This is a specific conversation about Rabbit housing — space and setup that works — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
Switching from a plastic-base cage to a C&C grid setup is one of the best things you can do for a rabbit — those moulded cages are almost always too cramped, and the solid plastic base does nothing for ventilation or easy cleaning. Most pet shop hutches and cages fall well short of what rabbits actually need: space for at least three full hops, room to stand completely upright on their hind legs, and separate zones for sleeping and toileting. Before I point you at a specific configuration, can you tell me: is this rabbit kept indoors or outdoors, and what floor space do you realistically have available for the enclosure?
She's indoors. I've got a corner of my living room, probably about 120cm wide and 80cm deep I could use. She's a Mini Lop, about 2.5kg.
inparticular.ai
Good — indoors is ideal and a Mini Lop at 2.5kg is a medium-small rabbit, so that footprint is workable. A 4x2 grid configuration (roughly 140cm x 70cm with standard C&C grids) fits neatly into what you've described and gives her enough run length for proper hops. Is she your only rabbit, or do you have more than one?
Just her, solo rabbit.
inparticular.ai
Perfect. For a single Mini Lop indoors, I'd go straight to the Kavee 4x2 C&C Cage for Rabbits — it's the most practical ready-to-configure option on Amazon UK right now. The grids are sturdy enough that she won't push panels out, the coroplast base sits flush so there's no gap for mess, and the modular design means you can add a second level later if you want to give her more vertical space. The 4x2 layout gives her a genuine run area plus enough room to section off a sleeping corner with a hidey house. What's your current flooring like — hard floor or carpet? That affects how you'll want to anchor the base.
It's on laminate flooring.
inparticular.ai
Laminate is easy to work with. Line the coroplast base with a layer of fleece bedding — it grips well, washes cleanly, and is much kinder on Mini Lop feet than bare plastic or sawdust. Put a rubber-backed bath mat under the entire cage footprint so it doesn't slide on the laminate and so she has traction when she's moving around near the edges. One other thing worth knowing: C&C grids have square openings of about 9cm. For a Mini Lop that's fine — her head won't fit through — but double-check when the cage arrives before you let her in unsupervised, just as a habit.
That's really helpful. Do I need to buy anything extra with the Kavee cage, or does it come with everything?
inparticular.ai
The Kavee 4x2 comes with the grids, connectors, and a pre-cut coroplast base, so the core structure is covered. You'll want to add a water bottle or heavy ceramic bowl (bottles fit neatly on the grid bars), a wooden hidey house for her sleeping area, and a litter tray with hay rack if you're litter training her — which I'd strongly recommend, it makes the whole setup far cleaner. Fleece liners and the rubber mat are separate purchases but both cheap. That's genuinely everything you need to have her set up properly on day one.