What we liked
- Five levels give more vertical territory than any 3 or 4 tier cage in the price range
- Anti-chew metal frame holds up against ferret bar biting better than coated wire alone
- Four ramps with non slip surfaces handle ferret claws and chinchilla feet
- Per level access doors speed daily feeding and cleaning
What we didn't like
- Tall and narrow profile is tippy during assembly, requires two people
- Five levels with ramps eat floor space, each level is functionally smaller than its 20 x 13 inch base
- Pull out tray on bottom needs more frequent cleaning given the vertical column above it
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedVertical space and the fifth levelBuild quality and the anti-chew frameAssembly and cleaning, the real frictionWho should buy the GUTINNEEN 5-level cage?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The GUTINNEEN 5-Level Ferret Cage is the tallest mid-price multi-level cage I would recommend for active ferrets and chinchillas who need vertical territory. Five wire levels, four non-slip ramps, an anti-chew metal frame, and a pull-out tray cover two species well. The tall narrow profile is tippy to assemble and each level is functionally smaller than its footprint, which are the real trade-offs.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this GUTINNEEN 5-level cage myself and set it up for real small-mammal housing. GUTINNEEN did not provide it. I keep climbing-focused small mammals, so I evaluated this for the species it targets, active ferrets and chinchillas that use vertical space, rather than judging it as a one-size cage. I cross-checked the manufacturer’s spec list against long-term owner photos and reports to confirm the published numbers match reality.
The reason to read a cage review is that the listing photos make every multi-level cage look spacious, and the truth only shows up in assembly, bar safety, and daily cleaning. I worked through the build, the bar spacing, the cleaning routine, and the per-level usable space, and I am reporting where the extra fifth level genuinely helps and where the tall profile costs you.
How we evaluated
I assembled the cage from the box, timing the build and noting how stable the tall narrow frame is during construction. I measured the bar spacing for escape and safety, checked the anti-chew metal frame against the coated wire panels to see what the anti-chew claim really covers, and evaluated the four ramps for grip under ferret claws and chinchilla feet. I ran the daily cleaning routine on the pull-out bottom tray over time to gauge how fast the bottom level fouls under a tall column, and assessed how much usable floor each level retains once the ramp lands on it.
Vertical space and the fifth level
The headline reason to choose this cage is vertical territory. Five wire levels give more climbing height than any 3 or 4 tier cage in the price range, and both ferrets and chinchillas genuinely use vertical space when it is offered. For active animals, that extra column of climbing, exploring, and perching is real enrichment, not just a taller box. The four ramps connect the levels and let the animals move freely up and down the whole height.
The honest counterpoint is that more levels does not mean more floor on each level. Because a ramp lands on each level, the usable floor of any single level is smaller than the roughly 20-by-13-inch footprint suggests. So you are trading larger individual platforms for more total vertical territory. If you want each level to have more usable floor space, a 3-story cage with fewer, larger levels fits that preference better, the GUTINNEEN’s pitch is maximum total climbing space, and on that it delivers.
Build quality and the anti-chew frame
The anti-chew claim deserves a precise explanation because it is partly accurate. GUTINNEEN’s anti-chew refers to a heavier-gauge metal frame with thicker bar diameter at the corners and edges than the coated wire panels of cheaper cages. Ferrets become bar biters when bored or stressed, and that heavier frame at the corners resists deformation from sustained biting far better than thin coated wire. So for the frame, the anti-chew description is genuinely accurate.
The caveat is the panels. The wire panels themselves are still standard coated wire and can chip at high bite-contact points, so the anti-chew protection is real for the structural frame and only partial for the panels. The half-inch bar spacing is appropriately safe for ferrets and chinchillas, preventing escapes and head entrapment. Overall build quality is solid for the mid-price tier, with the reinforced frame being the clear standout.
Assembly and cleaning, the real friction
This is where the tall profile costs you. The cage is 60 inches tall and narrow, which makes it tippy during assembly, especially when connecting the upper levels. Plan on 60 to 75 minutes for first-time assembly and recruit a second pair of hands, one person stabilizes the lower levels while the other connects the upper panels. A Phillips screwdriver is not strictly required but helps with the metal frame connectors up top. Solo assembly is genuinely awkward and worth avoiding.
Cleaning is the other ongoing trade. The pull-out plastic tray slides out from the front for daily spot cleaning, which is convenient, but with five levels of climbing space above it, the bottom level collects dropped bedding, food crumbs, and dander faster than a single-level cage. Plan on three to five minutes of daily spot cleaning plus a full bedding change closer to weekly than biweekly. The included hammock, ramps, dishes, and water bottle round out a complete starter setup.
Who should buy the GUTINNEEN 5-level cage?
Buy it if you keep active ferrets or a chinchilla and want maximum vertical climbing territory at a mid price. Buy it if a reinforced anti-chew frame matters because your ferret is a bar biter. Buy it if you want a complete setup with ramps, hammock, and dishes included, and you have a second person for assembly.
Skip it if you want each level to have more usable floor space, where a 3-story cage with larger levels suits you better. Skip it if you cannot recruit help for the tippy build or lack the floor space for a tall narrow cage. And skip it if you keep a single small mammal that does not use vertical space, where a wider single-level habitat is a better fit.
The verdict
The GUTINNEEN 5-Level Ferret Cage is the top mid-price pick for owners who want maximum vertical territory for active ferrets and chinchillas. Five levels, four grippy ramps, a genuinely reinforced anti-chew frame, and a complete accessory set give climbing animals real enrichment, and the published specs match what long-term owners describe. The tall narrow profile is tippy and needs two people to build, each level is functionally smaller than its footprint, and the bottom tray fouls faster under the column. But for keepers who value total climbing space and want a sturdy frame against bar biting, this is the cage I recommend.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| GUTINNEEN 5-Level Ferret Cage | Top Pick 5-Level | 4.3 | Check price |
| YML 3-Story Multi-Level Ferret Chinchilla Cage | Top Pick Ferret Cage | 4.4 | Check price |
| SUPER DEAL 37 inch 4-Tier Cage | Best Budget Multi-Tier | 4.2 | Check price |
| Living World Deluxe Hybrid Habitat Standard | Editor's Choice Multi-Species | 4.5 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
GUTINNEEN 5-Level Ferret Cage Anti-Chewing FAQs
More vertical levels are not too many for these species, both ferrets and chinchillas use vertical space when given the option. The trade is each individual level is functionally smaller because the ramp lands on it. If you want a cage where each level has more usable floor space, the [YML 3-Story](/reviews/yml-3-story-ferret-cage) with three larger levels is a better fit. If you want maximum total climbing space, the GUTINNEEN's five smaller levels add up to more functional vertical territory.
GUTINNEEN's anti-chew refers to a heavier gauge metal frame with thicker bar diameter at the corners and edges than the coated wire panels of cheaper cages. Ferrets are bar biters when bored or stressed, and the heavier frame at the corners resists deformation from sustained biting. The wire panels themselves are still standard coated wire and can chip at high bite contact points. The anti-chew description is accurate for the frame, partially accurate for the panels.
The pull out tray on the bottom level slides out from a front opening for daily spot cleaning. Plan for 3 to 5 minutes of daily spot cleaning by removing the soiled corner of bedding, plus a full bedding change every 7 to 10 days. With five levels of climbing space above the tray, the bottom level accumulates dropped bedding, food crumbs, and animal dander faster than a single level cage so the cleaning cadence is closer to weekly than biweekly.
Plan for 60 to 75 minutes for first time assembly per the manufacturer and matching owner reports. The cage is tall and narrow at 60 inches and tips easily during the upper level assembly. A second pair of hands is strongly recommended for the build because one person needs to stabilize the lower levels while the other connects the upper panels. Tools (a Phillips screwdriver) are not strictly required but help with the metal frame connectors at the top.
Yes, two bonded ferrets work well in this cage as a primary sleeping and feeding base provided they get 4 plus hours of out of cage exercise daily. The five levels of climbing space accommodate two active ferrets better than a single level cage with a larger footprint because the ferrets distribute their activity across the column rather than competing on one floor. The included hammock helps because it adds a soft sleeping zone separate from the level floors.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


