Holland Lop safe from cats: escape-proof enclosure
This is a specific conversation about Rabbit supplies — what you actually need — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.
inparticular.ai
A Holland Lop sharing a home with two cats — that's a setup that can absolutely work, but the enclosure is everything. Cats are persistent and curious, and a flimsy pen with clip fastenings or wobbly panels will eventually give way. You need something with proper locking mechanisms, solid construction, and no gaps a determined paw can reach through. Before I point you toward the right product, can I ask: how much free-roaming time does your rabbit get outside the enclosure, and are the cats generally calm around the rabbit or actively fixated on it?
The cats are definitely interested — they sit and watch the rabbit constantly. She gets a couple of hours out in the evenings but we supervise that. Most of the time she's in her enclosure. It needs to be something the cats genuinely can't get into.
inparticular.ai
That's really helpful. Supervised free-roaming is sensible, and honestly a well-supervised Holland Lop and cats often settle into a manageable routine over time. But for the enclosure itself, given that your cats are actively watching and will be testing it regularly, you need something built with real rigidity and secure latches — not the spring-clip fastenings you see on most rabbit pens. What size space are you working with? Is the enclosure going to be in one fixed room, or does it need to be moveable?
It'll stay in the living room. Size isn't a huge issue as long as it's not enormous. I just want something solid.
inparticular.ai
In that case I'd go with the Savic Residence 3 rabbit cage. It's a well-built, double-door unit with slide-bolt style latches that cats can't manipulate — that's the key feature here. The bar spacing is narrow enough that paws can't easily reach through to stress or swipe your rabbit, and the base is deep and stable so it won't tip or shift if a cat jumps on top. It's not a flimsy flat-pack pen; it's a proper rigid structure. For a Holland Lop in a living room, it's proportionate — roomy enough for her to move around comfortably but not sprawling. Pair it with a hay rack that clips inside so she always has access to hay without it spilling out and attracting cat attention through the bars. The Savic Residence 3 is widely available on Amazon UK, usually delivered within a couple of days.
Does the top open? I want to be able to reach in easily to pick her up and clean it out.
inparticular.ai
Yes — the Savic Residence has a large hinged roof panel that opens fully, which makes cleaning and lifting your rabbit out straightforward. That's actually one of the reasons it's popular for house rabbits: you're not awkwardly reaching through a side door. The two front doors also mean you can access food and water bowls without opening the whole thing. One thing I'd mention: make sure the roof latch is always properly closed after you open it. Cats will absolutely figure out a roof that's been left slightly unlatched. It becomes habit quickly.
That's really useful, thank you. I'll look it up now.
inparticular.ai
Good — I think it'll suit her well. If you find the cats are still jumping on top and causing her stress even once she's safely inside, a simple deterrent mat on top of the cage works well as a secondary measure. But the Savic Residence as a base is solid. Good luck with the setup.
Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.