









🐾 Feed smarter, not harder — because your cats deserve the future of dining!
The PETLIBRO 5L Automatic Cat Feeder is a dual-bowl, WiFi-enabled smart feeder designed for two cats. It supports 5G & 2.4G WiFi for stable app control, allowing up to 10 customizable meals daily with portion adjustments. Featuring airtight freshness technology, stainless steel bowls, smart alerts, and personalized voice calling, it ensures your pets are fed timely, hygienically, and with a touch of your care—perfect for busy professionals who never want to miss a meal moment.


| Product Care Instructions | Do not wash the base, Use kibble with the diameter 2-15mm, Please use indoor |
| Material Type | Stainless Steel, Acrylonitrile Butadiene Styrene, / |
| Item Dimensions L x W x H | 10.16"L x 7.72"W x 14.17"H |
| Item Weight | 4.21 Pounds |
| Capacity | 5 Liters |
| Style | Dual Tray with WiFi |
| Color | White |
| Power Source | Multi-Powered (AC Adapter and Batteries) |
| Operation Mode | Automatic |
| Connectivity Technology | WiFi |
| Additional Features | Pet daily feeding for two pets, Detachable for Easy Cleaning, Slide Food Outlet, App Control, Voice Recording |
C**M
I dig it
I had another automatic feeder for years that has been working fine, but one of my cats was recently diagnosed with diabetes and needs insulin shots. I scoffed at the idea of a wifi pet feeder some time ago, but this is quite nice. The old feeder would let you select feeding times, and that's it. With the Granary, I can set a different schedule each day, which is great for the days I get up earlier and go to the office, so the cat eats earlier too. I can also give a pet sitter access to control the feeder, which is what drew me to this device. With a diabetic cat, he needs an insulin shot 15-30 minutes after eating and this way the pet sitter could run the feeder before they leave home. The price is good, I reached out to Petlibro to get a few more bowls so I can put them through the dishwasher and they were happy to put together an order.Overall, I am very happy with this purchase and will be considering some of their other products as well.
B**I
Great
Really love this feeder. It holds about a gallon of food.(we fill it with our cat dedicated pitcher) the food comes out slowly and in increments which is nice fit prevent from eating too quickly and puking. The lid locks and you don’t have to worry about your animal knocking it over and emptying it. Our cats have yet to tip it. It’s definitely worth the money. It functions just as it should. It sends notifications of how much it fed at the time of feeding, you can ensure that the feeder is working when you are not home. It lets you know when food is low. I’m really loving it. My cats tend to over eat and then puke, so this really regulates it and makes it a bit easier on our lives when we get super busy. All we have to do is check phone quick and make sure they’ve gotten their food!
C**N
Not QUITE perfect, but a major step up from simply "sharing one bowl" for multiple cats!
I picked up the PetLibro "Granary" automatic pet feeder with built-in camera some time back, but decided that between my "big boy" can and his littler sister, I really needed more than one bowl to prevent them from fighting over access when I feed them. So, I upgraded my feeder with this device. The alternative was to get a second feeder, and that seemed sort of like overkill.My reason for wanting the feeder is for those times when I have to take short business trips... just a few days... and prefer not having to have a petsitter come to my home or having to board my pets. I've made sure I have plenty of feeding and watering options available. The "Granary" feeder is definitely my preferred feeder, though I have both open bowls and another auto-feeder as well, so I can be sure that they won't starve during a few days' absence. (Water availability is a bit more complex, but I've dealt with that too.)What I really like about "camera feeders" is that I can talk to them, I can hear them (they "talk" to me, too... though I have yet to figure out exactly what their "words" mean!), and can watch them as they eat, and can also see the bowls, so I can tell if they're full or empty, and I can actually control the device remotely (skipping servings if the bowls are still full, or dispensing additional food if they're empty).There are a couple of issues I'd like to see addressed in future versions of this. Mainly, associated with the "portion apportionment" setting. I'd really like to be able to independently control, remotely, just how much food goes into each side. Either by an internal "shutter" over each of two food chutes, or a method of rotating the "diverter vane" on the food tray itself.The "diverter vane" is what allows you to control the total amount of food dispensed on the right or left bowl. Shift it further one way, and more food goes into that bowl... shift it the other way, and more goes into the other bowl. Unfortunately, this isn't especially well-calibrated... getting equal amounts requires the vane to be offset considerably!... and so the only way to really evaluate the "mix" is through testing... trial and error.So... being able to move the vane in real-time, remotely, would allow issues in feeding to be resolved even when you're away. And even better, having dual chutes would allow very precise feeding... even shutting one bowl off completely, or providing metered amounts into each.But both of those solutions drastically increases the complexity (and thus cost) of the device, so I can make due with this solution for the foreseeable future. For now, building that solution would result in a product more expensive than two of these are, after all!I'm really very happy with this, but I AM dinging it by a single star for the difficulty of adjusting the "diverter vane" to get the amounts of food you want into each of the two separate bowls. That is something that they could improve, without really increasing the overall product cost, I think. It just requires a bit more R&D time, and an improved "chute" design. Ah, well... maybe next years' model!
R**P
Game changer for hungry cat -- try simple hack to prevent kibble from getting stuck
My cat and I love our Petlibro! It was an expensive purchase but the freedom it's given me is priceless. For my cat, it's a guarantee that kibble will fall into his dish on a regular basis (I swear he's learning to tell time!). For me, it's freedom from being the bad guy. It enabled me to transfer Hobson's association of my being in the kitchen equals food for him to the dispenser that sits quietly in the corner now equals food for Hobson. I can now come and go into the kitchen without him wailing at me (ok, well, most of the time).I did not purchase the wi-fi version. At the time I thought why in the heck would I want to access his feeder over wi-fi. I regret that decision. There have been times when I'm out for the day and realize I won't be back in time to give Hobson his wet food dinner, and wished that I could access his feeder over wi-fi and change the time that it would dispense the next kibble run to be at an earlier hour. Live and learn.PROS:-- big container holds lots of cat kibble (and includes a tray in the lid which holds desiccants to help keep the kibble dry and mold free)-- timed release (up to 4x in a 24 hour period)-- ability to pick how many multiples of kibble should be dispensed each release time (for a cat, with dispensation 4x a day, I've never had the machine delivery more than 2 or 3 batches of kibble at once)-- easy to clean-- I like the removable stainless steel dish (so I can easily clean that on a daily basis)-- well made productCONS:-- kibble size limitation (for most cat kibble, this would never be an issue, but Hobson gets dental kibble which by definition are big kibble nuggets--thankfully Purina DH kibble does fit)-- The digital clock isn't accurate, it's slow, losing 2-3 minutes every 4 months-- Maximum of 4 dispensing times during a 24 hour period. I wish this were 6x.Quick hack: Before we moved Hobson to dental kibble, his smaller regular cat kibble would sometimes not clear the dispensing shoot and get stuck on a plastic seam. Easiest thing in the world to fix that was to place a little yellow post-it stickie over the plastic seam and extending into the bowl. This ensured 100% of the dispensed kibble always fell into the bowl. That said, the yellow stickie was not going to prevent Hobson from sticking his paw up into the machine to jimmy loose some additional kibble. (I've seen some posts of people rigging a long shoot between the mouth of the dispenser and the kibble bowl as a means to combat the paw poke. I didn't want one more thing to have to clean.)
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