






🐱 Unlock freedom, lock out intruders — smart pet access redefined!
The SureFlap DualScan Microchip Cat Door offers advanced microchip recognition technology to control your cat’s access with precision. Compatible with all common microchips and programmable for up to 32 pets, it allows individual entry and exit permissions to keep unwanted animals out. Designed for versatile installation in doors, windows, or walls, it features a quiet, transparent flap and runs on 4 AA batteries lasting up to a year. Ideal for pet owners seeking smart, secure, and hassle-free pet access management.












| Customer Reviews | 3.7 out of 5 stars 2,361 Reviews |
H**E
Works really well - but they are serious about metal interference!
We have one big old senior cat (19lbs) who comes and goes as he pleases - he never leaves our yard. We also have a younger, far more adventurous cat that is not allowed out under any circumstances - he will jump the fence in a heartbeat and disappear for two days. So this was a perfect solution for us - with one big question mark. Could our senior cat even fit through the hole? It's a very small opening, and there's only one size to this. I tested him before I bought this door - I cut a flap in a cardboard box and put some treats in it, and he squeezed through just fine. (Ironically, the treats are how he got to be so fat ...) This door was bought to replace a manually operated door, which we used before we got our younger cat. It fit in the same opening, which had been cut into the aluminum panel at the bottom of a storm door. Despite the fact that the instructions cautioned against interference if mounted in metal, it was worth a shot because the hole had already been cut. Mounted like this, the performance was inconsistent - sometimes it worked, sometimes it didn't. I called the company to see if there might be some other cause i could look into - they listened carefully and were very certain that this was the problem. They recommended the circular mounting bracket that will offset the sensors from the metal by an inch or two, which they say is enough. Instead, I found a nice piece of plexiglass in the garage, left over from another project, that I repurposed as a window to replace the aluminum. The installation is very straightforward - but it does require a little bit of skill. Basically, it's "trace the hole, cut the hole, push one end through and stick the other side on with two screws and you're done!", but the trick is in cutting the hole. Initially (with the original door) I just traced the hole and cut it out with a pair of tin snips. The plexiglass was a little trickier. Going through a wall or an exterior door would require some thought for sure. I measured the size and cut the plexiglass on a tablesaw, but I put masking tape on both sides to prevent chipping. Same with the cutout - I traced out the rough size of the opening using the door, then used masking tape on both sides. I made a more accurate line with a marker, drilled a couple of pilot holes and cut the opening out with a jigsaw and a fine-tooth blade. Electronically, it works great. After a little encouragement, our old-timer just sticks his nose up against the little window and we can hear the "click" that unlocks it. I think he has learned to listen for the click himself. We'll see if the other cat figures this out and tries to follow close behind - I wouldn't put it past him. There's a locking mechanism that offers all possibilities. It can be locked both ways, or open one way and locked the other (right now we have some rodents in the yard; we have it set to let him out but not in; we want to check first to see if he's bringing in a mouse or rat). It can also be set to let him in but not back out again - which is great for keeping him in at night. It can also be unlocked both ways for the cat with the right chip, or unlocked and completely overridden to let anyone in or out. Once again, the big downside is the size; it's really tight for our cat. The company assures me that they are "in production" for a larger door, which I will probably buy once it's available.
N**E
A new life
Orderd this device on 10/19/2019. I have had no issues with this device and my cat never complained about it. It did take some time to train our cat to go through the door since she is not regular cat food motivated. She is a rescue and is very particular about her food, basically she loves garbage food over high priced food (will not mention companies). I have read some of the other negative reviewers and looked at their videos. I do not agree with most of them. Had this device for a while and is it loud opening and closing, I guess it is if you have supersonic hearing. The door will make a clicking sound that is no louder then our kids typing on their phones. Door size, cats are cortortionist and they dont care about the door size they just want to go outside. Now if ur cat controls ur household and u feed it as much as they wantyou too, then that is not the size of the door that is the problem. Could the door be larger just for the comfort of the cat getting in and out, yes. A smug bigger would be great but I am sure it would cost more. Funny thing is they now do have a bigger dog one, so if you want too go bigger because of cat complains get the bigger small dog door. I think some people said they rather go with other doors and i have ordered other doors and don't like that they are not raccoon proof at all, this door is and they have tried. Last thing if you install it wrong the door will not work properly, meaning if ur door is thicker then the device you will need to get the extender. It says that in the instructions, so read them before you comment. This is why I dont write reviews right away, sometimes it takes me years. In all this is a great door that I have had it for a good while and one of the springs failed for the opening mechanism on this filthy looking door. I regret not taking a photo on how filthy it looked but it took me 3 days to clean it and get new springs into it and now it is back to working perfectly fine. Cat was not happy during this time. I did take a photo of two of the 3 rusted springs as the 3rd completely disintegrated. I personally did not think that this device would last as long when i originally got it, for it to last 5 plus years is a wow for an electronic device. I was thinking 2 years tops but the engineers on this know what they were doing. The only thing I did wish this device did is have a permanent slide type plastic when it comes to winter. I feel the seal feather strips are not the best where i tape the whole door in the winter. They do what they are supposed to do just like they do one our regular windows but on this I personally dont think it's that great. I will be using this door for another 5 years plus in the same spot of the house. I did get this companies new app activated door, which I will install soon and noticed a great differences, like a silicone seal on the battery door. No more water / humidity getting into the battery compartment. This just means thay this company does improve their products over time to make it last even longer. So to that I will say thank you guys. AND NO I AM NOT SPONSORED BY THIS COMPANY IN ANY SHAPEWAY OR FORM. To the engineers I think what placing some caulk on the outside compartment would fix some of the other negative reviews.
P**Y
Controls entrance and exit and works for multi cat household and different door types
I bought two of these for three cats. We have a two cats that we want to keep indoors and one who is an outside cat who needs to come home for food. All have microchips from 3 different companies. All can activate the cat doors. We have the cat doors in a thin metal lanai door and a thick metal-lined wood door. Both cat doors work with both doors. One cat has always been a wizard with picking at "locked" cat doors and has not been able to prison break these doors yet. They are multidirectional. You set each cat as "indoor cat" who can only come in, or "outdoor cat" who can come and go. One cat is scared of the click the door makes when it unlocks and he still doesn't use the door much. The 3 legged one figured it out in 2 minutes. We then have a large shy mostly outdoor cat. He seems to have to stick his head in really far for the microchip to activate it. In the end we bought a collar and bought the sureflap microchip tag (2 for $10). This is a great product so long as you are patient with training your cats. We put treats on there until they got the hang of it. We bought (and returned) a different brand as it was enter-only activated and did not restrict them leaving. With 2 doors we can control who goes on the lanai as well as who comes and goes outside. They are normal cat door sized so may not fit a very wide cat. I would recommend programming the door before you put it in your door so that you can just move it over your cat beforehand. I can't see a backup battery but you are able to change the main batteries without having to reprogram it afterwards. There are great manual locks on there too if you need to temporarily change access during bad weather etc .....two weeks later and all three cats are happily using the cat doors (even the one who isnt very smart) and there is peace again in the land :-)
J**S
Good cat door unless you have smart raccoons
We bought this door so our 3 outdoor cats would have access to our garage where we keep their food, water, and warm beds for winter. We had a one-way door before and the raccoons figured out how to get inside so decided we needed to upgrade to the dual door. We continued having raccoon issues and were convinced that they were finding other way to break into the garage because this door was impossible to open. After many, many months of dueling with the raccoons and continuously finding them inside, we installed a camera in our garage which caught the sneaky things opening the door from the outside to get into the garage and then opening from the inside to get back out. As far as functionality for the cats to get access, the door has been great. Our cats are microchipped, which works seamlessly with the door (much better than our one-way door). The ability to lock certain cats in or out based on the microchip has been handy. And the flap locking feature is also good when we have a vet visit planned and need to collect all the cats to be able to take them - I just flip the door so they come in and can't go out in the evening and they're collected inside by morning. Unfortunately, none of that great functionality is important if it won't keep out pests.
J**R
Excellent auto cat door
This cat door is awesome. It works flawlessly and it’s high quality. The install was really easy too. Unfortunately, my cat would not use it and I had to return it.
D**M
The BEST cat flap door ever!!!
i LOVE this door! I don't get why anyone would want to return it. It's great to keep your cat safe from wild life (racoons) or strange cats from entering your house or barn. It works off a microchip in your cat and will only open for him/her and then locks behind them. You can program up to something ridiculous like 25 cats. You can manually lock the door (i.e. you are feeding them their evening meal, and want to keep them inside, turn the knob, lock the door). Or you have a wayward cat that hasn't made it home yet, but you don't' want anyone else to leave, turn the knob to "enter only." You have a cat you don't want to go outside ever. You never program their microchip so they can't use the door. This door never failed. It operates on AA batteries and has a low battery power light to warn you. Instructions are simple. If someone returns this door it's because they are lazy and don't want to train their cat on this door. Yes, it takes some of that, but I am here to tell you, invest the time to teach this to your cat, and you will sleep better every night. My cat was skittish of other people. He was a barn cat, but I took the time to let him know me, and he allowed me to train him. He flies through this door faster than a cat doing zoomies in your house now. Best investment i made into my safety, and my cat's safety. Easy to install, sturdy, durable, and great battery life. Yes, there is a click as the door reads your cat's microchip, but that's also a training aid. They learn they have to hear a click and then the door works. And if they are like my cat, who never went through a cat flap till this door, it took him some time to get used to the flap sliding across his back. But cats are smart. They get this. Too bad some people don't.
J**R
Cats hate the design flaws
Update: it's been two weeks and the cat has now mastered the door! The cat has to learn to push the door with his head not his paws. Every morning i lock my cat in the utility room till he figures it out. First day was 5 hours, second day was 3 hours. He's not a stupid cat, it just isn't natural for them that a door will open with a head push but not a paw push. However to be fair It appears most Microchip cat doors have this flaw, so all of them are hard to make work. See below for a mounting tip to make it easier to learn . Moreover when it does stick its head in first the machine makes a large snap sound and the cat pulls his head out and it locks shut instantly. Wouldn't you? The other really really stupid design flaw on this system is there's no way to use this as simply a cat flap without the electronic gating. There's four modes of operation and all of them allowing the cat to go through require the electronic scan to work. This would be so much easier for the cat to learn if there was just a mode where the cat flap could just be a normal mechanical cat flap. Finally if the batteries or electronic fail on this the fail mode is locked rather than unlocked. So if you were away on vacation and it failed then no raccoons can get get in but your cat dies because it's stuck outside or inside. So massively bad design concepts. I decided on this dual scan model after reading reviews of other scanners. Some scanners only scan for entry, which is all I wanted because I only need a raccoon and mouse excluder. But it turns out raccoons can manage to pull the door out on those with no gating on exit. Hence I needed dual scan. I read about the petsafe one with dual scan and It has the same dumb design flaws this one plus a second problem in that clever cats can spoof it so that they can get both in and out even if only one if those privledges is granted. For me that would not have been a problem as I'm not trying to keep my cat inside, just raccoons outside. In hindsight I'd have bought that pet safe brand one as it was cheaper. It appears that how fast your cat can figure out that a head push is required may depend on the height you mount thus in the door. I had no choice that mine had to be about 6" high off the floor due to the door design. Evidently if they have to couch down to get it the idea of pushing head first rather than paws first will se more natural to the cat. So for training I've put in a booster block in front of the door so the door is at ground level for now . But obviously I can't leave that obstruction in my doorway forever. These design flaws annoy me because a better electrical engineer could have made it so the rfid detector had greater range and did not require a head push to work. Such incompetence! And the lack of a fail-unlocked mode or a general unlocked mode is just begging for a dead cat lawsuit. But the bottom line is that my cat is slowly learning to use it. Ive noticed that he learned to go out faster than go in. I suspect this is because when locked in the utility room he's bored enough to experiment with it till a head push works. I'm not sure if he's learning the idea though as this may be just random chance that he uses his head occasionally. For going in the sets no confined space so I think he just doesn't sit there and try it over and over as he can he can something else like howl at the window to get my attention. Only when it rains does he make a concerted effort to get in. So the good news is it does work and it appears cats can make use of it but not easily at least at first. As far as I can tell from reading all the rfid gates have the same stupid design flaws. I bought two of these and one of them seemed to have a weaker or non existent detection and so I returned it. So there may be variability in how close the cats head has to be. Other people have reported these things making noise when the cat just walks by it so those must have a longer range. Evidently the quality control on these is poor. It seems to be mechanically well made though. The opening is small but I'd say anything but the largest cat could squeeze through snugly. I prefer tat as it will exclude raccoons and dogs more if they manage to break the latch
M**Y
Grace-proof
We live near the woods. I feed birds. We have raccoons. We have three outdoor cats, all between 10 and 12 years old, that need to get in and out of the garage. Cat food and bird food are stored in the garage. Do you see where this is going? To make matters worse, we have Grace. When Grace was a (runty, clumsy, identifiable because she's almost blonde) raccoon kit, her mother brought her and taught her that food was to be found beneath bird feeders, and Grace was an apt student. Raccoons are wild animals and supposed to be afraid of humans, but Grace definitely missed that memo because when I go out to feed the birds--same time every day--she knows I'm going to empty out any leftover seed for the squirrels, and she happily trots right toward me. The sound of my voice holds no fear for her; I literally have to shout at her to get her to back off even a few feet. We had a bigger problem this year because the small, fearless blonde raccoon has three kits that she is teaching to look for food...here. She had finally discovered the cat door to the garage, and my husband went in one morning to find the cats' water all over the floor, muddy tracks and bird food everywhere, and Grace, and her three babies. I immediately ordered this door, and two packs of tags because the cats aren't chipped. While I waited (it took 10 days) for the door and tags to arrive, we were reduced to putting concrete blocks in front of the cat door at night because they were able to push a 15lb bucket of ice melt out of the way and get in. I installed the SureFlap the day it arrived. Our cats have unique personalities; one is smart, one is pretty, and the third is affectionate and almost doglike in his desire to please. "Put the cat through the door" wasn't going to happen with two of them because they don't like being picked up, and I didn't want to add stress to an unfamiliar situation, so I programmed the tags, then my husband put them on the cats. Though curious, they were all afraid of the click, so I sat there for a while and every time they'd get close enough to the door to make it click, I'd say, "It's okay...click! Open the door! Click! Open! Click!" and push the door open in hopes that they'd make a "click-open" association. After a few tries, the smart one and the affectionate one went through the door when I pushed it open. We left them alone for a few days, but it wasn't until the fifth day that the smart one exited the garage on his own after I'd let him in and walked away, closing the door. (Don't tell my husband I actually forgot the cat was in there.) The affectionate one soon followed, and finally, after *many* false starts (it's a wonder he didn't run the batteries dead) the pretty one did it. The door is smaller than their previous one, and the "tunnel" means some hilariously interesting hind foot placement when they're going through, but they can do it. Raccoons, OTOH, cannot. Not for lack of trying--every evening, we wipe off the raccoon prints, and the next morning, there are more--but there have been no raccoons at all in the garage since I installed this door. Not even Grace, who has no fear of humans and I'm sure thinks she's supposed to be allowed in the garage. The door is expensive, but it's sturdy, and at $15 for a small bag of shelled sunflower seeds, $10 for peanuts, and $2 a block for peanut suet that my woodpeckers go through like crazy, and at least four raccoons that were getting into the garage, it won't take long for the door to pay for itself.
Trustpilot
1 month ago
2 weeks ago