RabbitCare
New rabbit owner checklist from RabbitCare.co.uk
First-time rabbit guide

New Rabbit Owner Checklist

Build a personalised checklist for housing, hay, bedding, toys, food and daily health checks.

Rabbit care made simple

Prepare your rabbit’s home before they arrive

This new rabbit owner checklist helps you plan the essentials: a roomy setup, unlimited hay, safe bedding, enrichment, cleaning routines and the warning signs every rabbit owner should know.

New rabbit owner checklist

Everything to prepare for your first rabbit

Bringing rabbits home is exciting, but it helps to prepare properly before they arrive. Rabbits need more than a small cage and a food bowl. They need space, hay, safe flooring, enrichment, companionship, routine and quick access to a rabbit-savvy vet if something goes wrong.

This new rabbit owner checklist generator creates a simple plan based on your setup. Choose whether your rabbits will live indoors, outdoors or free roam, then add the areas you still need help with.

You will get a starter shopping list, daily routine, weekly care list and important health checks to keep nearby during your first few weeks as a rabbit owner.

Free checklist generator

Build your new rabbit owner checklist

Choose your setup and the areas you want help with. Your personalised checklist will update below.

This changes the housing and safety tasks.
Rabbits are social animals and many do best with a suitable companion.
Your list will prioritise setup, settling-in or improvements.
What do you want included?
Checklist ready Indoor bonded pair

Your new rabbit owner checklist

Use this as a practical starter plan. Adjust it around your rabbits’ needs, your vet’s advice and your home setup.

Daily focus Hay, water, droppings, appetite and behaviour
Setup focus Roomy indoor pen or rabbit-proofed room
Health focus Know urgent warning signs before you need them

Starter shopping list

    Daily rabbit care checklist

      Weekly setup and cleaning checklist

        First-week reminders

          Open symptom checker
          Rabbit essentials

          What new rabbit owners need ready

          A calm start is much easier when the basics are already set up before your rabbit arrives.

          🏡

          Roomy housing

          Rabbits need space to hop, stretch, stand, hide and explore. Avoid relying on a small cage or hutch alone.

          🌾

          Unlimited hay

          Good-quality hay should always be available because it supports digestion and dental wear.

          💧

          Fresh water

          Use a heavy bowl, bottle or both, and check daily that your rabbit is drinking normally.

          🚽

          Litter tray

          A roomy litter tray with hay nearby can make cleaning easier and encourage good habits.

          🏠

          Hiding places

          Rabbits feel safer when they have quiet places to hide and rest away from noise or stress.

          🧸

          Enrichment

          Provide chew toys, tunnels, forage trays and safe cardboard activities to prevent boredom.

          Know this before day one

          Rabbit warning signs can be urgent

          New owners should know the emergency signs before they happen. If your rabbit stops eating, stops pooing, seems bloated, weak, in pain or suddenly unwell, contact a rabbit-savvy vet urgently.

          • Not eating
          • Not pooing
          • Bloated belly
          • Severe diarrhoea
          • Head tilt
          • Flystrike signs
          • Breathing problems
          • Sudden weakness
          First week tips

          Help your rabbit settle calmly

          The first week is about safety, routine and observation. Keep things calm while your rabbit learns their new home.

          🤫

          Keep things quiet

          Give your rabbit time to explore without too much handling, noise or sudden changes.

          👀

          Watch appetite and poo

          Check hay eating and droppings every day. Changes can be important early warning signs.

          🧹

          Build a routine

          Daily feeding, cleaning and health checks make it easier to spot changes quickly.

          FAQs

          New rabbit owner questions

          What should I buy before getting a rabbit?

          Prepare roomy housing, hay, water bowls, suitable bedding or litter, a litter tray, hiding places, chew toys, food bowls, cleaning supplies and a secure carrier.

          Should I get one rabbit or two?

          Rabbits are social animals and many do best with a suitable bonded companion. Bonding should be done carefully and safely, especially with rescue rabbits or rabbits that have not met before.

          What is the most important daily rabbit care task?

          Check that your rabbit is eating hay, drinking, passing normal droppings and behaving normally. These daily checks can help you spot health problems quickly.

          When should a new rabbit owner call a vet?

          Call urgently if your rabbit stops eating, stops pooing, seems bloated, has breathing problems, has flystrike signs, collapses, shows head tilt or suddenly seems very unwell.

          Final thoughts

          A prepared home makes rabbit care calmer

          New rabbit owners do not need to know everything on day one, but the essentials matter: space, hay, water, safe flooring, hiding places, enrichment, routine and knowing when to call a vet.

          Use the checklist as a starting point, then keep learning from your rabbit’s behaviour and your vet’s advice.

          RabbitCare.co.uk provides general rabbit care information for UK owners. This checklist is a general guide and does not replace advice from a rabbit-savvy vet. If your rabbit stops eating, stops pooing, seems in pain or is suddenly unwell, contact a vet urgently.

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