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.
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.