SOSA Home & Body · Founder Diaries
You want your home to smell like a home, not a vet clinic — but you also share that air with a cat who licks everything and a dog who sleeps under the console table. Here is how a perfumer would scent a pet home responsibly: what's actually low-risk, what to be cautious with, and the gentlest reed diffusers to reach for.
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Pet-home pick · gentlest, lowest projection Evening Calm Reed Diffuser 50ml ₹799  · 130ml ₹1,299 |
| Shop 50ml · ₹799 → Shop 130ml · ₹1,299 → |
TL;DR
If you live with cats or dogs, the right home fragrance is the gentlest, lowest-projection one you can find, placed well out of pet reach, in a ventilated room. Reed diffusers are a sensible choice because they are passive and low-concentration — they release scent slowly into the air without heating, misting or atomising oil the way active electric diffusers do, which makes them a lower-risk format for pet homes.
The gentlest pick: SOSA Evening Calm — the softest, lowest-projection scent in the range (8.9/10), built on real Himalayan lavender and chamomile, calibrated for sealed, sensitive rooms. It is the SOSA pick for cat and dog homes because it does the least shouting.
The honest caveat: no home fragrance is "100% safe" for every animal, and certain essential oils can pose risks to cats and dogs — especially if ingested or used in high concentration. Place any diffuser where pets cannot reach or knock it over, keep the room ventilated, watch your pet for any reaction, and consult your vet first if your pet is young, old, pregnant, asthmatic, or has any health condition.
Why SOSA over a cheap diffuser in a pet home: phthalate-free coconut-derived carrier, real ingredients instead of harsh synthetic accords, and deliberately low projection — the cleanest, quietest option for a home you share with animals.
Reed diffusers & pets: what's actually safe
Let me say the most important thing first, plainly: I make fragrance for a living, I have spent my career around concentrated aromatic materials, and I will not tell you that any scented product is "completely safe" for your cat or dog. Animals are not small humans. Cats in particular metabolise certain compounds very differently from us, and what is harmless to you can be a genuine problem for them. So this is not a sales pitch dressed as safety advice. It is the honest version: how to think about home fragrance responsibly when you share your air — and your furniture — with animals.
The single most useful distinction to understand is passive versus active diffusion, because it changes the risk picture more than the scent itself does.
Passive vs active diffusion — why the format matters
A reed diffuser is passive. Fragrance oil sits in a bottle, reeds wick it up, and it evaporates slowly into the air at room temperature. There is no heat, no electricity, no spray, no fine mist. The amount of fragrance in the air at any moment is low and gradual — you are smelling a faint, steady scent, not a cloud of atomised oil.
An active diffuser is the opposite. Ultrasonic ("mist") diffusers and nebulisers actively break neat essential oil into a fine airborne spray, putting far more concentrated oil into the air much faster — and that spray can also settle on a pet's coat, which they then ingest while grooming. Veterinary toxicology guidance has repeatedly flagged active essential-oil diffusers as the higher-concern format for cats and dogs precisely because of this concentration and coat-deposition effect. Heated wax warmers and plug-ins behave more like active devices too, pushing scent out under power rather than letting it drift.
This is the core reason a passive reed diffuser is generally considered a lower-risk way to fragrance a pet home than a misting diffuser. It is not a guarantee — it is a meaningfully gentler mechanism. The oil stays in the bottle, the air-concentration stays low, and nothing is being sprayed onto your pet's fur.
Concentration is everything
Almost every scary "essential oils are toxic to pets" headline is really a story about concentration and route. Most reported problems involve a pet that licked or swallowed neat oil, had oil applied directly to skin or fur, or was kept in a small unventilated room with an active diffuser running heavily. A finished reed diffuser is a dilute formulation, not neat essential oil, and in a passive setup the airborne dose is low. The risk you actually have to manage is the bottle of liquid itself — a pet drinking from it or knocking it over — far more than the gentle scent in the room. Manage the bottle, and you have managed most of the real risk.
Placement: out of reach, always
This is the rule that matters most in a cat or dog home, and it is non-negotiable. Place the diffuser where your pet cannot reach it, knock it over, or drink from it. For dogs, that means up off the floor and away from worktops they can counter-surf. For cats — who can reach almost anything — it means a high, stable shelf, ideally behind something, not on an open ledge a tail can sweep clean. A spilled bottle of fragrance oil that a curious animal then walks through and grooms off its paws is the scenario you are designing against. If a spill ever happens, separate your pet from it, clean it up, and call your vet if your pet has had any contact. (We have a full guide on cleaning up a spill if you need it.)
Ventilation and "the room must have an exit"
Use any home fragrance in a ventilated space, and make sure your pet can always leave the room. Animals self-regulate scent far better than we give them credit for — if a smell bothers a cat or dog, they will walk away from it, provided the door is open and there is somewhere else to go. Never run a diffuser in a small sealed room your pet is shut into. Cracking a window or keeping interior doors open turns a fragranced home into one where the animal has agency, which is exactly what you want. This is also why low projection helps so much: a quiet scent is easy for a pet to move away from; a blasting one fills every corner.
Watch your pet, and ask your vet
For the first few days with any new home fragrance, watch your animal. Signs that a scent does not suit them include sneezing, watery eyes, drooling, pawing at the face, lethargy, or simply avoiding a room they used to love. If you see any of that, remove the diffuser. And please treat this as the bottom line of the whole article: if your pet is a kitten or puppy, elderly, pregnant or nursing, asthmatic, brachycephalic (a flat-faced breed like a Persian cat or a Pug), or has any liver, respiratory or other health condition, talk to your vet before introducing any scented product. A two-minute conversation with the person who knows your animal beats any blog, mine included.
The gentlest format, the gentlest scent
A passive reed diffuser kept out of reach, in a ventilated room — and the softest, lowest-projection scent SOSA makes.
Shop Evening Calm → Browse the collection →Scents & ingredients to be cautious with around pets
Not all aromatic materials are equal where pets are concerned. The compounds most often flagged by veterinary sources are problematic mainly when ingested, applied to skin, or diffused heavily in concentrated form — but a responsible pet owner should still know which families to be careful with, and prefer formulas calibrated soft and low. Here is the honest map. This is general guidance, not a diagnosis; your vet's advice about your specific animal always takes precedence.
| Scent / oil family | Why to be cautious | Who's most sensitive |
|---|---|---|
| Tea tree (melaleuca) | Frequently cited as risky for both cats and dogs, especially undiluted or ingested. Best avoided as a home fragrance in pet households. | Cats & dogs |
| Citrus oils (in high concentration) | Concentrated citrus / d-limonene can bother cats in particular. A trace, dilute citrus in a passive low-projection diffuser is different from neat citrus oil — but cats are the ones to watch. | Cats especially |
| Eucalyptus | Commonly listed among oils to be careful with for cats and dogs, particularly in strong, heated or heavily diffused form. | Cats & dogs |
| Pine & some conifers | Pine oils appear on caution lists for pets, especially in concentrated cleaning or active-diffuser form. Treat woody-pine scents conservatively in cat homes. | Cats & dogs |
| Other strong oils (e.g. wintergreen, pennyroyal, clove, cinnamon bark) | Various "hot" or potent oils are flagged for pets in concentrated form. If your home has animals, prefer soft, well-balanced finished formulas over neat or DIY potent oils. | Cats & dogs |
| Soft florals / herbals (e.g. chamomile, calibrated lavender) | Generally among the gentler, less-flagged families — but still use low and ventilated, and never let a pet ingest the liquid. "Gentler" does not mean "feed it to your cat." | Use with normal care |
Important nuance: a finished, properly diluted reed diffuser used passively and out of reach is a very different exposure from neat essential oil applied to a pet or diffused as a heavy mist in a sealed room. The families above are reasons to choose carefully and keep concentration low — not reasons to panic about a faint scent in a ventilated home. When in doubt, ask your vet, and choose the gentlest option.
Why this points to a soft lavender-chamomile for pet homes
Read the table back and a pattern emerges. The families to be most careful with are the potent, "active," or hot ones — tea tree, strong citrus, eucalyptus, pine, the hot spices. The families that sit on the gentler end are soft florals and herbals. That is precisely why, of the five SOSA reed diffusers, my pet-home recommendation is Evening Calm — a soft, calibrated lavender-chamomile that is the lowest-projection scent we make. It is the SOSA scent that asks the least of a sensitive room, used at low intensity and kept out of reach. It is not "safe to feed your cat," and I would never claim that. It is the gentlest, quietest choice in our range for a home with animals in it.
Quick recommendation
If you want one answer and you are done thinking about it: in a cat or dog home, choose a passive reed diffuser over a misting one, pick the softest, lowest-projection scent you can, keep it out of reach and ventilated, and ask your vet if your pet is young, old or unwell. Within the SOSA range, the gentlest pick by a clear margin is Evening Calm — start with three or four reeds instead of all six to keep the throw as quiet as possible.
Gentleness chart — why low projection matters most
For a pet home you read this chart the same way you would for a sensitive sleeper: lower is gentler. A low-projection scent keeps the air-concentration faint and easy for an animal to move away from, while a high-projection one fills every corner of the room. The two soft picks at the top are the pet-conscious choices; the deeper gourmand and woody at the bottom are wonderful in well-ventilated, pet-free spaces but are the strongest in the range.
All five SOSA diffusers are calibrated low for compact Indian rooms — but for a home with animals, the softest pick gives you the lowest air-concentration and the most room for your pet to self-regulate. Lower projection is the single most practical lever a pet owner has.
Want the gentlest, lowest-projection option for your cat or dog home? Shop Evening Calm reed diffuser →
Best pet-conscious reed diffusers India 2026 (ranked)
This is a ranking for pet homes specifically — gentlest and lowest-projection first. Every one of these is still a finished, dilute, passive reed diffuser to be placed out of reach and used in a ventilated room. Ranking order here reflects how soft and pet-conscious each scent is, not overall quality.
Evening Calm — the gentlest, lowest projection
This is the pet-home winner because it asks the least of a sensitive room. Evening Calm is the softest SOSA diffuser — strength 8.9/10 — built on real Himalayan lavender (not the harsh single-molecule synthetic linalool that makes cheap "lavender" smell like floor cleaner) over real chamomile and a quiet musk drydown. Soft florals and herbals sit on the gentler end of the pet-caution map, and this scent is deliberately calibrated low for sealed, sensitive spaces. Used at three or four reeds, kept out of reach and in a ventilated room, it is the quietest, lowest-air-concentration option in the range — and with 142 verified reviews at 4.9/5 it is also the most-proven scent SOSA sells. As always: place it where your pet cannot reach the liquid, and check with your vet if your animal is young, old or unwell.
Strength: 8.9/10 (softest)  · 50ml ₹799  · 130ml ₹1,299  · Pet-home role: the default gentle pick
Shop Evening Calm →Garden Bloom — soft floral for light-cook, well-ventilated pet homes
If you want a touch of florals rather than herbals, Garden Bloom is the next-gentlest pick. It is a medium floral (8.9/10) built on a real-rose-derived accord and night-blooming jasmine tuned below the indole threshold, so it stays sophisticated rather than going sour in the heat. As a soft floral it sits in the gentler half of the pet-caution map, and like Evening Calm it is calibrated low for compact rooms. It ranks just behind Evening Calm only because lavender-chamomile is the softer, more universally gentle profile. Best in a well-ventilated room, placed high and out of reach — and as ever, watch your pet and consult your vet for any sensitive animal.
Strength: 8.9/10 (medium floral)  · 50ml ₹799  · 130ml ₹1,299  · Pet-home role: floral lovers / hosting rooms
Shop Garden Bloom →Fresh Brew — cosy gourmand, best in dog homes & ventilated rooms
SOSA's bestseller — real Coorg coffee and real Kerala vanilla — is a warm gourmand that "respects scale," so it does not go heavy even in a compact apartment. For pet homes it earns a middle ranking precisely because it avoids the flagged caution families: it is not citrus, not pine, not eucalyptus, not tea tree. It is the strongest in the range by projection (9.5/10), so use fewer reeds, place it high and out of reach, and keep the room ventilated. It is a particularly nice choice for dog homes and reading-nest setups where there is good air exchange. Cats are generally more sensitive than dogs, so go especially gentle and watch your animal — and ask your vet if unsure.
Strength: 9.5/10 (warm-deep)  · 50ml ₹849  · 130ml ₹1,349  · Pet-home role: dog homes / cosy ventilated rooms
Shop Fresh Brew →Morning Freshness — fresh citrus-mint, go gentle around cats
Morning Freshness is a bright citrus-mint built on real cold-pressed Malabar lemon and cool peppermint over a eucalyptus base. It is a wonderful, clean, fresh scent — but it ranks lower for pet homes specifically for an honest reason: concentrated citrus and eucalyptus are exactly the families veterinary sources flag as ones to be careful with around pets, and cats in particular. To be clear, this is a finished, dilute, passive formulation, not neat citrus oil — but if you have a cat, this is the SOSA scent to be most conservative with. If you love it and have a dog rather than a cat, place it well out of reach in a well-ventilated room, use fewer reeds, and watch your pet. For cat homes, I would point you to Evening Calm or Garden Bloom instead, and recommend a quick word with your vet.
Strength: 9.0/10 (bright)  · 50ml ₹749  · 130ml ₹1,249  · Pet-home role: dog homes / be conservative with cats
Shop Morning Freshness →Mountain Breeze — woody-pine, the most cautious choice in cat homes
Mountain Breeze is a beautiful grounding woody of real Himalayan pine, sage and Indian cedar — the deepest character in the range, calibrated not to feel oppressive in shared rooms (9.4/10). For pet homes it ranks last for one transparent reason: pine and conifer notes appear on caution lists for pets, especially cats, and woody scents are deeper by nature. Again, a finished, dilute, passive reed diffuser is a very different exposure from neat pine oil or a pine-based cleaner — but if you live with a cat, this is the SOSA scent I would be most cautious with, or skip. In a dog home with good ventilation, placed high and out of reach with fewer reeds, it can work for those who love woody scents. Cat owners: please choose a gentler pick and consult your vet.
Strength: 9.4/10 (deep woody)  · 50ml ₹849  · 130ml ₹1,349  · Pet-home role: woody lovers / be most cautious in cat homes
Shop Mountain Breeze →Why a cheap diffuser is the wrong call in a pet home
A pet home is the place to be fussiest about what's in the bottle, because your animal lives at floor level — closest to anything that off-gasses or spills — and grooms everything it touches. These are the failure modes that matter most when there are paws in the house:
| Failure mode | Why it's worse in a pet home |
|---|---|
| Harsh synthetic single-molecule scents | Floor-cleaner "lavender" or "lemon" is sharper and more aggressive in a room a sensitive animal can't always leave. SOSA uses real Himalayan lavender and real chamomile. |
| Phthalate carrier off-gas | Many diffusers use phthalate solvents that off-gas — and pets live at floor level where heavier compounds settle. SOSA uses a phthalate-free, coconut-derived CCT carrier instead. |
| Top notes crack at 40°C+ | A bitter, acrid synthetic base is harder on a sensitive animal's nose. SOSA is tested at 45°C summer heat so it stays clean. |
| Designed for European living rooms | Imported diffusers are too strong for compact, sealed Indian rooms — bad news when you want low projection a pet can move away from. SOSA is calibrated low on purpose. |
| Active misting diffusers | Ultrasonic and nebulising diffusers atomise neat oil into the air and onto pet coats — the format vets flag most. A passive reed diffuser keeps the oil in the bottle. |
Best-for: matched to your pet household
Every pet home is different. Match your situation to the pick below, then tap through to shop. In every case: place out of reach, ventilate, watch your animal, and consult your vet for young, old, pregnant or unwell pets.
| Your household | SOSA pick | Why | Shop |
|---|---|---|---|
| Cat home | Evening Calm | Softest, lowest-projection, herbal — the gentlest option for cats. Avoid strong citrus/pine. Vet first for any sensitive cat. | Shop → |
| Dog home | Evening Calm or Fresh Brew | Soft and calming, or a cosy gourmand for ventilated rooms. Keep up off the floor, away from counter-surfers. | Shop → |
| Small pet (rabbit, hamster, bird, etc.) | Vet first; then Evening Calm at lowest setting | Birds and small mammals are extra sensitive to airborne compounds — confirm with your vet, keep well away from the cage, ventilate generously. | Shop → |
| Multi-pet household | Evening Calm | Default to the most sensitive animal in the house — usually the cat. One gentle, low-projection scent everyone can live with. | Shop → |
| New puppy or kitten | Vet first; then Evening Calm, minimal reeds | Young animals are more sensitive and more curious. Check with your vet, place high and out of reach, start with 2–3 reeds. | Shop → |
| Sensitive / asthmatic / senior pet | Vet first; then Evening Calm at lowest setting | Respiratory and age-related sensitivity raise the stakes. Vet guidance first; gentlest scent, fewest reeds, best ventilation. | Shop → |
| Pet + baby home | Evening Calm | The same soft, low-projection scent that suits sensitive sleepers also suits a nursery shared with a pet. Out of reach of both. | Shop → |
| Gifting a pet parent | Evening Calm 130ml | Universally liked, gentlest in range, longest-lasting size — a thoughtful, considerate gift for a fellow animal household. | Shop → |
Most pet homes are happiest with the gentlest, lowest-projection pick. Shop Evening Calm reed diffuser →
A note from the perfumer
"I get this question more than almost any other, and it is the one I am most careful answering, because I have animals in my own home and I would never put a sale ahead of them. When people ask me 'which of your diffusers is safe for my cat?', the honest answer starts with what I will not say: I will not tell you any scented product is completely safe for an animal. Cats especially process certain things very differently from us, and the responsible thing is to respect that.
What I can tell you is how to be sensible. Choose a passive format over a misting one. Choose the gentlest, lowest-projection scent you can, so your animal can always move away from it. Keep the bottle somewhere they cannot reach it or knock it over — the liquid is the real thing to guard against, far more than the faint scent in the room. Keep a window cracked or a door open. Watch them. And if your pet is young, old, expecting, or unwell, talk to your vet before you bring any fragrance into the house. Of everything I make, Evening Calm is the one I reach for in my own pet-friendly rooms — the softest, quietest thing in the range, real lavender and chamomile, calibrated to sit in the background rather than take over. It is the gentlest, cleanest option I can offer a fellow animal lover. It is not a substitute for your vet's judgement, and I would never pretend it is."
— Sonal Sahani, founder & perfumer, SOSA Home & Body · ISIPCA Versailles-trained
Shop Evening Calm reed diffuser →  · Browse the full collection →
Frequently asked questions
What is the best reed diffuser for pet owners in India?
For a cat or dog home, the gentlest pick in the SOSA range is Evening Calm — the softest, lowest-projection scent (8.9/10), built on real lavender and chamomile. It is a passive diffuser, so the air-concentration stays low. Place it out of reach, ventilate the room, watch your pet, and consult your vet for any young, old or unwell animal. No home fragrance is "100% safe" for every pet, so choose the gentlest option and supervise.
Are reed diffusers safe for cats?
A passive reed diffuser is generally lower-risk than an active misting diffuser, because nothing is heated or sprayed and the air-concentration stays low. But cats are more sensitive than dogs to certain oils, so choose a soft, gentle scent, avoid strong citrus, eucalyptus, pine and tea tree, keep the bottle well out of reach, ventilate the room, and consult your vet — especially for kittens or cats with any health condition. We cover this in more depth in our dedicated guide on whether reed diffusers are safe for cats.
Are reed diffusers safe for dogs?
Dogs are generally less sensitive than cats, but the same rules apply: prefer a passive diffuser, choose a gentle low-projection scent, keep it up off the floor and away from counter-surfers, ventilate, and watch your dog for sneezing, watery eyes or avoidance. Consult your vet for puppies, senior dogs, flat-faced (brachycephalic) breeds, or any dog with respiratory issues. See our dedicated reed-diffusers-and-dogs guide for detail.
Is a reed diffuser safer than an electric or mist diffuser for pets?
Generally, yes — a reed diffuser is passive. It releases scent slowly at room temperature without heat, electricity or spray, so the air-concentration is low and nothing is atomised onto your pet's coat. Active ultrasonic and nebulising diffusers put far more concentrated oil into the air quickly, which is the format veterinary sources flag most for cats and dogs. "Safer" is not the same as "risk-free," but the passive mechanism is the gentler one.
Which essential oils should I avoid around pets?
Veterinary sources commonly flag tea tree (melaleuca), concentrated citrus, eucalyptus, pine and other conifers, and various "hot" oils like wintergreen, pennyroyal, clove and cinnamon bark — especially for cats and especially when ingested, applied to skin, or diffused heavily as a neat oil. A finished, dilute, passive reed diffuser is a different exposure from neat oil, but in a pet home it is wise to prefer gentler families like soft lavender-chamomile and to keep concentration low.
Is lavender safe for cats and dogs?
Soft lavender sits among the gentler families and is less commonly flagged than tea tree, citrus or pine — which is why a calibrated lavender-chamomile is our pet-home pick. But "gentler" is not "harmless to ingest." Never let a pet drink the liquid, keep it out of reach, ventilate, and consult your vet for a sensitive or unwell animal. Use low concentration and watch your pet.
Where should I place a reed diffuser in a home with pets?
Somewhere your pet cannot reach it, knock it over or drink from it. For dogs, that means up off the floor and away from counters they can surf. For cats, who can climb almost anything, choose a high, stable shelf, ideally tucked behind something a tail can't sweep clear. The bottle of liquid is the real hazard to guard against — guard the bottle and you have managed most of the risk.
Do I need to keep the room ventilated?
Yes. Use any home fragrance in a ventilated space and make sure your pet can always leave the room — crack a window or keep an interior door open. Animals self-regulate scent well: if a smell bothers them, they walk away, provided there is somewhere to go. Never run a diffuser in a small sealed room your pet is shut into.
How will I know if a scent is bothering my pet?
Watch for sneezing, watery or red eyes, drooling, pawing at the face, lethargy, loss of appetite, or simply avoiding a room they used to enjoy. If you see any of these, remove the diffuser and ventilate the room. If symptoms are serious or persist, contact your vet promptly.
My pet knocked over / drank some diffuser oil — what should I do?
Separate your pet from the spill, clean it up so they cannot walk through it and groom it off their paws, and contact your vet straight away if your pet has had any contact with or ingested the liquid — take the bottle or its label with you so the vet can see the ingredients. This is exactly why placement out of reach matters most. We also have a guide on cleaning up spilled diffuser oil on wood, carpet or fabric.
Should I consult my vet before using a reed diffuser?
If your pet is a kitten or puppy, elderly, pregnant or nursing, asthmatic, a flat-faced (brachycephalic) breed, or has any liver, respiratory or other health condition — yes, please ask your vet first. Even for a healthy adult animal, a quick word with the person who knows your pet is the most responsible step. This article is general guidance, not veterinary advice.
Are reed diffusers safe around cats specifically — they seem more sensitive?
Cats are more sensitive than dogs because they metabolise certain compounds differently and groom their coats constantly. That means: prefer the gentlest scent, avoid strong citrus/pine/eucalyptus/tea tree, keep the air-concentration low, place the bottle truly out of reach, ventilate well, and consult your vet for any sensitive cat. A soft lavender-chamomile used passively and out of reach is the most cat-conscious option in our range.
Are SOSA reed diffusers tested for safety?
SOSA diffusers are phthalate-free, paraben-free, IFRA-compliant, low-VOC and contain 0 ppm formaldehyde, and use a coconut-derived CCT carrier instead of phthalate solvents. They are also climate-tested at 45°C heat and 85% humidity. These are formulation-quality measures for home use; they are not a claim of safety for ingestion by animals. For pet-specific concerns, follow the placement, ventilation and vet-consultation guidance above.
How many reeds should I use in a pet home?
Start with the fewest — three or four reeds, or even two in a small room (each bottle ships with six). Fewer reeds means lower throw and a fainter scent your pet can easily move away from, plus a longer-lasting bottle. You can always add a reed later; you cannot easily pull a too-strong scent back out of the room.
Is Fresh Brew or Mountain Breeze okay if I have a dog but no cat?
In a dog-only home with good ventilation, both can work used at low intensity and placed well out of reach — Fresh Brew avoids the most-flagged caution families, and Mountain Breeze is best handled conservatively given pine notes. Use fewer reeds and watch your dog. Cat owners should choose Evening Calm or Garden Bloom instead, and ask their vet.
What about birds and small pets like rabbits or hamsters?
Birds and small mammals can be especially sensitive to airborne compounds, so they deserve extra caution. Confirm with your vet before using any home fragrance, keep the diffuser well away from cages, ventilate generously, and use the gentlest scent at its lowest setting. When in doubt with a small or exotic pet, the safest choice is often no fragrance in their room at all.
Will a reed diffuser help with pet odour?
A reed diffuser adds a clean, pleasant background scent, but it does not remove odour at the source. For pet smell, deal with the cause first — wash bedding, clean litter trays and clear the air — then use a gentle, low-projection diffuser like Evening Calm to keep the room smelling fresh. A diffuser is a finishing touch, not a substitute for cleaning.
Which size should pet owners buy — 50ml or 130ml?
For testing how your pet responds, start with a 50ml Evening Calm (₹799), which lasts 6–8 weeks. If it suits your home and animal, the 130ml (₹1,299) lasts 14–18 weeks and is more cost-effective. Either way, keep the bottle out of reach and use fewer reeds.
Are reed diffusers safe for both pets and children in the same home?
The same gentle, low-projection scent that suits a pet home also suits a home with young children — Evening Calm is our pick for both. Place it out of reach of both pets and children, ventilate the room, and consult your vet and paediatrician for any sensitive individual. We have separate guides on reed diffusers around babies and on whether SOSA scents are safe for pets and children.
Where can I buy pet-conscious SOSA reed diffusers?
Directly from the SOSA reed diffuser collection. Free shipping over ₹499, and a portion of every purchase supports Nanhi Kali girl education.
The pet-home gentle pick
Evening Calm Reed Diffuser
Softest, lowest projection · 50ml ₹799 · 130ml ₹1,299
Shop 50ml · ₹799 → Shop 130ml · ₹1,299 →Browse the full reed diffuser collection →
Place out of pet reach · ventilate · consult your vet for young, old or unwell pets.