Your new rabbit should begin in a smaller, secure primary area rather than having free access to the entire home.
A defined space helps reduce anxiety and supports litter habits. It should include:
- Solid, supportive flooring
- Unlimited hay & fresh water
- A litter area
- A dark hiding place or tunnel (rabbits need an entrance and an exit)
Hiding is not avoidance. It’s natural rabbit behavior. Retreat spaces are a basic need, not an optional comfort item. A rabbit new to your home will utilize retreat spaces even more frequently until they feel safe.
Keep the area calm and low-traffic. Avoid loud televisions, barking dogs, or excited children rushing toward the enclosure.
When cleaning or refreshing food, move slowly and deliberately. Rabbits rely heavily on smell and hearing. In time, your rabbit will begin cautiously investigating you.
Allow the process of investigation to unfold without forcing interaction. Building relationships requires respect for the rabbit’s base nature. That nature includes doing things on the rabbit’s terms and timeline.
If you plan to expand the rabbit’s space, do so gradually over several weeks. Sudden large spaces can increase anxiety and disrupt litter habits, especially in young or unaltered rabbits.