Litter boxes: I have 3 sharing 2, that's plenty for them. In theory you should have (C+1) litterboxes, actually, where C = number of cats; but I do fine with two. Just clean them regularly - more cats/litterbox, the more often it needs cleaning and full replacement.
Cheap furniture: The furniture my three cats like the most are wicker baskets lined with a cotton lining and with a soft pillow or an old wool or cotton sweater on the bottom, placed on top of at least a few feet worth of crates or other height-providing stable object(s). Cats like height, warmth, softness, and walls. Oversize pillows can also work well (the kind that are about 2' on each side, and really fluffy).
One cat particularly likes windows, the sunny kind, and so I have crates piled up near a windowsill for her to sleep on. None of this cost more than $20 or so, and the crates are serving a dual purpose (storing my library) so it all works out
The single most important thing(s) you will buy, by the way, is the scratcher(s). Corrugated cardboard scratchers are reasonably cheap and very effective; particularly if you get the ramp-style ones (cats really like that). They're usually better than the ones that are rope-covered freestanding columns, though some cats like those as well. Either way, get something for them to scratch on, or it will be your furniture that gets scratched on...
Cheap furniture: The furniture my three cats like the most are wicker baskets lined with a cotton lining and with a soft pillow or an old wool or cotton sweater on the bottom, placed on top of at least a few feet worth of crates or other height-providing stable object(s). Cats like height, warmth, softness, and walls. Oversize pillows can also work well (the kind that are about 2' on each side, and really fluffy).
One cat particularly likes windows, the sunny kind, and so I have crates piled up near a windowsill for her to sleep on. None of this cost more than $20 or so, and the crates are serving a dual purpose (storing my library) so it all works out
The single most important thing(s) you will buy, by the way, is the scratcher(s). Corrugated cardboard scratchers are reasonably cheap and very effective; particularly if you get the ramp-style ones (cats really like that). They're usually better than the ones that are rope-covered freestanding columns, though some cats like those as well. Either way, get something for them to scratch on, or it will be your furniture that gets scratched on...
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