CES 2026 Pet Tech: AI Collars & Smart Doors Win Big

CES 2026 Pet Tech: AI Collars & Smart Doors Win Big

> At a Glance

> – Satellai won Best of CES 2026 Pet Tech with an AI dog wearable that tracks health patterns

> – Petkit and Pawport were finalists with smart feeders and easier-to-install pet doors

> – AI-Tails, High Tech Pet, and FireTag also showcased adaptive feeders, collar-ID doors, and security-linked collars

> – Why it matters: Pet tech is shifting from novelties to preventive health and seamless home integration

Pet tech at CES 2026 moved beyond gimmicks, spotlighting AI wearables, smarter feeders, and doors that retrofit existing homes.

Best of CES 2026 Pet Tech Winner

Satellai claimed the top prize with a lightweight AI collar built solely for dogs. It logs movement, sleep, and behavior to flag early health issues.

Key points:

  • Designed for daily use with long battery life
  • Markets itself as a health tool, not a toy
  • Aims to catch problems earlier than routine vet visits

Best of CES 2026 Pet Tech Finalists

Petkit brought three connected devices-smart feeders, fountains, and monitors-that share data through one app. Cameras and sensors record eating and drinking habits so owners notice red flags faster.

Pawport refreshed its smart door to slip into current pet-door cutouts, cutting installation hassle. A collar tag grants entry; owners set curfews and lock or unlock remotely.

More Notable Pet Tech From the Show

Product Core Function Stand-out Feature
High Tech Pet door Collar-ID entry Keeps strays out, preserves indoor temp
FireTag collar Home-security link Pet doubles as roaming motion sensor
AI-Tails station AI feeding & hydration Adjusts portions as habits change

Key Takeaways

  • Satellai’s health-focused collar took the CES crown
  • Petkit’s ecosystem approach simplifies multi-device care
  • Pawport’s retrofit design could boost smart-door adoption
stood

From preventive health to seamless home ties, CES 2026 showed pet tech maturing fast.

Author

  • My name is Olivia M. Hartwell, and I cover the world of politics and government here in Los Angeles.

    Olivia M. Hartwell covers housing, development, and neighborhood change for News of Los Angeles, focusing on who benefits from growth and who gets pushed out. A UCLA graduate, she’s known for data-driven investigations that follow money, zoning, and accountability across LA communities.

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