Jenser Furniture Dog Crates for Three Dogs

Jenser builds 95-inch wooden dog crates designed to hold three dogs, function as real living room furniture, and eliminate the wire kennel problem entirely. Both models run 95"L × 23.6"W × 31.5"H with two removable dividers that convert the interior between one, two, or three compartments — each compartment measuring 29.8"L × 21.9"W × 23.8"H. The sliding barn door model handles TV stand duty with a 100-lb tabletop and a cable management port on the shelf. The hinge door model offers three full drawers and 180-degree door clearance for dogs who need the widest possible entry. Same footprint, two configurations, one piece of furniture that actually earns its square footage.

✓ 95-inch steel bar containment✓ Three separate compartments✓ Replaces your TV stand
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Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate Furniture with 2 Dividers
95 Inches of Actual Crate Space

Each compartment measures 29.8"L × 21.9"W × 23.8"H — sized for real dogs, not product photos.

Barn Doors That Don't Eat Floor Space

The sliding door model moves laterally on a track, so no door swing cuts into the room in front of the crate.

Three Drawers for the Leash Pile

Both models include integrated storage: three drawers on the hinge door version, two drawers plus a cable-management shelf on the sliding door version.

Up to 100 Pounds on the Tabletop

The sliding door model's 95-inch tabletop holds 100 lbs — rated for a flat-screen TV; the hinge door model is rated to 70 lbs.

Jenser 95-Inch Triple Dog Crate Lineup

Both Jenser crates share the same 95-inch exterior footprint and the same three-compartment divider system — what separates them is the door mechanism, storage configuration, tabletop capacity, and colorway. Pick the one that matches your room layout and how you plan to use the top surface.

Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate with 3 Lockable Sliding Barn Doors

95" Triple Crate Sliding Door (White)

The sliding barn door model carries a 100-lb tabletop rating and includes a shelf with a built-in cable management port — designed for buyers who want to run a TV and entertainment setup on top of the crate without managing cord clutter. Three sliding doors move on a lateral track, so there's no door-swing arc eating into the room in front of the crate. The white farmhouse finish works in lighter, brighter rooms where a black crate would read as too heavy.

Best choice for tight living rooms where door-swing clearance is a real constraint, or for anyone replacing a TV stand — the 100-lb tabletop and the cable management port on the shelf are purpose-built for that use case.

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Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate Furniture with 2 Dividers

95" Triple Crate Hinge Door (Black)

The hinge door model gives you three full drawers instead of two drawers and a shelf — more total storage volume for leashes, treats, grooming supplies, and whatever else accumulates near the dog station. Each of the three doors opens to a full 180 degrees, which matters for large or reluctant dogs who balk at a partially blocked entry. At 180 lbs assembled, this is a piece of furniture that stays where you put it. The black finish pairs well with darker wood tones and furniture with metal hardware.

The right pick if storage capacity is the priority, or if you have a dog that needs the widest possible door opening — three full drawers and 180-degree hinge doors are what separate this model from the sliding door variant.

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Which Jenser Crate Fits Your Setup

Both Jenser models share the same 95-inch footprint and the same three-compartment configuration system — so the decision comes down to three variables: how tight your room is, how much drawer storage you actually need, and whether the crate is going to hold a TV. Get those three answers right and the choice is obvious.

Jenser - Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate Furniture with 2 Dividers

You want a TV stand replacement in a tight room

Go with the 95" Triple Crate Sliding Door (White). The sliding barn doors move laterally along a track — there's no door swing arc eating into the floor space in front of the crate. In a room where you're working with limited depth between the crate and the coffee table, that matters more than it sounds. The sliding door model also carries a 100-lb tabletop capacity and includes a shelf with a built-in cable management port at the back, so you can run cords cleanly behind the structure rather than letting them pile up on the floor. If you're replacing a wire crate and a TV stand at the same time, this is the configuration that does both jobs without compromise.

You want maximum drawer storage above everything else

The 95" Triple Crate Hinge Door (Black) gives you three full drawers where the sliding door model gives you two drawers and a shelf. That's a meaningful difference if you're storing leashes, training treats, waste bags, and a collar collection — the third drawer adds usable volume that a shelf doesn't replicate for loose small items. The 180-degree hinge door swing also creates a wider entry point than a sliding door, which some larger dogs are less reluctant to walk through. Tabletop capacity on this model is 70 lbs — plenty for a lamp, a plant, or a smaller TV, but not the 55-inch flat-screen setup the sliding door model is rated for.

You have one large dog and want the full open configuration

Either model works here, but confirm one thing first: run the crate as a single open compartment by removing both dividers. That gives you 89.4 inches of interior floor length — well beyond what any single dog needs. A 70-lb Labrador Retriever, for reference, typically needs about 46 inches of interior length to stand, turn, and stretch out fully. The single-compartment open setup on either Jenser model handles that without friction. The choice between hinge and sliding door then falls back to your room layout and storage preference.

You have three dogs and want separate spaces

Both models divide into three compartments using the two included removable dividers. Each resulting section measures 29.8 inches long — sized right for dogs up to roughly 25–30 lbs per compartment. Three Beagles, three French Bulldogs, three Cavalier King Charles Spaniels: that works. Three adult Labrador Retrievers in divided compartments: that doesn't, and you shouldn't try to make it work just because the math on the total crate length seems generous. The per-section interior length is the binding constraint, not the overall footprint.

What Fits Inside Each Compartment

The single most important number in this purchase isn't the 95-inch exterior length — it's 29.8 inches. That's the interior floor length of each compartment when both dividers are installed. Whether your dog fits comfortably in the divided configuration depends entirely on that number, not the crate's full footprint.

Interior dimensions, stated clearly

Each compartment in the three-room divided configuration measures 29.8 inches long × 21.9 inches wide × 23.8 inches tall. These are interior measurements for the sliding door model (B0F13FXT96), which is the only Jenser 95-inch model with published interior specs. The hinge door model (B0DQPPH6NJ) shares the same exterior dimensions, so interior compartment depth will be comparable — but the precise figure for that model hasn't been published separately.

Jenser - Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate Furniture with 2 Dividers

The 23.8-inch interior height is the number most buyers miss. A dog standing inside the compartment needs floor-to-shoulder clearance below that ceiling. If your dog's shoulder height is 22 inches, they'll just clear it. If it's 24 inches, they won't stand upright in the divided configuration — and you'll need to run the crate open.

Exterior vs. interior: the gap that surprises people

The crate's exterior is 95 inches long. The per-compartment interior floor length is 29.8 inches. Multiply three compartments by 29.8 inches and you get 89.4 inches — roughly 5.6 inches shorter than the exterior length. That gap is accounted for by the wood panel walls, divider thickness, and frame construction. It's normal, and it's consistent with how every furniture crate in this category is built. But buyers who assume the interior matches the exterior will missize their dog's fit, so account for it before ordering.

Named breed examples by compartment configuration

The 29.8-inch compartment length in the divided three-room setup works well for:

  • French Bulldogs (body length roughly 18–20 inches, shoulder height 11–13 inches) — comfortable with room to spare
  • Beagles (body length roughly 20–25 inches, shoulder height 13–15 inches) — good fit
  • Cavalier King Charles Spaniels (body length roughly 18–21 inches, shoulder height 12–13 inches) — comfortable
  • Cocker Spaniels (body length roughly 23–26 inches, shoulder height 14–16 inches) — fits, tighter on length
  • Pugs (body length roughly 14–18 inches, shoulder height 10–13 inches) — comfortable

The 29.8-inch compartment length does not work well for:

  • Labrador Retrievers (body length roughly 36–40 inches) — too long for divided compartments; use open single configuration
  • Golden Retrievers (body length roughly 36–40 inches) — same issue
  • Border Collies (body length roughly 29–34 inches) — borderline; measure your specific dog
  • Standard Poodles (body length roughly 32–38 inches) — use open single configuration

How to measure your dog before ordering

Measure nose to tail base (not including the tail) with your dog standing naturally — that's the body length you're comparing against the 29.8-inch compartment floor. Then measure floor to the top of the shoulder blades for standing height clearance, and compare that against the 23.8-inch interior height. Both numbers need to clear by at least 3–4 inches for your dog to be comfortable. A dog that technically fits by half an inch isn't comfortable — it's just not visibly stuck.

If either measurement is close, remove both dividers and run the crate in single-compartment mode. The open interior gives your dog the full interior floor length — roughly 89 inches — with the same 21.9-inch width and 23.8-inch height. That configuration handles most large single-dog scenarios without modification.

Honest Assembly and Setup Expectations

The Jenser 95-inch crate is a large piece of furniture — 180 lbs assembled, shipped in multiple boxes. Plan for 60–90 minutes of assembly for one person working at a reasonable pace. If you've assembled flat-pack furniture before, the process will feel familiar. If this is your first time with a large flat-pack build, add 30 minutes to that estimate and read the hardware sort before you pick up a tool.

Multi-box shipment: what to expect on delivery day

At 95 inches long and 180 lbs assembled, this crate ships across multiple boxes. Don't attempt assembly the moment the boxes arrive if you're working alone — move all boxes to the room where the crate will live before opening any of them. Assembling in one room and carrying the completed crate to another isn't realistic at this weight. The felt-padded feet help with floor protection once the crate is in place, but they don't make it easy to slide a 180-lb piece across the house.

Check all boxes for completeness before starting. The category's most common one-star review trigger is discovering a missing screw midway through assembly — not because hardware is actually missing, but because buyers start building before confirming the full hardware sort. Lay out every component and match it against the included parts list first. All required hardware ships with the crate.

Jenser - Dog Crate Furniture - Indoor Wooden Dog Kennel Crate Furniture with 2 Dividers

First-assembly mistakes to avoid

Don't fully tighten fasteners until the structure is completely assembled. With large flat-pack furniture, tightening joints before the full frame is together creates alignment problems that are difficult to correct once they're locked in. Finger-tighten everything first, confirm the frame is square, then tighten in sequence. This is especially important for the steel bar panels — a slightly off-square frame puts lateral stress on the bar attachment points.

The sliding barn door track (on the B0F13FXT96 model) requires careful alignment during installation. A track that's even slightly misaligned will produce a door that catches or doesn't close flush. Take the time to confirm track levelness before final tightening — fixing it after the fact means disassembling the upper section, which adds another 20–30 minutes to the build.

Two-person assembly vs. solo

One person can assemble either model, but the panel-holding steps — particularly when attaching the top surface — are easier with a second person keeping the side panels steady. If you're assembling solo, use the boxes themselves as temporary supports to hold side panels upright while you attach cross members. It's slower but it works.

Honestly, the assembly isn't the hardest part. The hardest part is deciding where in the room the crate will live before you start building, because moving it afterward is a two-person job regardless of how carefully you planned.

Jenser Warranty and Support Coverage

Both Jenser models carry a 1-year limited warranty from the date of purchase. That's confirmed in the product specs for the 95" Triple Crate Hinge Door (Black) and the 95" Triple Crate Sliding Door (White). The warranty covers manufacturing defects in materials and workmanship — it doesn't cover damage from chewing, improper assembly, or normal wear to the wood finish.

How to access warranty support

Jenser sells through Amazon, so warranty claims and post-purchase support go through Amazon's buyer-seller messaging system. If you receive a defective component or discover a manufacturing issue within the warranty period, contact Jenser directly through your Amazon order — open the order, select "Contact seller," and describe the issue with photos if possible. Response times vary, but Amazon's A-to-z Guarantee provides a backstop if the seller doesn't respond within two business days.

Hardware replacements — individual screws, bolts, or brackets — can typically be sourced directly from the seller through the same messaging channel. This matters more than it sounds: with a 180-lb piece of furniture, you're not returning the whole crate because one bolt stripped. Knowing replacement hardware is accessible through the seller is worth confirming before you need it.

What ships in the box

Both models include all assembly hardware in the box — screws, bolts, connectors, and an Allen wrench. You don't need to supply your own tools for a standard assembly. The dividers are also included (2 per model), so the multi-room configuration is ready from day one without additional purchases.

The sliding door model (B0F13FXT96) includes the shelf with the built-in cable management port as part of the standard configuration — it's not an add-on. The three drawers on the hinge door model (B0DQPPH6NJ) ship as part of the main assembly, not separately packaged accessories. Confirm all components against the parts list before starting assembly, and contact the seller immediately if anything is missing — don't wait until you're halfway through the build.

How the Most Popular Dog Crates Actually Compare

We picked this roundup because it tests the question most buyers get wrong: furniture-style crate or heavy-duty kennel? You'll see how aesthetic options stack up against escape-proof builds across real use conditions — not just looks. It's a useful gut-check before you commit to a configuration, especially if you're deciding between a single open compartment and a divided multi-dog setup.

Which Jenser 95-Inch Crate Fits Your Home

Both Jenser 95-inch crates share the same exterior footprint and three-compartment system — but they differ in door mechanism, storage layout, tabletop capacity, and finish. The table below puts those differences side by side so you can make the call based on what your room actually needs.

Feature95" Triple Crate Sliding Door (White)95" Triple Crate Hinge Door (Black)
ASINB0F13FXT96B0DQPPH6NJ
Exterior dimensions95"L × 23.6"W × 31.5"H95"L × 23.6"W × 31.5"H
Interior compartment (single room)29.8"L × 21.9"W × 23.8"HNot individually specified
Door styleSliding barn doors (3) — no swing clearance neededHinge doors (3) — open 180°
Storage configuration2 drawers + 1 shelf with cable management port3 full drawers
Tabletop weight capacity100 lbs70 lbs
Assembled weightNot specified180 lbs
FinishWhite farmhouseBlack
Current rating4.4/5 (4 reviews)3.8/5 (17 reviews)
Warranty1-year limited1-year limited

If your primary goal is a TV stand replacement — especially in a tighter room where door swing is an issue — the sliding door model wins on both the 100-lb tabletop rating and the cable management shelf. If you want maximum drawer storage and a black finish that reads more like a traditional media console, the hinge-door model gives you three full drawers and a 180-degree door opening that's easier on large dogs. Check current pricing on Amazon for both before deciding — the gap between them may factor into the choice.

What Buyers Say After Living With a Jenser Crate

"We have two Beagles and I was genuinely tired of wire crates eating half the living room. The 95-inch black hinge-door model replaced both crates and our old TV stand in one shot. Assembly took me about 75 minutes solo, which is about what I expected for the size. The drawer storage is actually useful — all the leashes and bags are finally off the counter."
— Rachel M., multi-dog household owner replacing three wire crates
"The white sliding door version looks exactly like the listing photos once it's built — that was my biggest worry going in. I used it as a console table base in my living room and it holds my 43-inch TV without any flex. The barn door mechanism is smooth and the white finish photographed great for our new apartment. Wish there were more reviews before I bought, but no regrets so far."
— Jenna P., design-forward first-time dog owner setting up a new home
"The tabletop on the sliding door model holds my 55-inch TV, soundbar, and a plant with room left over. I was skeptical of the 100-lb claim but it hasn't moved. The cable management port on the shelf is a legitimately good feature — runs the TV cord clean. One thing: measure your room before ordering. 95 inches is a full sofa length and it showed up in multiple boxes."
— Dan K., practical upgrader who needed the crate to replace a media console
"The sliding barn doors were the deciding factor for me — my living room doesn't have the clearance for swing doors on something this wide. It fits flush against the wall and doesn't eat into the walkway. My Cocker Spaniel took to it immediately. I'd say assembly is a two-person job at this size, which the instructions don't really tell you upfront."
— Monica T., apartment owner working with a tight urban living room layout
"I bought the hinge-door black version for two small dogs and it's solid. The steel bars feel completely different from the particle board furniture crates I tried before — no wobble after two months. Three drawers is more storage than I expected. My only gripe is the instructions could be clearer on the divider installation step. Once it's together, though, it doesn't move."
— Brett A., practical upgrader switching from a budget MDF competitor
"We have three small dogs and this was the only furniture crate I found at 95 inches that wasn't custom-priced. The compartment dimensions work well for our two Cavaliers and a Maltese. The felt pads on the feet actually protect the hardwood — I checked after two weeks and no marks. Assembly took my husband and me about 90 minutes total. It's not light, so plan for where you want it before you start building."
— Sandra W., multi-dog household owner consolidating three separate wire kennels

Questions People Ask Before Buying a Jenser Crate

Are furniture-style dog crates safe?

Yes — when the containment structure uses steel bars rather than wood alone. Jenser's crates use steel bars for the kennel panels, which resist chewing and bending in a way that MDF-panel-only competitors don't. Latches on all three doors lock individually. The felt-padded feet reduce the risk of floor slipping. "Safe" in this context means structurally sound for containment — it doesn't substitute for proper crate training.

Are furniture dog crates worth it?

For multi-dog households that also need a TV stand or console table, yes — the math works out. The Jenser 95-inch model replaces two or three wire crates and a piece of furniture simultaneously. Where they don't deliver value: cheap all-MDF builds that wobble within weeks. VEIKOUS reviews on Home Depot specifically mention MDF seam failures. Jenser's steel bar frame is the meaningful structural difference in this comparison.

What are the different styles of dog crate furniture?

The two primary door mechanisms are hinge doors and sliding barn doors. Hinge doors (like Jenser's black model) open to 180 degrees — maximum entry clearance, useful for large or reluctant dogs. Sliding barn doors (like Jenser's white model) move laterally on a track with zero swing clearance, better for tight rooms. Beyond doors: single-compartment vs. multi-compartment configurations, and storage style (drawers vs. shelf vs. both) are the other main variables.

What is the most durable dog crate furniture option?

Durability in this category depends on the containment frame material. Steel bar construction — used in both Jenser 95-inch models — outlasts all-MDF or particle board builds, which are prone to warping at joints and panel delamination over time. The Jenser hinge-door model weighs 180 lbs assembled, which reflects the steel content in the frame. Wood panel components on any furniture crate will show wear faster than the steel; that's honest about the category.

What size dog fits in the Jenser 95-inch crate?

Each divided compartment on the Jenser 95-inch crate measures 29.8"L × 21.9"W × 23.8"H. That's well-suited for dogs up to roughly 30 lbs per section — think Beagles, Cocker Spaniels, Cavaliers, or Bulldogs. For a medium Labrador or anything over 50 lbs, remove the dividers and use the full interior as a single compartment. Always measure your dog nose-to-tail-base and floor-to-shoulder before ordering, then compare against interior dimensions — not the 95-inch exterior.

Does the Jenser crate work as a TV stand?

Yes, with some specifics worth knowing. The sliding barn door model (B0F13FXT96) has a tabletop rated at 100 lbs — enough for a 55-inch flat-screen with a soundbar. That model also includes a cable management port on the shelf, which keeps TV cords routed cleanly. The hinge-door model (B0DQPPH6NJ) is rated at 70 lbs — still enough for most screens, but a tighter margin. The tabletop depth is 23.6 inches, which matches a standard media console footprint.

Is the Jenser furniture-style dog crate easy to assemble?

Assembly runs 60–90 minutes for most buyers working alone; plan for two people at the 95-inch size. Both models ship in multiple boxes, so confirm all boxes have arrived before starting. All required hardware ships included — no separate tool run needed. Assemble in the room where the crate will live; at 180 lbs for the hinge-door model, moving it after the fact is a two-person job at minimum.

How does Jenser compare to other furniture crate brands?

Jenser's 95-inch triple-compartment footprint is unusual in this category — most competitors, including Frisco and VEIKOUS, top out at 48–72 inches. The Wirecutter-reviewed Frisco Double Door Furniture Style Dog Crate took over an hour to assemble and its MDF components drew criticism. Jenser's steel bar frame addresses that structural complaint directly. The tradeoff: Jenser is a newer brand with 17–21 total reviews across both 95-inch models, vs. competitors with 100+ reviews on Amazon and Chewy.

Can the dividers be fully removed on Jenser crates?

Yes. Both 95-inch Jenser models include 2 removable dividers that can be taken out entirely, creating a single open compartment running the full 95-inch interior length. They can also be positioned to create 2 or 3 separate sections. Reconfiguration doesn't require tools. This is the right setup for a single large dog or for households where the dog mix changes — one large dog now, adding a smaller one later.

What is the Jenser furniture-style dog crate review consensus?

The hinge-door model (B0DQPPH6NJ) sits at 3.8 out of 5 stars across 17 reviews. The sliding barn door model (B0F13FXT96) sits at 4.4 out of 5 stars, though that's based on 4 reviews — too few to draw firm conclusions. Positive themes across both: steel bar construction feels substantively different from budget competitors, storage is genuinely useful, and the tabletop holds real weight. Cautionary note: assembly at this size is demanding, and interior dimensions run smaller than the 95-inch exterior suggests.

Do the Jenser crate feet protect hardwood floors?

Yes. Both 95-inch Jenser models include felt-padded feet designed to prevent floor scratching and reduce sliding on hardwood and tile. Buyer feedback in the category consistently flags felt pads as a meaningful detail — bare-footed furniture crates at 180 lbs leave marks quickly. The pads are factory-applied, not an aftermarket add-on, which means they're correctly sized and positioned from the first day of use.

Why Jenser Built a Crate at 95 Inches

Most furniture-style dog crates stop at 48 or 72 inches. That's a reasonable size for one dog in a smaller room — but it doesn't solve the problem that sends people searching in the first place: three wire crates spread across a living room, none of them furniture, all of them in the way. Jenser's design premise is that the 95-inch footprint — roughly the length of a standard sofa — is what it actually takes to house two or three dogs and replace a piece of furniture at the same time. That's a less crowded segment of the market, and the 95-inch triple-compartment build is where the brand has planted its flag.

The two current 95-inch models represent two different approaches to the same footprint. The sliding barn door model in white is built around the TV stand use case — sliding doors that don't eat into the room, a 100-lb tabletop, and a cable management port on the shelf. The hinge-door model in black leans into storage and maximum entry clearance — three full drawers and 180-degree doors that make getting a reluctant dog in and out easier. Same exterior dimensions, meaningfully different configurations. Jenser is a newer brand in the category; 21 combined reviews is an honest picture of where they are in market maturity. The structural choices in these products — steel bar frames, confirmed tabletop weight ratings, felt-padded feet — reflect a design approach that takes the furniture half of "furniture crate" seriously.

This site is written by Megan Calloway, a home and pet furniture specialist who has worked directly with the Jenser product line for four years. She came to this work from interior design consulting, where the recurring frustration was clients who couldn't find a dog crate that didn't wreck the room. That's the specific problem Jenser is built to solve — and the perspective behind every recommendation here.

Useful Guides

Before you order, measure your dog — we'll show you exactly what fits in each model.

About Jenser

Jenser is a furniture-style dog crate brand available through Amazon and Walmart. The brand's current lineup focuses on large-footprint, multi-compartment wooden crates — primarily the 95-inch triple-room configuration in two door-style variants. Both products are fulfilled through Amazon's standard fulfillment network.

Customer Support

All customer service for Jenser products is handled through Amazon's messaging system. To contact the seller directly, visit the Jenser Store on Amazon and use the "Ask a question" function on either product listing. Amazon's standard buyer protection applies to all orders, including A-to-Z Guarantee coverage.

Warranty and Returns

Both 95-inch Jenser models carry a 1-year limited warranty, confirmed in the product specifications for B0DQPPH6NJ and B0F13FXT96. Warranty claims and return requests are processed through Amazon. Assembly hardware — screws, fasteners, and any required Allen wrenches — ships included with both models; if hardware is missing on arrival, contact the seller through Amazon before beginning assembly.