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
Three bonded neutered males — that's a lovely setup, and keeping them together is absolutely the right call. But I'll be straight with you: almost every hutch sold in pet shops is too small for a single rabbit, let alone a trio. They need enough space for at least three full hops each, room to stand completely upright, and separate zones for sleeping and toileting. A group of three also needs enough territory that no one rabbit can corner or dominate the others — that's what keeps a bonded group stable. Are they going to be kept indoors or outdoors? And roughly what space do you have available?
They'll be outdoors. I've got a reasonable garden, probably a 3x2 metre footprint I could dedicate to them. They're Dutch rabbits so medium-sized.
inparticular.ai
That footprint is genuinely workable for three Dutch rabbits — Dutch are medium-sized so around 2–2.5kg each, not giants, but they're active and curious and need room to express that. With 3x2 metres you can do this properly. What I'd recommend is a large modular hutch combined with a permanently attached run rather than a hutch you move around. Have you got a solid, fox-proof base area sorted, or is that still to figure out?
I was planning to put paving slabs down under it so foxes can't dig under. The rabbits have been bonded for two years without any serious falling out so I'm not worried about that side of things.
inparticular.ai
Paving slabs are exactly right — combined with a run that has a skirt or buried wire at the edges, that's a solid fox deterrent. And two years bonded with no serious issues is reassuring; Dutch males can be fine together when neutered young and introduced properly, which yours clearly were. For a trio with your available space, the product I'd point you to is the Eglu Go Hutch by Omlet with their extended 3-metre run attached. The Eglu Go is weatherproof, insulated, easy to clean, and the aluminium frame means no rotting or warping. The hutch itself houses the sleeping and sheltered area, and the 3-metre run gives them genuine roaming space. For three Dutch rabbits you want that run extended — Omlet sell 1-metre run extensions separately, and I'd add at least one so you're getting 4 metres of run length off the hutch. That takes you close to your full footprint and gives each rabbit room to move without feeling crowded.
I've seen the Eglu mentioned before but dismissed it as expensive. Is it actually worth it over a wooden hutch?
inparticular.ai
It's a fair question and yes, the upfront cost is higher. But wooden hutches need annual treating, they warp and rot within a few years in a British garden, and they're genuinely hard to clean thoroughly — bacteria and mites get into the wood grain. With three rabbits producing waste from three sets of digestive systems, ease of cleaning matters a lot for their health. The Eglu wipes down in minutes, doesn't absorb moisture, and the plastic shell will outlast three wooden hutches. Over five or six years it's comparable in cost and far less work. The other thing worth noting for a trio: the Eglu's sleeping compartment is snug by design, which actually suits bonded rabbits who like to pile in together. The run is where they spend their active time, so that's where the extension pays off.
That makes sense. Do I need to do anything else to the run to make it suitable for three?
inparticular.ai
Yes — enrichment and sightline breaks. Three rabbits in an open run can occasionally have tension even when bonded, and the fix is simple: add a couple of cardboard tunnels or low wooden hideouts so no rabbit has a clear run at another. Scatter feeding rather than one bowl also helps — spread their pellets and leafy greens in a few spots so there's no single resource to guard. Omlet sell add-on tunnels that clip into their run system, but honestly a cardboard tube from a carpet shop works just as well and costs nothing. The main thing is that with the Eglu plus one extension, you've got the space — it's just about making that space interesting and tension-free.