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
A French Lop bending cage bars is unfortunately not as rare as manufacturers would like you to think — those wire Galaxy-style cages are built to a price point, not for a rabbit that can weigh 5–6 kg and has real muscle behind it. Most hutches and cages sold in pet shops are also far too small to begin with: rabbits need space for at least three full hops, room to stand completely upright on their hind legs, and separate zones for sleeping and toileting. So you need something bigger and genuinely stronger. Before I point you in the right direction — is this rabbit kept indoors or outdoors, and do you have a rough sense of the floor space you can give the enclosure?
He's indoors. Just the one rabbit. I've got a decent chunk of the living room — probably up to about 150 cm wide if needed.
inparticular.ai
Good — 150 cm gives you proper options. With a French Lop indoors you want heavy-gauge welded wire or solid metal construction, not the thin powder-coated bars that flex under pressure. Can I ask how he was bending the bars — was he chewing them, pushing with his body weight, or both? That affects whether the priority is bar thickness, bar spacing, or the rigidity of the frame.
Mostly pushing and throwing himself against the side when he wants out. He chews a bit too but the bending was definitely physical force.
inparticular.ai
That tells me the issue is frame rigidity as much as bar gauge — a rabbit that body-slams the side will defeat any cage where the panels are only held by clip connectors, no matter the wire thickness. The one product I'd point you to specifically is the Ferplast Krolik 160 Plus. It's 161 cm long, has a solid deep base tray, and the wire panels are noticeably heavier gauge than Galaxy or similar budget cages. The frame locks together more securely than clip systems, and the two-section layout gives your Lop the separate sleeping and living areas he needs. It's designed as an indoor rabbit home rather than a display cage, which shows in the build. It won't have him through the side.
Does it come with anything useful or is it just the cage itself?
inparticular.ai
The Krolik 160 Plus comes with a hay rack, a water bottle, and a small food bowl as part of the kit — nothing you'd rely on long-term for a French Lop (the bowl is on the small side), but it means you're not starting from zero. The main value is in the size and the construction. One thing worth knowing: French Lops should ideally have free-roaming time in the room daily even with a good-sized enclosure, so the cage works best as a secure base rather than full-time confinement. Given your living room space, that sounds very doable.
That sounds like exactly what I need. Where's the best place to get it?
inparticular.ai
Amazon UK reliably stocks the Ferplast Krolik 160 Plus and it's usually eligible for next-day delivery. Search that exact name — Ferplast Krolik 160 Plus — and you'll find it. Just double-check it's the 160 rather than the 140, since the size difference matters for a rabbit this large. You'll be getting something built to last this time.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.