Everything you need to care for your rabbit
Rabbits are gentle, clever, and a little bit mysterious. Whether you just brought home your first bunny or you have loved rabbits for years, we are here with cozy, plain-language guidance on diet, housing, health, and the daily joys of life with a rabbit.
Friendly decision support, not a substitute for your exotic vet.
New: Rabbit Care Planner
10 printable worksheets: health & symptom log, diet & weight tracker, litter habits, vet prep, bonding diary, and more
The things rabbit owners ask us most
These four topics come up again and again, and getting them right makes life with a rabbit so much smoother. Each one has a friendly, detailed guide to walk you through it.
Hay First, Always
Unlimited grass hay should be about 80% of your rabbit's diet. It wears down teeth and keeps the gut moving.
Not Eating or Pooping
A rabbit who stops eating or passing droppings may be in GI stasis, a true emergency. Call an exotic vet right away.
Litter Training
Rabbits naturally pick a corner. A roomy box with hay over the back makes litter training surprisingly easy.
Bonding Two Rabbits
Rabbits are social and often happiest in a pair. Slow, neutral-space bonding is the key to a peaceful duo.
What this site is
- Warm, plain-language guides to everyday rabbit care
- Product picks based on research, specs, and verified owner reviews
- Honest cost estimates so you can plan ahead
- Friendly, calm, never alarmist
What this site is not
- A replacement for a rabbit-savvy exotic vet
- A diagnostic tool
- Fear-based or alarmist content
- A source of treatment plans or dosing advice
Start here
The foundations of a healthy, happy rabbit, explained simply.
What Rabbits Should Eat Every Day
Unlimited hay, a generous handful of leafy greens, and a measured scoop of pellets. The simple framework that keeps a rabbit healthy.
GI Stasis: The Emergency Every Owner Should Know
Why a rabbit who stops eating needs help fast, the early warning signs, and how a hay-first diet helps prevent it.
Setting Up a Happy Rabbit Home
Why hutches fall short, how much space a rabbit really needs, and how to build a safe free-roam or pen setup indoors.
The Rabbit Care Planner
10 printable worksheets to track your rabbit's health, diet, weight, litter habits, vet visits, bonding, and molts, so the small changes that matter never slip past you.
Health & Symptom Log
Diet & Weight Tracker
Litter Habits Log
Vet Visit Prep
Bonding Diary
Grooming & Molt Log
Browse by topic
Everything from a hay-first diet to senior rabbit comfort.
Rabbit Essentials Owners Love on Amazon
- Timothy & Orchard Grass Hay: The foundation of a healthy diet, about 80% of what a rabbit should eat
- Exercise Pens & Playpens: Give your rabbit the space a hutch never can
- Corner Litter Boxes: Roomy boxes that make litter training simple
- Timothy-Based Pellets: A measured daily scoop of plain, high-fiber pellets
- Grooming Brushes: Help your rabbit through heavy molts and prevent hairballs
How old is your rabbit, really?
Rabbits grow up fast and then settle into a long, gentle adulthood. Find your rabbit's human-equivalent age and life stage, then see what it really costs to give a rabbit a happy life.