Pet Rabbit Care Guide for First-Time Owners
Slug: pet-rabbit-care-guide-first-time-ownersPillar: Pet Care > Beginner Pet GuidesKeyword: how to care for a pet rabbitExcerpt: A complete pet rabbit care guide for beginners — diet, housing, grooming, and health. Everything you need to know before bringing a rabbit home.
Rabbits are among the most misunderstood pets. They look low-maintenance but are actually intelligent, sensitive animals with complex social and physical needs. Get it right and you'll have an affectionate companion that lives 8-12 years. This guide covers everything first-time rabbit owners need to know.
Before You Bring a Rabbit Home
Rabbits are a serious commitment — they live as long as many dogs and require daily care. Consider: Do you have enough space for a large enclosure plus free-roaming time? Can you afford vet bills (rabbits need annual check-ups and neutering)? Are you home enough to provide daily interaction? If the answer is yes, a rabbit can be a wonderfully rewarding pet.
Setting Up the Right Housing
The minimum indoor enclosure size for one rabbit is 3m x 2m x 1m — most pet shop hutches sold as "rabbit hutches" are far too small. Avoid wire-bottomed cages; they cause painful pressure sores. Use solid flooring with a layer of dust-free hay for bedding. If housing outdoors, the hutch must be fully weatherproof, predator-proof, and raised off the ground.
What to Feed Your Rabbit
The correct diet splits as: 80% unlimited timothy hay (the single most important component — it wears teeth down and keeps the gut moving), 10-15% fresh leafy greens (romaine lettuce, kale, parsley, fresh herbs — avoid iceberg lettuce and anything high in sugar), and 5% high-quality pellets (about one tablespoon per kilogram of body weight daily). Fresh water in a heavy bowl must always be available. Never feed: chocolate, avocado, onions, garlic, or fruit seeds.
Understanding Rabbit Behaviour
Rabbits communicate in subtle ways. A binky — jumping and twisting mid-air — means pure happiness. Thumping means alarm or displeasure. Flopping dramatically onto their side looks alarming but means they're deeply relaxed. Ear position indicates mood: forward is curious, flat against body is fear or aggression. Rabbits are most active at dawn and dusk.
Exercise and Enrichment
Rabbits need a minimum of 3-4 hours of exercise outside their enclosure every day. A rabbit-proofed room works well. Provide cardboard boxes to chew and jump on, tunnels, and hay-stuffed toys. Mental stimulation is as important as physical exercise — a bored rabbit becomes destructive and stressed.
Handling and Bonding
Never pick up a rabbit by the ears — this causes significant pain and injury. Support the full body weight with both hands, cradling the bottom. Let rabbits come to you on the floor rather than chasing them. Most rabbits don't enjoy being held but love company on their terms.
Health Essentials
Rabbits require annual vaccinations against Myxomatosis and Rabbit Haemorrhagic Disease (RVHD1 and RVHD2) — both are fatal without vaccination. Neutering is strongly recommended (reduces cancer risk in females by over 80%). GI stasis — where the gut slows or stops — is a veterinary emergency: if your rabbit stops eating or passing droppings for more than 12 hours, contact a vet immediately.
Grooming Your Rabbit
Short-haired breeds need brushing weekly; long-haired breeds need daily grooming. Rabbits groom themselves like cats and don't need baths — getting them wet is stressful and dangerous. Check and trim nails every 6-8 weeks.
For more beginner pet guides, visit our Pet Care section.
FAQ: Pet Rabbit Care
Do rabbits need a companion?
Rabbits are social animals and generally thrive in bonded pairs. A single rabbit needs significant daily human interaction. Two bonded rabbits are happier, though introductions must be done carefully and both should be neutered first.
Can rabbits live outdoors all year?
Yes, with proper weatherproofing and insulation — but indoor rabbits tend to be healthier and more socialised.
How do I rabbit-proof a room?
Cover all cables with spiral cable wrap. Remove toxic plants (lilies, daffodils, foxglove). Block gaps behind appliances. Rabbits chew everything — it's a natural behaviour.
What's the best age to get a rabbit?
8 weeks is the minimum age to leave their mother. Adopting from a rescue gives adult rabbits a home and means you know their temperament before committing.










