Keeping rabbits out of a garden is mostly a battle against digging, so the best fence is the one that goes down, not just up. Rabbits will tunnel under a barrier that only sits on the surface, which is why a no-dig fence with panels that sink several inches into the soil works where a decorative border fails. We tested these barriers for burrow resistance first, pushing on how deep the spikes seated and whether a determined dig could undermine them. Height matters less for rabbits than for larger animals, since rabbits rarely jump high fences, so a low arched or straight panel that seals the ground line is usually enough. We also weighed how tightly panels lock end to end, because gaps between sections are an open invitation, and rust resistance, since a fence left out through rain and snow needs a coated or galvanized finish to last more than a season. Installation should be tool-free for most of these, but soft or rocky soil changes how well the spikes seat, so we noted which held firm in loose ground.

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