Once the decision has been made to get a pet rabbit,
the next decision is to figure out the way to house her. it’s very important to
house the pet rabbit in a spacious and comfortable environment. You should
consider between the size and type of the cage, as well as whether she will
live outside or indoors.
There are dozens of indoor bunny cages, including
regular rabbit hutches, and multi-level rabbit houses that provide plenty of
places for your bunny to move around. In this article, we’ve identified the
best 5 options based on features, durability, and other important factors. We
then narrowed down our search to five of the best indoor rabbit cages available
today.
Living World Deluxe Habitat:
This cage is great. Very easy to put together and
clean.excellent cage, very easy to assemble, well made!!
Plenty of room.
it is easy to clean, the entire top part (wire cage)
comes off with the
simple release of 6 clips, making cleaning the bottom super
easy!! Access door on the side but the entire top is hinged as well so you can
open that as well. Hayrack and double balled water bottle included, both mount
outside the cage giving more actual living space on the inside. Food bowl
included, food bowl sits inside a molded recess on the platform, this helps
keep the piggy from knocking over or dragging around the food bowl. You could
actually use the recess that the bowl sits into like a bowl for dry pellets and
then set the actual bowl next to it and put wet food like veggies and fruit in
that. The base of the cage (plastic part) is deep enough that shavings/bedding
doesn't get kicked out. The wire top easily opens for access inside and there
is a wire door at the front for additional accessibility.
Midwest Wabbitat Folding Rabbit Cage:
A good-sized cage that was very easy to put together.
However, the sides on the tray that slip out from underneath (the "potty
tray") doesn't come up very high, so when our bunny pees, it gets outside
of the cage and onto the floor.
Great cage and easy to put up. You can use it for a
Rex rabbit and you can see has plenty of space for herself, food/water dish and
a mat. One of the other things I really appreciate is that this cage has a door
on the side and a door on top, so I can take her dish without needing to be let
out (most of the time she is out of her cage, we open it up in the morning and
put her back in the evening).
Yaheetech Indoor Small Animals Hutch:
The cage is super easy to assemble and took less than
15 minutes to put together. It has plenty of space for all 3 of them and enough
room for both the hammock and hanging bed plus a few of their toys. The water
bottle it comes with is actually pretty decent, a little small but it would
make due as a starter bottle.
The water bottle slides down and can be fixed by using
a rubber band around the bottle as a grip. It came with a corner “pool” style
food dish but I added my own since my girls prefer to eat out of separate
dishes.
So the Yaheetech Indoor Small Animals Hutch is easy to
set up, perfect size, easy to move (wheels), Chinchilla friendly and bottom
floor slides out along with the tray for easier cleaning.
Ferplast Krolik 140 Plus Rabbit Cage:
This was a perfect choice! The food bowl is impossible
to tip over, the feeder is plenty large for two
DreamHome Small Animal Cage:
it will create a safe and comfortable environment that
he will be able to be happy in. The size is ideal for that of a smaller rabbit
and I like that the cage is entirely made of metal, not like others I have seen
with plastic bottoms which can look cheap. Having two separate doors will also
be a nice advantage for cage cleaning and removing the bunny with care. Which
will be made even easier by the tray at the bottom that slides out cleanly as
soon as you lift the latch. There were only two small cons to keep my rating
from being 5/5. One is that the assembly was not quite as easy as advertised,
unfortunately, due to the hooks that keep the cage upright being rather stuck
in the bars of the floor while I was trying to unfold it. And the other in
relation to the open design of the cage that may require the use of urine
guards in the future.
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