Rabbit toys are not just for fun, they are dental and mental health tools, and the wrong one can do harm. A rabbit’s teeth grow for life, so they need safe things to chew every single day or they develop painful overgrown teeth. The toys that matter most are the ones a rabbit can actually gnaw and shred, which is why untreated apple-wood sticks and woven grass balls keep showing up as favorites. Stacking and nesting cups add a different kind of play, the toss-and-fling behavior rabbits love when they are feeling bouncy, and they double as foraging puzzles if you hide a pellet underneath. We looked at the popular options and split them by what they actually do for your rabbit. The wooden and grass items are the workhorses because they combine chewing with enrichment. The colorful plastic stacking cups are great fun but earn a caution, since some rabbits will chew plastic and that is not something they should swallow. Whatever you pick, watch how your rabbit interacts with it the first few days and pull anything that splinters or sheds small pieces. For questions about safe materials, ASPCA rabbit care guidance is a solid starting point.

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