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
That's a brilliant thing you're doing — helping Cinnamon find the right home is so much easier when the adopter knows exactly what they need from day one. Before we get into specifics: most hutches sold in pet shops are far too small. Rabbits need space for at least three full hops, room to stand completely upright on their hind legs, and separate areas for sleeping and toileting — most standard hutches fail all three. To point the adopter in the right direction, can you tell me: will Cinnamon be living indoors or outdoors, how many rabbits will there be (is Cinnamon going solo or bonded with a partner?), and what kind of space does the adopter have available?
Cinnamon is a single rabbit going to a first-time owner who has a small garden. They want to keep her outdoors. Budget is tight — probably under £80 for the whole setup if possible.
inparticular.ai
Good to know. Outdoor single rabbit, small garden, tight budget — that's very workable. The honest truth is that a proper-sized hutch alone will eat most of that £80, which is why I'd steer the adopter away from buying a hutch and run separately. What actually makes the budget stretch further is a hutch-and-run combo. The one I'd point them to is the Pets Imperial Wentworth rabbit hutch with integrated run — it's a genuine two-storey hutch attached to a large ground-level run, so Cinnamon gets sleeping quarters, a separate resting level, and space to move without needing a second purchase. It regularly comes in around £75–£80 on Amazon UK and is solidly built for the price. Can I ask — does the adopter have any bedding or hay sorted, or are they starting completely from scratch?
Starting from scratch on everything. They're on a really limited income so every pound counts.
inparticular.ai
Understood — let's keep this practical. For bedding, a large bale of Timothy hay from a local farm or agricultural merchant is dramatically cheaper than pet shop bags and doubles as both food and nesting material. Burgess Excel nuggets are a solid, affordable daily food — a 2kg bag from Amazon is around £6 and lasts a good while for a single rabbit. For litter in the toilet corner, plain paper-based cat litter like Breeder Celect is safe and cheap in bulk. The one thing I'd flag as genuinely non-negotiable even on a tight budget: Cinnamon will need at least one companion rabbit eventually, as they're highly social animals — but that's a conversation for once she's settled. Does the adopter know about rabbits needing daily free-roaming time outside the hutch, or would it help if I put together a quick care note they could take home with Cinnamon?
A care note would be really helpful actually. And yes, they're aware she'll need a friend but want to get the setup right first.
inparticular.ai
That's exactly the right approach. Here's a simple handover summary you can print or share: Feed Cinnamon unlimited hay every day — it should make up 80% of her diet. A small handful of Burgess Excel nuggets morning and evening, plus fresh leafy greens like romaine lettuce, kale, or herbs. Fresh water always available; a bowl is better than a bottle as it's easier to drink from. She needs at least two to three hours outside her hutch daily — even a small garden with supervision works. Clean her litter corner every two days and do a full bedding change weekly. Watch for signs she's not eating or pooping — both are urgent in rabbits. The Pets Imperial Wentworth hutch-and-run combo is the single purchase that covers the most ground for the budget. Is there anything else you'd like me to clarify before Cinnamon goes to her new home?
No, that's exactly what I needed. Thank you so much — this is going straight into the adoption pack.
inparticular.ai
Really glad it helps. Cinnamon is lucky to have someone making sure she lands in the right setup. Good luck with the rehoming — I hope she settles in brilliantly.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.