TheRabbitGuide.com

Diet & Weight Tracker

A printable monthly tracker for your rabbit's weight, body condition, and diet

Rabbit's Name:
Breed:
Age:
Target Weight:
Spayed / Neutered:
Year:

1. Monthly Weight & Body Condition Log

Weigh your rabbit on the same kitchen or pet scale each month. Steady weight is the goal. Sudden loss can signal dental disease or illness.

Month Weight Body Condition (1 to 5) Diet Notes & Changes
January
February
March
April
May
June
July
August
September
October
November
December

2. Body Condition Score (BCS) Reference

Run your hands over the rib cage, spine, and hips. You should feel the bones with a light covering, like the back of your hand.

Score What You Feel
1 - Too thinRibs, spine, and hips sharp and obvious. No fat cover. Underweight
2 - ThinBones easily felt with very little covering. Slightly underweight
3 - IdealRibs and spine felt with gentle pressure, smooth rounded curves. Healthy
4 - OverweightBones hard to feel under fat. Rounding belly, fat pads forming
5 - ObeseCannot feel ribs or spine. Large dewlap, fat rolls, cannot reach to groom. At risk

3. Current Daily Diet Plan

Record your rabbit's baseline diet so anyone caring for them can match it. Unlimited grass hay should be roughly 80 percent of the diet.

Food Type / Brand Daily Amount
Grass hay (timothy, orchard, etc.)
Pellets
Fresh leafy greens
Treats (fruit, herbs)
Water source

4. Notes

Vet weight targets, diet transitions, or questions to raise at the next checkup.

Ideal weight varies widely by breed, from under 3 pounds to over 10. Ask your exotic vet for your rabbit's healthy target and use that as your reference.