This $1,500 Silicon Valley studio is the purr-fect home — for a pair of tabbies who live alone.

The 425-square-foot San Jose, Calif., apartment is outfitted with a scratching post, a couch and even an Apple TV — all for the enjoyment of cared-for California kitties Louise and Tina, according to local reports.

“Basically I’ve got two renters that don’t have opposable thumbs,” landlord David Callisch told The Mercury News. “It’s actually great. They’re very quiet, obviously. The only problem is they stink up the place.”

Footing the bill is Callisch’s friend Troy Good, who saw the studio as a solution to the problem of what to do with his daughter’s beloved cats when she moved away to college. Good was also moving and couldn’t bring Louise and Tina with him.

“This wasn’t my lifelong vision or dream to have cats as tenants,” Callisch told the local ABC affiliate. “It just worked out that way.”

“They can never screw up the electronics,” he said, adding: “They don’t drink, they don’t smoke, they don’t play loud music.”

While it’s easier to be a landlord to cats than humans, Callisch said he feels guilty as housing is so scarce in the Bay Area — a problem that’s driving up prices.

The average rent for a studio in San Jose is $1,951 a month, according to RentCafe. The kitty crib doesn’t have a kitchen, which seems to have brought the price down.

But Louise and Tina — named after characters in the animated Fox show “Bob’s Burgers” — aren’t going hungry. The Maine Coon and Bombay mixes weigh about 20 pounds each and are visited by Good every day.

“They definitely have the nicest cat apartment in Silicon Valley,” Good said.