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Furbo 360 Treat Size & Jam Prevention Guide

Choose round, dry treats near the recommended size, load below the line, test the launch with the dog present, and separate food behavior from camera convenience.

Prepared by the PawSelect Picks editorial deskUpdated July 16, 2026

Best starting point

Furbo 360 Dog Camera

Price band: $$

Start with the evidence page for Furbo 360 Dog Camera, then compare the alternatives against your layout, budget, and compatibility needs.

Furbo-style pet camera with small dry treats prepared for testing
Editorial image for visual context; device appearance and configuration can vary by model and region.

Use dry, consistent pieces

Furbo recommends small round treats near the stated diameter. Sticky, oily, soft, crumbly, or highly irregular pieces can bridge in the hopper, create dust, or launch unpredictably.

Load below the maximum

Overfilling increases pressure around the outlet and makes it harder to see stale crumbs. Start with a small amount, test several launches, and clean the treat path using only the approved method.

Count treats in the daily diet

A remote launch is still food. Use small pieces, include them in the dog's daily intake, and stop if the routine increases guarding, barking, anxiety, or frantic behavior around the camera.

Test while someone is home

Introduce the motor sound, voice, rotation, and treat arc under supervision. Move or discontinue the launcher if the dog paws at the unit, startles, or waits beneath it instead of settling normally.

Primary sources

References used for this guide

Buying framework

What to check before you choose

Checklist

  • Confirm the product fits the pet's size, food type, room layout, and cleaning routine.
  • Check replacement parts, filters, bags, refills, or app features before comparing price.
  • Read recent owner feedback for noise, durability, chewing risk, and setup friction.

Common mistakes

  • Buying the largest or smartest option before checking daily cleaning effort.
  • Treating odor, hydration, feeding, or monitoring gear as a substitute for the routine itself.
  • Ignoring where the pet actually eats, sleeps, waits, or makes messes during the day.

Category checks

  • Separate source control from air or surface cleanup.
  • Noise and placement matter because these products live in shared rooms.
  • Replacement filters, bags, and refills should be checked before purchase.

Decision rule

Choose the simpler product when the problem is routine consistency; choose the more specialized product only when it removes a repeated chore you already know you have.