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
Most rabbit hutches sold in pet shops are far too small — rabbits need enough space to do at least three full hops, stand completely upright on their hind legs, and have genuinely separate areas for sleeping and toileting. A connected run solves a lot of this, but the connection and the security of that run matter enormously. Before I point you toward something specific: is your Mini English Lop living alone or with a companion, and roughly how much garden space are you working with?
She's on her own at the moment, about 2 years old. The garden is maybe 4 metres by 6 metres, mostly patio with a grassed strip along one fence. I want something I can leave her in safely during the day without worrying about foxes.
inparticular.ai
Good to know — and fox security is absolutely the right thing to prioritise. A lot of runs that look sturdy have thin wire that a determined fox can rip through or pop open latches on. Mini English Lops aren't huge, but they're solid, active rabbits and they'll use every bit of run space you give them. Can I ask — do you already have a hutch, or are you starting from scratch? That changes what I'd recommend.
Starting from scratch. I'd rather get a setup that's designed to work together than try to jury-rig something.
inparticular.ai
That's exactly the right instinct. In that case I'd point you toward the Eglu Go Rabbit Hutch with its attached run, made by Omlet. It's an all-in-one system where the hutch and run are designed as a single unit — no cobbling together. The hutch section is insulated twin-wall plastic, which handles cold and damp far better than a standard wood hutch, and the run attaches directly with no gap a fox can exploit. The wire is heavy-gauge and the door latches are genuinely predator-resistant, not just clip catches. The standard run is 2 metres, but Omlet sell extension runs that you can add on, which matters for a rabbit who needs space to move. For a small paved or mixed garden like yours it also sits cleanly without needing to be pegged into turf, though you can anchor it. It's not cheap, but it's built to last and you're not going to be replacing it in two years.
That sounds good. Is the base run long enough, or would I need to buy the extension straight away?
inparticular.ai
Honestly, for a 2-year-old Mini English Lop as a sole rabbit, I'd buy the 1-metre extension at the same time and treat it as part of the initial setup rather than an add-on. The base 2-metre run is the minimum — your rabbit will use a 3-metre run meaningfully more, and you've got the garden space for it. Buying both together also saves you having to disassemble and reconfigure it later. The extension connects without tools and the whole thing can be moved around your grassed strip if you want to give her access to fresh grass.
Perfect. One last thing — does it need any extra bedding or setup inside the hutch section?
inparticular.ai
Yes — the Eglu hutch is insulated but not pre-bedded. Line the sleeping compartment with good quality meadow hay rather than straw; straw has almost no nutritional value and can scratch eyes, whereas hay doubles as bedding and a food source, which is ideal. Fill it generously. The hutch has a separate enclosed sleeping area from the open run section, so she'll naturally use it as her safe retreat. You'll also want a hay rack in the run itself and a water bottle or ceramic bowl attached to the run frame. That's the full setup — solid, fox-secure, and easy to clean out.