If your dog rides in your car, your car smells like dog. And probably has fur on every surface, drool on the windows, and mysterious wet spots you don’t want to think about. We tested six waterproof seat covers over four months of muddy hikes, beach trips, and one unfortunate encounter with a skunk.
What Actually Matters in a Car Seat Cover
Forget the marketing copy. You need four things: waterproofing that actually works, a non-slip backing so it doesn’t slide around, enough coverage to protect the doors when your dog leans on them, and attachment points that don’t rip out after two uses.
Most covers we tested failed on at least one of these. A couple failed on all four.
1. Active Pets Waterproof Seat Cover — $30
Best overall
This was our top pick after four months. The 600D Oxford cloth is thick enough that our dog’s nails haven’t punctured it, and the waterproof backing held up through rain-soaked walks and beach trips. The quilted top layer is surprisingly comfortable — we sat on it too, and it’s not bad.
Pros: Truly waterproof (tested with a full bucket of water), side flaps protect doors, headrest anchors are solid, easy to hose off, fits sedans and SUVs
Cons: The “universal fit” is a bit loose in compacts. The mesh storage pockets on the sides ripped after 6 weeks. Gray color shows dark fur.
2. Barksbar Pet Seat Cover — $35
Best for heavy-duty use
Thicker material than the Active Pets cover and better stitching on the seams. This one felt like it could survive a decade. The rubberized backing genuinely doesn’t slide on leather seats (a problem with most covers).
Pros: Heavy-duty construction, excellent non-slip backing, side anchors are metal clips (not plastic), seat anchor stays put even with a squirming dog
Cons: Stiffer material means it doesn’t contour to the seat as well. Takes more effort to clean (you really need to hose it off, spot cleaning doesn’t work well). $5 more than our top pick for marginal improvements.
3. Petsfun Premium Seat Cover — $23
Best budget option
At $23, expectations should be low. But this one actually works — the waterproofing held up, the fit was decent, and after two months it hasn’t torn. It’s thinner than our top picks, so large dogs with sharp nails will eventually poke through, but for the price, it’s solid.
Pros: Cheap, lightweight, easy to put on and take off, genuinely waterproof, machine washable
Cons: Thinner material won’t last forever, side flaps are smaller (less door protection), no seat anchors for the middle (it relies on the headrest straps), slides a bit on leather
4. Kurgo Wander Hammock — $45
We wanted to love this more than we did. The hammock design covers the full back seat area, and Kurgo makes quality stuff. But the attachment system is fiddly — it took us 15 minutes to get it properly set up, and taking it on and off is annoying enough that we just left it in permanently.
Pros: Full hammock design keeps dogs off the floor, very waterproof, heavy material, lifetime warranty
Cons: Setup is annoying, blocks the front seat from folding forward, $45 is on the higher end, the zippers for split-seat mode stick
5. Active Pets Luxury Quilted Cover — $28
Different from their standard cover — this one has a quilted top layer that looks nice but absorbs water instead of repelling it. After one rain walk, the quilting was soggy for hours. Not what you want in a “waterproof” cover.
Pros: Looks nice, comfortable, easy to install
Cons: The quilting absorbs moisture — dealbreaker for a “waterproof” cover. Smaller coverage area than the standard version.
Our Pick
For most people, the Active Pets Waterproof at $30 is the best balance of price and performance. If your dog is particularly rough on things (or you have leather seats that you don’t want anything sliding on), spend the extra $5 on the Barksbar. Either way, your car interior will thank you.