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
Getting enrichment zones ready before your Lilac rabbit arrives is exactly the right approach — it means the space feels settled and interesting from the moment they come home, rather than being bare and stressful. Before I point you in the right direction, a quick note: most hutches sold in pet shops are far too small. Your rabbit needs room for at least three full hops, space to stand completely upright on their hind legs, and separate areas for sleeping and toileting — that's the baseline. Now, are you setting this up indoors or outdoors, how many rabbits are you getting, and roughly how much floor space do you have to work with?
Just the one Lilac rabbit, indoors. I've got a spare bedroom I'm planning to use as a rabbit room, so space isn't really a problem. I want to make sure she has things to do and explore before she even gets there.
inparticular.ai
A whole spare bedroom is brilliant — that gives you real scope to create distinct zones rather than just plonking down a few toys. For a single rabbit, I'd think about dividing the space into three areas: a resting zone with a hide or tunnel she can retreat into, a foraging zone where she has to work a little for her food, and an activity zone with things to dig, chew, and manipulate. Lilac rabbits are just a colour variety of domestic rabbit, so temperament varies, but most rabbits are highly motivated by foraging and gnawing. Can I ask — does she have a confirmed home already, and do you know roughly how old she'll be when you collect her?
She's about 10 weeks old, coming from a breeder next weekend. I've already got a litter tray and a hay rack sorted. I just need the enrichment side of things.
inparticular.ai
Perfect — at 10 weeks she'll be curious and exploratory but also easily overwhelmed, so you want enrichment that's engaging without being chaotic. Don't fill the whole room on day one; let her get comfortable with the core space first, then introduce new items over the first couple of weeks. For the activity zone specifically, I'd start with one solid multi-element piece rather than lots of loose toys. What's your budget roughly, and are you happy to put something together yourself or would you prefer something ready to use?
Ready to use would be easier. Budget is flexible, maybe up to £40 for the enrichment items.
inparticular.ai
In that case, I'd go with the Rosewood Boredom Breaker Activity Centre. It's a wooden activity station with multiple elements — gnaw blocks, a rattle, a foraging tray — all in one unit, which means she gets chewing, sensory stimulation, and a bit of problem-solving from a single piece. It's well within your budget, robust enough to last, and safe for a young rabbit. Pair it with a handful of dried forage scattered across the floor of the foraging zone — Timothy hay mixed with a little dried chamomile or dandelion — and you've got a genuinely stimulating setup without overwhelming her. Place the activity centre in the middle zone of the room so it's accessible but not right next to her sleeping area, and let her discover it at her own pace on day one.
That sounds really sensible. Is there anything else I should have in place before she arrives?
inparticular.ai
The main things are: a hide she can fully disappear into — a wooden tunnel or a cardboard box with two exits works well — fresh water in a bowl rather than a bottle (easier for young rabbits to drink from), unlimited timothy hay as the core of her diet, and a pellet designed for young rabbits in a small measured amount. Make sure any cables in the room are completely inaccessible and check there are no toxic houseplants. Beyond that, the Rosewood activity centre and a calm first few days will set her up really well. She's lucky to have someone thinking this carefully before she even arrives.