Most pet odor sprays work by piling perfume on top of the smell, which fades and leaves you back where you started. Zero Odor markets a different approach, claiming to chemically bind and eliminate the odor molecules instead of masking them. We tested that claim on the messes owners actually deal with, from fresh accidents on carpet to a couch that had absorbed cat smell over time. We sprayed, let it work, and came back at intervals to see whether the smell genuinely stayed gone or crept back once the product dried. We also looked at how it performed on the hardest case, set-in urine that had soaked into padding, where an enzyme cleaner sometimes does better. Safe use around pets matters too, so we noted ventilation and dry-time before letting animals back on treated surfaces. If you are tired of cycling through scented sprays that never quite fix the problem, here is how Zero Odor held up.