Rabbits are experts at hiding illness. By the time they show obvious signs of being sick, they've often been unwell for days. That's why every rabbit owner should have an emergency kit ready before a crisis happens.
This guide covers what to include in your rabbit emergency kit, why each item matters, and how to use them.
Why Every Rabbit Owner Needs an Emergency Kit
Rabbits can go downhill fast. GI stasis, dental problems, and respiratory infections can become life-threatening within hours. Having supplies on hand can buy you critical time while you get to a vet—or help you manage a minor issue at home.
An emergency kit isn't about replacing veterinary care. It's about being prepared so you're not scrambling to find supplies while your rabbit is suffering.
Your Rabbit Emergency Kit: The Essentials
First Aid Supplies
- Digital thermometer — Rabbits normal temp is 101-103°F. Below 99°F or above 104°F is an emergency.
- Syringes (1ml, 3ml, 10ml) — For administering Critical Care or medications
- Cotton swabs and gauze — For cleaning wounds
- Styptic powder or cornstarch — For stopping bleeding from nails if you cut too short
- Pedialyte (unflavored) — For hydration support
- Infant gas drops (simethicone) — For gas pain relief (Gas-X or Little Tummys)
- Critical Care powdered formula — Emergency feeding support
- Pet-safe antiseptic (chlorhexidine diluted) — For cleaning minor wounds
Medications to Keep on Hand
- Metacam (meloxicam) — Pain relief (prescription from your vet)
- Trimethoprim-sulfa (Bactrim) — Antibiotic (prescription)
- Reglan (metoclopramide) — For gut motility (prescription)
Important: Never give human medications to rabbits without vet approval. Many are toxic. Ask your exotic vet which medications to keep on hand and get prescriptions before you need them.
Documents & Information
- Your exotic vet's phone number — Posted prominently
- Nearest 24-hour emergency vet — Call ahead to confirm they see rabbits
- Poison control numbers — ASPCA Animal Poison Control: (888) 426-4435
- List of current medications and dosages — For your rabbit
- Weight log — Sudden weight loss is a warning sign
Comfort Items
- Heating pad (set to low) — Can help a hypothermic rabbit
- Soft towels — For handling a stressed rabbit
- Small carrier — For safe transport
Building Your Kit on a Budget
You don't need to buy everything at once. Start with the essentials:
- Must-have first: Digital thermometer, syringes, your vet's number
- Next priority: Critical Care, gas drops, styptic powder
- Later additions: Prescriptions, heating pad, full first aid kit
Check expiration dates every 6 months and replace used items promptly.
When to Use Your Emergency Kit
Your emergency kit is for:
- Suspected GI stasis — Use gas drops, encourage eating with Critical Care, keep warm
- Injury — Clean wounds, stop bleeding, contain your rabbit
- Sudden lethargy — Check temperature, note symptoms, call the vet
- Not eating — Offer Critical Care while arranging vet care
Print Your Own Emergency Kit Checklist
Download and print our Rabbit Emergency Kit Checklist to keep in your kit. Fill in your vet's contact info and post it where everyone can see.
Printable checklists turn good intentions into real preparedness. Put one on your fridge, one in your kit, and one in your car.
Know Your Nearest Emergency Vet Before You Need One
Before an emergency happens:
- Find the nearest 24-hour exotic/animal emergency vet
- Call to confirm they treat rabbits (not all do)
- Add them to your phone and post near your kit
- Know the estimated drive time
Having to find a vet while stressed and dealing with a sick rabbit is a recipe for bad decisions. Do the research now.
The Bottom Line
Rabbits are fragile in ways that aren't always visible. An emergency kit won't fix everything—but it means you're not starting from zero when something goes wrong.
Get the essentials together, print the checklist, know where you're going in a crisis, and you'll be ready to give your rabbit the best chance at recovery.
Want more preparedness resources? Check out our Rabbit Health Checklist for weekly health monitoring and our Emergency Vets directory.
