• Voor 17 uur besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden!
  • Specialist sinds 2011
  • Delivery from our own stock

Rabbit Toilets – Spacious litter boxes & corner toilets for house-trained rabbits

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Looking to buy a rabbit toilet? Discover spacious litter boxes, corner toilets, toilets with rims, and scoops for a clearly defined toilet area, better cleanliness, and a fresher enclosure.
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€4,95
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  • Voor 17 uur besteld, dezelfde dag verzonden!
  • Specialist sinds 2011
  • Delivery from our own stock
€12,95
Order now
In stock

Rabbit toilets and litter boxes for rabbits at DRD Rodent Shop

Rabbit toilets – litter boxes and corner toilets for house-trained rabbits

Choose a rabbit toilet for a clearly defined toilet zone A good rabbit toilet helps keep your rabbits' enclosure more organized, fresher, and easier to keep clean. Rabbits often prefer to choose a fixed spot to urinate and defecate. With a spacious litter box, corner toilet, or toilet with a rim, you create a clear toilet zone.

At DRD Knaagdierwinkel®, you will find various rabbit toilets: straight litter boxes, corner toilets, spacious models with a rim, and practical scoops to keep the toilet area tidy. Combine the toilet with matching rabbit toilet bedding , a hay rack , and fresh rabbit hay daily.

 

In short: a rabbit toilet helps create one clear spot for peeing and pooping.

Preferably choose a spacious toilet where your rabbits can sit, turn around, and eat hay comfortably.

Place hay at or above the litter box, as many rabbits like to eat hay while sitting on or near the toilet area.

Clear toilet area

With a designated toilet area, your rabbits know better where they can pee and poop.

Handy with hay

A hay rack above or next to the toilet makes the location logical, as rabbits often combine eating and defecating.

Easier to clean

A toilet tray concentrates wet spots and droppings, making daily cleaning faster.

Why use a rabbit toilet?

Rabbits are often clean animals and regularly choose a fixed spot to urinate and defecate. A rabbit toilet helps to guide this natural behavior. You create one clear place where urine and droppings end up, so that the rest of the enclosure remains fresher and drier.

A litter box is particularly useful in a rabbit room, indoor run, clean-and-collect enclosure, or outdoor enclosure with a permanent hay corner. By cleverly combining a litter box, hay, and litter bedding, a clear routine is established: your rabbits eat hay here, they often defecate here, and you can easily check on them daily.

A rabbit toilet helps with

Create a clear pee and poop area.

Concentrate on wet spots better.

Easier to keep the enclosure clean.

Logically combine hay corner and toilet area.

Monitor urine, droppings, and eating behavior more closely on a daily basis.

What can you find in this Rabbit Toilets category?

This category contains various solutions for rabbit litter boxes. Some litter boxes are straight and spacious, while others fit better in a corner. Models with a rim can help keep litter and droppings better contained within the box. Additionally, you will find handy scoops here to quickly remove wet spots and droppings.

Assortment in this category

Straight litter boxes: spacious boxes that are comfortable for rabbits who like to have a bit more room.

Corner toilets: handy when your rabbits already use a specific corner to urinate.

Toilets with rims: practical for keeping filling, droppings, and litter better inside the box.

Spacious models: great for larger rabbits or rabbits that like to turn and sit in the litter box.

Feeding and toilet solutions: convenient when hay, feeding area, and toilet zone are logically combined.

Scoops and sieve scoops: for the daily removal of droppings and wet spots.

Why a spacious rabbit toilet is important

A toilet for rabbits must be large enough. Many small corner toilets are primarily made for smaller animals and are less pleasant for rabbits to use. Your rabbits must be able to sit comfortably in the box, turn around, and eat without hanging halfway out of the toilet.

A toilet that is too small can cause urine or droppings to end up next to the box. Therefore, it is better to choose a spacious one, especially for larger rabbits, multiple rabbits, or when you want to place a hay rack over the toilet.

Space check for a rabbit toilet

Can your rabbits sit completely in the litter box?

Can they turn without getting out of the container?

Does toilet bedding fit in without the bin immediately becoming too full?

Can a hay rack be conveniently placed above or next to the trough?

Is the entry suitable for your rabbits?

Where do you place a rabbit toilet?

Preferably, place the litter box where your rabbits already like to urinate or defecate. Many rabbits naturally choose a corner or a favorite zone. By placing the litter box there, you align with their behavior rather than trying to change the entire layout against their preference.

In a rabbit room or indoor run, a litter box often works well in combination with a hay rack. Place hay above or next to the litter box so that your rabbits stay seated on the toilet area while they eat hay. This makes the zone clearer and easier to keep clean.

A good toilet spot

Place the toilet in a spot where your rabbits already like to pee.

Place hay near or above the toilet.

Ensure that both rabbits can easily access the litter box.

Position the toilet stably so that it does not slide or tilt.

In a large space, consider creating multiple toilet stations.

What kind of filling do you use in a rabbit toilet?

In a rabbit toilet, it is preferable to use absorbent litter bedding. This absorbs urine and helps keep the toilet area drier and fresher. It is better to use a different filling in the litter box than on the rest of the floor, so that the distinction between the toilet area and the resting area remains clear.

Consider paper pellets, cotton pellets, wood fiber pellets, straw pellets, or other suitable litter, depending on what works practically for your enclosure and your rabbits. Pay particular attention to absorption, low-dust use, odor control, and ease of cleaning.

Choose toilet filler

Choose a highly absorbent filling.

Use a different filling in the toilet than on the sleeping area.

Pay attention to low-dust use and practical cleaning.

Scoop out wet spots regularly.

Refresh the entire toilet bowl before the spot becomes too wet or strongly smelling.

View now: Rabbit toilet bedding .

Litter training rabbits with a litter box

A litter box helps with potty training, but don't expect everything to go perfectly right away. Rabbits learn primarily through familiar places, scent, and routine. Place the litter box at the chosen potty spot, use appropriate litter bedding, and place hay next to the box.

Droppings around the litter box can still occur, especially in new situations, bonding, tension, or territorial behavior. Therefore, do not look only at the litter box, but also at space, group dynamics, hormones, cleanliness, and the layout of the enclosure.

supporting potty training

Place the toilet in the spot where your rabbits already like to pee.

Optionally, place a few droppings in the litter box to make the spot recognizable.

Place hay near the toilet so that the spot is naturally used more often.

Keep the rest of the bottom separate from the toilet filler.

Clean the toilet without completely wiping away every recognizable odor.

Read more: Potty training a rabbit .

Cleaning the rabbit toilet

A rabbit toilet remains more attractive if you regularly remove wet spots and droppings. If the litter box becomes too wet or dirty, rabbits may move to another corner. With a scoop or sieve, you can quickly keep track of what needs to be removed daily.

Pay attention to the smell when cleaning as well. A light, recognizable toilet odor can help keep the spot clear, but a strong ammonia smell, wet spots, or caked-on filling are signals to change more often or try a different toilet filler.

Cleaning routine

Scoop out wet spots and droppings regularly.

Refresh the filling before the bin becomes too wet.

Rinse or clean the bin when deposits form.

Check urine, droppings, and wet spots daily.

Always use cleaning products according to the product information.

Checking stool and urine via the toilet

A rabbit toilet makes daily checks easier. You can see more quickly whether the droppings are normal, if the quantity changes, and if the toilet area remains wet or noticeably dry. This helps to detect changes in appetite, hay intake, or health sooner.

Is one of your rabbits suddenly pooping much less or not at all, or do you see clear abnormalities in combination with reduced appetite or lethargic behavior? Then contact a veterinarian specializing in rabbits.

Read more: Rabbit droppings · Rabbit not eating

Good to know

Is one of your rabbits not eating, is one of your rabbits not pooping, is one of your rabbits puffed up or lethargic, or do you see blood, maggots, signs of pain, or a wet, dirty hindquarters? Contact a rabbit-specialist veterinarian immediately.

Handy shopping routes at rabbit toilets

A rabbit toilet works best as part of a clear toilet and hay corner. Therefore, combine the litter box with suitable litter bedding, hay, a hay rack, and optionally bottom mats or cleaning products.

Toilet bedding

For intake, odor control, and a clearly defined toilet area.

View toilet bedding

Rabbit hay

Hay by the toilet often makes the location more logical.

View rabbit hay

Hay racks

For a neat hay corner above or next to the litter box.

View hay racks

Ground mats

For grip and protection around the toilet area.

View ground mats

Cleaning

For keeping litter tray, floor, and enclosure fresh.

View cleaning products

Rabbit room

For a complete indoor space with toilet, hay, and grip.

View rabbit room

Learn more about potty training, hay, and poop

Do you want to better understand how to set up a toilet area? Then read our information pages on litter training, hay, droppings, indoor keeping, and rabbit rooms. This way, you not only choose a litter box, but create a space that works logically for your rabbits.

Litter training a rabbit · Rabbit hay selection guide · Rabbit droppings · Keeping rabbits indoors · Setting up a rabbit room

Frequently asked questions about rabbit toilets

Do rabbits need a toilet?

A toilet is not mandatory, but it is very practical. Rabbits often choose a fixed spot to urinate. With a litter box, you make that spot clearer and the enclosure easier to keep clean.

Which rabbit toilet is suitable?

Choose a toilet that is spacious enough. Your rabbits must be able to sit and turn around comfortably in the tray. For larger rabbits or multiple rabbits, a spacious, straight tray is often more practical than a small corner toilet.

Is a corner toilet suitable for rabbits?

A corner toilet can work well if your rabbits already like to urinate in a specific corner. Do pay attention to the size: the toilet must be large enough to be used comfortably.

Where do you put a rabbit toilet?

Place the litter box in the spot where your rabbits already like to pee or poop. Place hay next to or on top of it, as many rabbits enjoy eating while sitting on or near the litter box.

What kind of filling do you put in a rabbit toilet?

Use an absorbent toilet bedding, such as paper pellets, cotton pellets, wood fiber pellets, straw pellets, or another suitable toilet filler. Choose based primarily on absorbency, low dust use, and ease of cleaning.

Why does my rabbit pee next to the litter box?

This can be caused by a litter box that is too small, an inconvenient location, litter that is too dirty, stress, territorial behavior, or a changed situation. Place the litter box at the chosen urination spot and check if the box is spacious and clean enough.

How often do you clean a rabbit litter box?

Regularly scoop out wet spots and droppings and change the litter before the box becomes too wet or strongly smelling. How often this is necessary depends on the number of rabbits, the litter, and the size of the litter box.

Can two rabbits use one toilet?

That is possible, as long as the litter box is spacious enough and both rabbits can access it comfortably. In a larger room or if there are multiple favorite corners, a second litter box can be handy.

Rabbit toilets at DRD Knaagdierwinkel®

At DRD Knaagdierwinkel®, you will find rabbit toilets for various enclosures: rabbit rooms, indoor runs, C&C enclosures, outdoor enclosures, and permanent hay corners. From spacious straight litter boxes to corner toilets, models with rims, and handy scoops: every item helps to make the toilet area more practical.

Spacious toilet bowls, corner toilets, rimmed toilets, and scoops neatly grouped together
Practical to combine with toilet bedding, hay, hay racks, floor mats, and cleaning products
Selection aid for potty training, toilet placement, filling, cleaning, and daily checks
Internal routes to litter training, droppings, keeping indoors, and rabbit room setup
Specialist since 2011
Delivered from our own stock

DRD Rodent Shop specialist since 2011

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