners — strong smells can put cats off their box — and dry it completely before refilling; a damp pan under fresh litter is a head start for bacteria.
A thin layer of baking soda under the litter
Cheap, unscented and cat-safe: a light dusting on the pan bottom before you pour buys you extra absorption between changes. It is a helper, not a cure — it will not rescue an under-scooped box.
Do not fight smell with smell
Skip air-freshener sprays and essential-oil diffusers next to the box. A cat’s nose is far more sensitive than ours, many essential oils are not cat-safe, and masking usually just teaches your cat to avoid the area — which creates a much worse problem than odour.
Use a litter whose odour control is verified — not advertised
Every bag on the shelf says “odour control.” Ask who checked. Noisy Lion’s charcoal + green tea formulas were measured at 99.1% deodorisation by the independent CTI lab, with the method and report number published. If scents bother you or your cat, our Natural Cassava line is unscented with hard, fast clumps.
Summer survival, straight to your inbox
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When the smell is not the litter
If the urine smell suddenly turned much stronger or sharper and nothing about your routine changed — or your cat is going more often, straining, or going outside the box — do not troubleshoot the litter first. Sudden odour changes can signal urinary or kidney issues. A quick vet call costs less than a week of guessing.
Does scented litter fix summer smell?
It masks it, briefly. Perfume does not slow ammonia production — and strong fragrance can put cats off the box entirely. Absorption and verified deodorisation beat masking; if you like a light scent, our White Tea and Green Tea lines use real tea, not sprayed-on perfume.
Will a dehumidifier or AC help?
Noticeably, yes. Drier air slows the bacteria down, helps clumps form tighter, and carries less odour. If the box lives in a basement or bathroom, a small dehumidifier nearby is one of the better non-litter fixes.
How often should I do a full litter change in summer?
More often than winter. As a rule of thumb, with twice-daily scooping, plan a full swap and pan wash every 2–3 weeks in humid months — sooner if your nose votes earlier. Multi-cat homes should shorten that further.
Is tofu litter better than clay for smell?
They work differently: clay masks and absorbs, plant-fibre litter traps liquid in clumps you remove entirely. What matters more than material is proof — our deodorisation is independently measured at 99.1%, and the report is public. See our tofu vs clay comparison for the full picture.
A fresher box by the weekend
Try a 2.4 kg pack of the scent your nose prefers, or go straight to the 12 kg value bag at C$4.58/kg. Subscribe & save 10% — and your first 2-pack is 100% money-back.
By Jing Xue, founder of Noisy Lion. Odour-control figure (99.1% deodorisation) from independent CTI lab report A2260218535101001E, published on The Noisy Lion Standard page. General guidance reflects common veterinary and cat-care practice; for sudden changes in urine smell or litter box behaviour, consult your veterinarian.