Petkit Turns Water Bowls into Health Monitors at CES 2026

Petkit Turns Water Bowls into Health Monitors at CES 2026

> At a Glance

> – Petkit unveiled three AI-connected devices that track pet health through daily routines

> – Products include a wet-food feeder, smart fountain, and self-cleaning litter box

> – All sync to one app that flags potential health changes

> – Why it matters: Owners get early clues about hidden illnesses without extra vet visits

Petkit’s CES 2026 booth shows how a simple water dish can now reveal what your dog or cat can’t tell you. The company’s new trio of products turns eating, drinking, and litter-box habits into a running health report.

Meet the Lineup

The Yumshare Daily Feast is a refrigerated wet-cat-food feeder that holds 21 portions. An onboard camera with NFC and UVC tech logs which pet eats how much and when.

automatic

The Eversweet Ultra fountain snaps photos to separate each pet’s drinking data. A larger tank and split-flow design cut refill frequency while the app notes changes in hydration.

The Purobot Crystal Duo is an open-top, self-cleaning litter box. Its AI camera watches for stool changes or odd vocal cues and sends alerts if patterns shift.

Launch Timeline

Device Ship Month Key Tech
Yumshare Daily Feast Spring 2026 21-day storage, AI camera
Eversweet Ultra April 2026 Pet-recognition camera
Purobot Crystal Duo July 2026 Health-alert camera

All three feed one central app that builds a per-pet profile rather than just automating chores.

Key Takeaways

  • Petkit’s ecosystem turns routine data into ongoing health awareness
  • Cameras inside each device identify pets and log behavior
  • Spring-summer 2026 rollout; pricing to vary by region

If the devices deliver reliable long-term data, yearly vet visits could be supplemented by daily digital check-ins.

Author

  • My name is Amanda S. Bennett, and I am a Los Angeles–based journalist covering local news and breaking developments that directly impact our communities.

    Amanda S. Bennett covers housing and urban development for News of Los Angeles, reporting on how policy, density, and displacement shape LA neighborhoods. A Cal State Long Beach journalism grad, she’s known for data-driven investigations grounded in on-the-street reporting.

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