Rabbit Bonding Guides
Everything you need to give your rabbit a companion: choosing a match, the step-by-step bonding process, living with other pets, and reading the signs of a bond.
How to Bond Two Rabbits
Bonding takes patience and neutral territory. The step-by-step process, why both rabbits must be fixed, handling chasing and fights, and signs of success.
Read guide →Getting a Second Rabbit
Rabbits are social and often happier in pairs. How to choose the best match, why bunny dating works, the costs and setup, and how to prepare to bond.
Read guide →The Rabbit Bonding Process
What bonding really looks like: pre-bonding by scent, neutral first meetings, building positive associations, and the careful final move-in together.
Read guide →Can Rabbits Live With Other Pets?
Rabbits with cats, dogs, or guinea pigs: which can share a home safely, why supervision matters, and why only another rabbit truly meets the social need.
Read guide →Why Rabbit Bonding Fails
The common reasons bonding goes wrong: hormones, rushing, wrong territory, and over-intervening. How to diagnose the problem and get back on track.
Read guide →Signs Two Rabbits Are Bonded
How to tell rabbits are truly bonded: mutual grooming, flopping together, eating side by side, and peaceful sharing, plus the normal dominance to expect.
Read guide →Bonding Essentials for Rabbits
- Small Animal Playpen - sets up as neutral territory for safe bonding sessions
- Oxbow Western Timothy Hay - a shared pile gives a bonding pair a calm joint activity
- TRIXIE Rabbit Snack Board - a foraging puzzle that builds positive shared experiences
Rabbit Care Planner
10 printable worksheets to track your rabbit's health, diet, weight, litter habits, and vet visits.
Get the Planner for $39