ChomChom vs Lint Roller: Buy Both, Here's Which for What
Different tools, different jobs. The ChomChom owns the couch. A peel-off Evercare owns the closet. The two-tool kit is the actual answer.
Buy both. The ChomChom owns the couch, the lint roller owns the closet. People keep asking which one replaces the other and the honest answer is neither, because they're different tools doing different jobs. A year with 3 cats, daily use of both, and I'm still not picking a single winner because the question is wrong.
Here's the breakdown. What each one is actually good at, why the marketing pits them against each other, and the $37 two-tool kit that covers every fabric in my house. This page is part of the main cat hair guide. The deep dives live at the full ChomChom review and the full Evercare lint roller review.
The spec sheet
Side-by-side: what each tool actually is
The ChomChom is a $25 plastic head with nylon strips and a wiper inside. Push and pull, static lifts hair into a chamber, button to dump. The Evercare is a $4 tube wrapped in 60 adhesive sheets. Peel, roll, tear, the next sheet is brand new.
| Feature | ChomChom Roller | Evercare Lint Roller |
|---|---|---|
| Mechanism | Static charge | Adhesive sheet |
| Upfront cost | $25 | $4 per roller |
| Refills | None, ever | 60 sheets per tube |
| Cleaning | Press a button to dump the chamber | Tear off the sheet, brand new |
| Best surface | Couches, fabric chairs, blankets, cat beds | Clothes you're wearing, sweaters, work pants |
| Worst surface | A shirt on a body | A whole couch |
| Speed on furniture | Whole couch in 60 seconds | 1 cushion burns 6 to 8 sheets |
| Speed on clothes | Slow, needs flat fabric | 2 passes and you're out the door |
| Year-1 cost in a 3 cat house | $25 once | ~$25 in rollers |
| Waste | Zero refills | ~180 sheets a year |
Each tool wins one row, loses the other, no overlap. Forcing one to do both jobs is how people end up frustrated with whichever they bought.
Static charge vs adhesive sheet
How they actually work differently
The ChomChom is electrostatic. Two velvet-feeling nylon strips and a plastic wiper blade inside the head. Push and pull across fabric, the wiper rubs the strips, static lifts hair into the chamber. No batteries, no consumables. The catch is geometry. Static needs flat, taut fabric. A couch cushion is flat. A shirt on your body is not. It has shoulders, seams, sleeves, a chest curve, all of which kill the static the second the wiper hits them.
The Evercare is adhesive. The sheet is paper coated in pressure-sensitive glue. It grabs whatever it touches, no charge required, no flat surface required. Tear off the sheet when it's full and the next one is brand new. The trade-off is that the sheet wrinkles after maybe 6 to 8 passes on a textured surface, and a single cushion of a fabric couch burns through that in one cleaning. Two different physics, two different jobs.
Couches, chairs, blankets, cat beds
When the ChomChom wins, no argument
My fabric sectional. Herbie sleeps on the left arm, Luna sleeps on the right cushion, Leo treats the whole thing like it's his. After a day there's enough orange and gray fur stuck to the upholstery that the cushion looks tinted. The ChomChom does the whole couch in 60 seconds, one button press to dump the chamber, done. Same story for the fabric chair, the blankets on the bed, the cat beds. Anything large, fabric, and stationary.
The killer fact is the year-1 math. $25 once, no refills, runs daily for a year and works the same as day one. A peel-off lint roller doing the same furniture job would run me hundreds of dollars in sheets. There is no scenario where a peel-off makes sense for upholstery in a multi-cat house.
Clothes, sleeves, the closet
When the lint roller wins, no argument
The shirt I'm about to wear out the door. Black work pants. A sweater pulled out of the closet. Anything fitted, anything I'm wearing, anything where the fabric isn't laid flat on a table. The Evercare wins all of it. The workflow is what closes the case. Peel a sheet, roll, tear it off, throw it away, brand new again. No rinsing, no drying, no chamber to dump, no static to generate. 30 seconds and I'm out the door with no fur on my pants.
An extra sticky Evercare runs about $4 for 60 sheets. With 3 cats I go through maybe 3 to 4 rollers a year, call it $15 in clothes hair-removal for the whole year. That's not a budget item, it's pocket change. One by the door, one in the car, one in the laundry room. The lint roller is also the only tool I trust on black fabric, an extra sticky sheet pulls every fiber off a flat plane in two passes. If you wear a lot of black, the Evercare is non-negotiable.
Why people pit them against each other
The "reusable replaces disposable" pitch
Every reusable pet hair tool is sold the same way. "Stop buying lint rollers forever." For furniture it's actually true, the ChomChom did replace lint rollers in my house for couches and blankets. But the pitch overreaches when it implies the reusable replaces the lint roller for every fabric job. Clothes are still a sticky-sheet category until somebody invents a static tool that works on curved fabric, which nobody has.
The reverse pitch shows up in the comments under every ChomChom video. "I just use a lint roller." Sure, on a fitted shirt. Try doing the whole couch with a lint roller in a 3 cat house and tell me how that goes. The honest answer doesn't sell as well as either pitch, because "buy both" is a worse headline than "stop buying X forever." But it's the answer. $25 ChomChom for furniture, $4 Evercare for clothes, the whole house gets covered for less than a Dyson handheld attachment.
More honest cat hair comparisons coming
I'm working through the rest of the gear in my 3 cat house. The Furminator vs the EquiGroomer, the air purifiers, the robot vacuums, the deshedding gloves nobody actually needs. Drop your email if you want the next one when it's up.
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The reusable rubber roller
What about the Sticky Buddy?
The Sticky Buddy is the third tool people ask about. The as-seen-on-TV reusable rubber roller you rinse in the sink. The pitch is "ChomChom plus lint roller in one." The reality is it does both jobs worse than the dedicated tools, works alright the first few uses, then loses grip, and the rinse-and-dry cycle becomes the step you skip. I keep one around because I bought it before I knew better. The full Sticky Buddy review is the no-buy page. Save your $10 and put it toward a ChomChom and a 3 pack of Evercares.
Pros and cons of each
The honest case for each tool
ChomChom Roller
Pros
- $25 once, no refills, runs for years
- Whole couch in 60 seconds
- Static keeps working as long as you push and pull
- Big chamber, dumps with a button
- No batteries, no electronics, nothing to break
Cons
- Needs flat fabric, fails on a shirt you're wearing
- Rigid plastic head bumps seams and sleeves
- Doesn't conform to curves at all
- Useless on black work pants you're about to put on
Evercare Lint Roller
Pros
- $4 a roller, 60 sheets each
- Conforms to sleeves, seams, knees, curves
- Tear off the sheet, brand new every time
- Works on a body, not just flat surfaces
- One by the door, one in the car, done
Cons
- One cushion of a fabric couch eats 6 to 8 sheets
- Sheet wrinkles after a few passes on textured weave
- Disposable, ~180 sheets a year in a 3 cat house
- Bad math on furniture, no contest there
By surface
Which one for which surface in your house
The full surface-by-surface breakdown is in the remove cat hair guide. The short version, room by room.
Couch, sectional, fabric chair: ChomChom. The math falls apart in one cushion with anything else.
Bed blankets, throws, comforters, cat beds: ChomChom. Lay it flat, two passes per side, done.
Black work pants, fitted shirts, sweaters, coats: Lint roller. Static won't build on a body.
Car seats: Both. Lint roller on cloth seat backs, ChomChom on the flat seat bottom.
Frequently asked
FAQ
Is the ChomChom better than a lint roller for cat hair?
It's better on furniture and worse on clothes. The ChomChom uses static charge to lift hair off couches, fabric chairs, blankets, and cat beds in 30 seconds, no refills. A peel-off lint roller pulls more hair per pass on a fitted shirt or work pants because the adhesive grabs every fiber it touches. They're different tools for different jobs. Own both.
Can a lint roller replace a ChomChom for furniture?
Not really. A peel-off roller will technically pick up hair off a couch, but you'll burn through 6 to 8 sheets cleaning one cushion, and the sheet wrinkles the second it touches a textured weave. The ChomChom does the same couch in one pass with no refill cost. For 3 cats and a fabric sectional, the math is not close.
ChomChom vs Evercare for cat hair on clothes, which is better?
Evercare. A peel-off lint roller is faster on a fitted shirt, sweater, or work pants, and it conforms to seams, sleeves, and pockets the way a rigid plastic head can't. The ChomChom struggles on a sleeve because it needs flat, taut fabric to build a proper static charge. Use the ChomChom on the couch, then the Evercare on yourself before you walk out the door.
Why does a lint roller pick up more hair on clothes than a ChomChom?
Adhesive grabs whatever it touches. Static charge has to build up against a flat fabric surface. A shirt on your body has wrinkles, seams, and curves the ChomChom can't keep flat against. A sticky sheet doesn't care, it just rolls over the wrinkle and the hair sticks. That's why the format wins for clothes regardless of brand.
Can you use a lint roller on a couch?
You can, and the math is awful. A standard 60 sheet Evercare will get you through maybe one couch cushion in a 3 cat house before the sheet wrinkles and stops grabbing. That's $4 for one cushion. The $25 ChomChom does the whole couch every day for a year and still works. Use the lint roller on a couch only when you don't own a ChomChom yet.
Does the ChomChom work on clothes?
Sort of. On a shirt laid flat on a table, yes. On a shirt you're wearing, no. The static needs flat tension to build, and a body underneath the fabric kills the geometry. I've tried it on jeans on the bed, blankets I'm about to fold, sweaters laid flat, all fine. For walking out the door in 30 seconds, a peel-off lint roller is the only right answer.
ChomChom vs Sticky Buddy vs lint roller, what's the order?
ChomChom for furniture, Evercare lint roller for clothes, Sticky Buddy for nothing. The Sticky Buddy is a reusable rubber roller that you rinse in the sink. It works alright the first few uses and then loses grip, and you're cleaning it after every job. Save your money and put it toward a ChomChom and a 3 pack of Evercares. Full no-buy in the Sticky Buddy review.
Is a reusable hair remover better than disposable for the environment?
On furniture, yes. The ChomChom replaces hundreds of sticky sheets a year for couches and blankets, the math is real. On clothes, the picture is worse. A peel-off sheet is paper coated in glue, it's not nothing, but a reusable rubber roller you rinse in the sink uses water and detergent every time you clean it. Buy one ChomChom for the couch and don't feel bad about a $4 lint roller for clothes.
What's the cheapest combo for a cat hair toolkit?
$25 for a ChomChom plus $12 for a 3 pack of Evercare extra sticky rollers. That's $37 and it covers every fabric in the house. The ChomChom never needs a refill, the Evercares last a few months each in a 3 cat home. Skip the Sticky Buddy, skip the gimmicky pet hair gloves, that's the whole kit.
The hair you don't reach with either tool ends up in the air. Air purifiers and fan covers are the third leg of the stool, and the robot vacuum is what catches the litter scatter and the floor fur the rollers can't touch.
How I tested
The bar this comparison had to clear
Bought both at retail
$25 ChomChom on Amazon, $4 a tube for Evercare extra sticky, several tubes over the year. No review samples, no PR units. Same kit anyone reading this would buy.
A year of daily use, both tools
ChomChom on the couch and the bed daily. Evercare on clothes by the door and in the laundry room. 3 cats, 2 outdoor rescues, so the fur load is heavier than a single-cat house.
Tried using each for the other's job
Did the whole couch with a peel-off, burned through half a tube. Tried the ChomChom on a fitted shirt, it bumped every seam and barely picked up the chest. The case for keeping both is built into the test.
Where to buy
The two-tool kit
The ChomChom is on Amazon at $25, the Evercare extra sticky rollers ship as 3 packs for about $12 to $15. That's the whole toolkit, $37 to $40, covers every fabric in the house. The deep dives are linked below if you want the year-with-3-cats writeup on either one.
This comparison is part of the main cat hair guide. For surface-by-surface advice on every fabric in the house, the remove cat hair guide covers the rest.