First, take the cat to the vet. If there are no urinary tract or otherwise problems, place litter boxes in places where he/she should not be doing his wee-wee or poo-poo. If you can't do that (like if your cat is doing his/her business where you have to walk), make the place where he's going as unattractive as possible, and the spot where he's supposed to go as attractive as possible. Put a rug under his litterbox, and don't clean the box too often. Turn the place where he's going into a feeding station; he won't do his business near his food. Place the litterbox in a quiet, easily accessible place (young kittens and senior cats don't like going up and down stairs a lot). Remove every bit of evidence of his urine from the place he's been using (don't use cleaning products containing ammonia, they'll smell like pee to the cat and he/she will attempt to cover it by peeing again), also, you can temporarily put aluminum foil in the place where the cat's not supposed to go (they don't like the sound or feel of aluminum foil, so they'll avoid the area. Also, spraying lemon scent will repel a cat.
First, take the cat to the vet. If there are no urinary tract or otherwise problems, place litter boxes in places where he/she should not be doing his wee-wee or poo-poo. If you can't do that (like if your cat is doing his/her business where you have to walk), make the place where he's going as unattractive as possible, and the spot where he's supposed to go as attractive as possible. Put a rug under his litterbox, and don't clean the box too often. Turn the place where he's going into a feeding station; he won't do his business near his food. Place the litterbox in a quiet, easily accessible place (young kittens and senior cats don't like going up and down stairs a lot). Remove every bit of evidence of his urine from the place he's been using (don't use cleaning products containing ammonia, they'll smell like pee to the cat and he/she will attempt to cover it by peeing again), also, you can temporarily put aluminum foil in the place where the cat's not supposed to go (they don't like the sound or feel of aluminum foil, so they'll avoid the area. Also, spraying lemon scent will repel a cat.
Another Answer:
Seeing as the answer above does not really answer the question:
Urinating is a bodily function all mammals need to do to get rid of excess liquid and other waste and potential toxins. You can not stop a cat from peeing, but if your cat has a sudden change in toiletry behaviour it is best to take it to the vet as soon as possible.
Another answer:
Firstly, the question is extremely vague. The range of meanings covers everything from "How do you plug your cat's urinary opening" to "Why has my cat's toiletry behavior changed." Secondly, it's extremely difficult to answer because of its generalization.
~Vampyria--I partly agree with you, but there is no right or wrong answer to this question unless the asker specifies.
Put lemon juice on the carpet cats hate the acidic smell and it keeps them away from anything you want them to stay away from. :)
another answerAnywhere the animal urinates, blot, then spray with a vinegar solution. There is a back story to go with this advice, so bear with me.Training cats is a frustrating job. At best, they will ignore you, at worst, they actively fight you. Vinegar solution is a "weapon" in your arsenal. Cats hate the taste and the odor, yet it is not offensive to you.
In a container, mix 1/4 cup vinegar to 2 cups of water. Purchase a small child's squirt gun, the very cheap kind. You don't want a high powered one, just something to hold the vinegar solution.
Catch your cat and deliberately squirt a small amount of the solution in it's mouth. This will begin the therapy. He will hate it and will despise you for a few days..but he will remember the taste that he hates, along with the smell.
Now every time he misbehaves, squirt him with the solution..just a little. The object is to let him smell it on himself and associate it with the bad behavior. Items that you don't want him to bother, plants, carpet, ect. need a nice dampening. The smell will linger and the cat will leave it alone.
Do not make a very quick habit of this. It is important to train the cat that this smell and taste are not for him. The cheap squirt gun will enable you to catch him and stop him by not letting him get away with the undesired behavior. Plus you don't have to get scratched or bitten disciplining your cat. It is more humane than other methods and has the advantage of being inexpensive.
I know that from experience, a cat may pee in the house if you have another cat, and it may become jealous or territorial by peeing in the house. If it just doesn't understand how to use a litter box, you can teach the cat by picking it up and showing it the litter box. Also, if you just catch the cat pee where it is not supposed to, say no, pick it up and again bring it to the litter box.
I'm not quite sure how maybe you should talk to a vet about your cats problem with not listening to you
you can buy a plastic thingy that fits on the toilet you pour kitty litter on it and the cat takes a dump in the toilet
Keep it isolated.
Put the kitten in the litter box or on some old newspapers before it can urinate, or as shortly as possible afterward. With patience and repitition, the kitten will learn where it is supposed to go.
You cannot get a guinea pig to stop peeing on you. They cant help it.
by peeing everywhere
Try putting orange peels in the pot or stones. The cat will stay away.
You cant, just wait a while and it will stop.
no i have did that befor
get him used to peeing with the leash on, so he'll get used to it.
Stop peeing on it
Kick it outside
shoot it
The dog is marking it's territory. It's normal for a dog to do that.
If your litter box is clean, he might have a kidney or bladder infection. You should phone the Vet and ask whether he needs to see your cat. I've heard that peeing everywhere is a symptom.