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    Easy-clean rabbit housing for Satin rabbits

    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
    Moving away from a sawdust-lined wooden hutch is a great decision — wood soaks up urine, holds bacteria, and becomes impossible to truly clean over time. A plastic-tray system is much more hygienic and far easier to maintain week to week. Before I point you toward something specific, a couple of quick questions: is your Satin housed indoors or outdoors, are they alone or with a companion, and roughly how much floor space do you have to work with?
    She's indoors, just the one rabbit. I've got a decent-sized spare room corner — probably about 1.5 metres wide by a metre deep I could give her.
    inparticular.ai
    That's a generous footprint — plenty for a single Satin to thrive. Satins are medium-sized rabbits, typically around 3–4 kg, active and curious, so they appreciate room to move. With 1.5 m × 1 m available, I'd steer you toward a large modular plastic-based enclosure rather than a traditional cage. Can I ask what bedding you're currently using in the sawdust hutch, and whether she's litter-trained or toilets across the whole floor?
    She mostly uses one corner for the toilet, so she's pretty much litter-trained naturally. I'm using paper-based sawdust at the moment but it still seems to get smelly fast in the wood.
    inparticular.ai
    That smelliness is the hutch itself, not the bedding — old wood is essentially a sponge for ammonia and you can never fully get rid of it. Because she's litter-trained, you'll get maximum benefit from a plastic-tray system: easy to spot-clean daily and do a full tray swap once or twice a week. My recommendation is the Ferplast Rabbit 160 Indoor Cage. It has a deep, smooth plastic base tray that lifts out completely, a removable divider so you can section off a sleeping area, and it measures 162 × 60 cm — which fits your space well and gives your Satin proper room to do full hops. Pair it with a dedicated corner litter tray inside and you'll find the whole setup takes minutes to clean rather than a scrubbing session. It's available on Amazon UK and reasonably priced for what you get.
    That sounds ideal. What bedding would you put in the tray itself — still paper-based or something different?
    inparticular.ai
    For the main tray, a thin layer of paper-based pellet litter like Carefresh or Back 2 Nature works well — it's absorbent, low dust, and easy to dispose of. Keep the deep, cosy bedding (hay or paper-based fleece liner) in the sleeping section only. In the litter corner, paper pellets alone are fine. You'll notice a big difference in odour within the first week just because plastic doesn't hold smells the way treated wood does. Make sure hay is available in a rack at all times too — it should make up around 80% of her diet and keeps her digestive system moving.
    View Carefresh Natural Paper Bedding on Amazon
    Perfect, thank you. I'll look up the Ferplast Rabbit 160 now.
    inparticular.ai
    You'll notice the difference immediately — both for her comfort and your cleaning routine. The key thing once it's set up is to spot-clean the litter corner daily; that alone keeps odour almost entirely at bay. Good luck with the switch, and enjoy having a much happier, easier-to-manage setup for her.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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