Cave & Covered Dog Beds
If your dog roots under blankets, tunnels behind cushions or vanishes under the duvet, they’re telling you they want a den — and a hooded cave bed is exactly that, on tap.
The instinct to burrow
Denning is hardwired. Wild canids dig out cool, enclosed dens to feel safe and regulate temperature, and many of our dogs carry that drive — terriers, dachshunds, chihuahuas and other small breeds especially. A cave bed gives them a roof overhead and walls all around, so they can tuck themselves away and watch the room from a position of safety.
That sense of enclosure is genuinely calming for anxious or easily startled dogs. Being able to retreat into a covered nest during fireworks, thunderstorms or a busy household lowers the stress of feeling exposed, and dogs that struggle to settle in an open bed often drop off within minutes once they have a hood to hide under.
Choosing a cave that fits
Size sensibly: a cave bed should be snug enough to feel secure but tall enough that your dog can turn around and lie comfortably without the hood pressing down. Too big and the cosseting effect is lost; too small and they simply won’t use it. Many caves have a soft, collapsible hood so you can fold it flat for dogs that like the option of an open bed too.
Warmth comes with the territory — a covered bed traps body heat, which thin-coated and small dogs love but means it isn’t ideal for a dog that runs hot or for high summer. Pick a washable cover and a removable inner cushion, and check the fabric is robust if your denner is also a digger, as the constant kneading and circling wears thin material quickly.
Everything here is chosen to be genuinely useful in everyday life with your pet — quality-checked, fairly priced and shipped tracked across the UK. For any health concern, your vet is always the best first port of call.
Common questions
Which dogs like cave beds most?
Small breeds and natural burrowers — dachshunds, terriers, chihuahuas, whippets — tend to adore them, as do anxious dogs that feel safer enclosed. Big confident dogs that sprawl in the open usually prefer a flat mattress.
Won’t my dog overheat under a hood?
Covered beds trap warmth, which is the appeal for thin-coated dogs but can be too much in summer or for heat-prone breeds. Many caves have a fold-down hood, so you can open them up when the weather warms.
My dog is nervous — will a cave bed actually help?
For many anxious dogs it does, because a roofed, walled retreat reduces the stress of feeling exposed. Place it in a quiet corner away from foot traffic and let your dog choose to use it rather than shutting them inside.
Free pet welcome kit
Four printable tools, zero cost
The new-pet checklist, a vaccination & worming tracker, a feeding-portion guide and a house-training chart — straight to your inbox, no spam, unsubscribe whenever.
