What we liked
- Sloped asphalt roof sheds rain and lifts open for full top access
- Enclosed upper nook gives the rabbit a real shelter from wind and direct sun
- Two level design separates sleep from feeding and litter zones
- Pull out tray on the lower level speeds up daily cleaning
What we didn't like
- Wood frame needs sealing or a covered location to last more than two seasons
- Wire run base is hard on rabbit feet without a flat liner
- Footprint is too small for full time outdoor housing of larger breeds
In this review
Why you should trust this reviewHow we evaluatedWeather protection and the roofThe enclosed nook and two-level layoutMaintenance, the wire floor, and sizingWho should buy the Kaytee 2-story hutch?The verdict Versus the alternatives Specs at a glance FAQsQuick verdict
The Kaytee Rabbit Hutch 2-Story 48-inch pairs a fir frame with a sloped asphalt roof, an enclosed sleeping nook, and a lower wire run, and the design choices line up with what outdoor rabbit owners actually need in mixed weather. The roof sheds rain and lifts for access, the nook gives real shelter, and cleaning is easy. The wood needs sealing and the wire floor needs a liner, but it earns its price.
Why you should trust this review
I bought this hutch myself for outdoor rabbit housing and used it through real weather, with no involvement from Kaytee. Outdoor hutches are a category where the photos always look idyllic and the reality depends entirely on whether the thing keeps a rabbit dry, sheltered, and safe. I have kept rabbits, so I know that the difference between a good hutch and a bad one shows up the first time it rains or the wind picks up.
A wooden outdoor hutch is also a maintenance commitment, and I think reviews that skip that do buyers a disservice. So this review is honest about both sides: the design choices that genuinely work, and the upkeep and sizing realities you sign up for when you bring it home.
How we evaluated
I assembled the hutch, placed it for outdoor use, and lived with it through changing weather. The core questions were whether the sloped roof actually sheds rain and keeps the interior dry, whether the enclosed nook provides real shelter from wind and sun, and whether the two-level layout separates the rabbit’s zones the way it should. Daily cleaning and access got close attention, since an outdoor hutch you dread cleaning gets cleaned less often than it should.
I also watched the things that decide longevity: how the fir frame holds up to moisture, how the wire run floor treats the rabbit’s feet, and whether the footprint is realistic for full-time outdoor housing. Assembly mattered too, since this is a screw-together build rather than snap-together.
Weather protection and the roof
The sloped asphalt-shingled roof is the standout, and it does its job. Rain ran off cleanly rather than pooling, and the interior stayed dry underneath, which is the single most important thing an outdoor hutch has to do. Just as useful, the roof is hinged and lifts open for full top access, so you can reach the whole upper level for cleaning and handling without contorting through a side door.
That combination, real weather protection plus easy top access, is harder to find than it should be. A lot of hutches give you one or the other; this one manages both, and after using it I would not want to go back to a flat-topped hutch that traps water.
The enclosed nook and two-level layout
The enclosed upper sleeping nook is the second design win. It gives the rabbit a genuine retreat from wind, driving rain, and direct sun, with solid walls and a solid floor rather than exposed wire, which is exactly the kind of shelter an outdoor animal needs to regulate against weather. The rabbit used it as the den it is meant to be.
The two-level split works in practice, separating the enclosed sleeping zone up top from the open feeding and litter area in the lower run. That separation keeps the sleeping space cleaner and gives the rabbit a sense of distinct territories, which suits how rabbits like to organize their space. Moving between levels via the connecting access kept the animal active.
Maintenance, the wire floor, and sizing
Now the honest costs. The fir frame is wood, and wood outdoors needs care. Without sealing or a covered location, it will not last more than a couple of seasons against moisture, so plan to treat it or site it under cover if you want real longevity. This is normal for a wooden hutch, but it is a commitment you are taking on.
The lower run has a wire mesh floor, which is hard on rabbit feet over time, so a flat liner is effectively required for the rabbit’s comfort and hock health. The pull-out tray on the lower level is a real help here, making daily cleaning quick. And the footprint, while fine as a shelter with daily run time, is too small to serve as full-time housing for a larger breed, so size your expectations to a dwarf or small rabbit.
Who should buy the Kaytee 2-story hutch?
Buy it if you want an outdoor hutch for a dwarf or small-breed rabbit, you value a roof that actually sheds rain and lifts for access, and you are willing to seal the wood and add a floor liner. With that upkeep it is a genuinely good shelter.
Skip it if you need full-time outdoor housing for a large breed, you will not maintain the wood, or you want a wire floor you can leave bare. For big rabbits or zero-maintenance setups, look elsewhere.
The verdict
The Kaytee Rabbit Hutch 2-Story earns its price through design choices that match real outdoor needs. The sloped, hinged roof keeps the interior dry and opens for easy cleaning, the enclosed nook gives the rabbit true shelter from weather, and the pull-out tray makes daily upkeep painless. The honest costs are the wood, which needs sealing to last, the wire run floor, which needs a liner, and a footprint suited to small breeds rather than large ones. Accept those and provide a covered spot, and this is a well-thought-out outdoor hutch I would recommend.
Versus the alternatives
| Model | Best for | Rating | |
|---|---|---|---|
| Kaytee Rabbit Hutch 2-Story 48 inch | Top Pick Outdoor | 4.3 | Check price |
| Aivituvin Rabbit Hutch 47 inch | Recommended | 4.4 | Check price |
| Trixie Natura Rabbit Hutch with Outdoor Run | Top Pick Larger Run | 4.3 | Check price |
| Petmate Aspen Pet Outdoor Hutch | Skip | 3.9 | Check price |
Specs at a glance
LIVE specs pulled from Amazon; performance specs from our testing.
Kaytee Rabbit Hutch 2-Story 48 inch FAQs
In mild and moderate climates with a covered porch or roofed shelter, yes. In climates that swing below 25 F or above 90 F regularly, no. Wood hutches without an additional shelter cannot insulate against extreme cold, and the asphalt roof will absorb heat in direct summer sun. Owners in northern states typically move the hutch indoors or into a garage for winter.
The roof is rain shedding rather than fully waterproof. The asphalt shingle layer will keep light and moderate rain off the upper nook, but driving rain or extended downpours can soak the side panels. Sealing the wood every season with an outdoor wood sealant extends the life noticeably. Owners who skip sealing report softening and rot at the corners by year two.
Bare wire mesh on the lower level run is the most common complaint. Add a flat panel (a plastic cutting board, a piece of finished plywood, or a thick fleece pad) over the wire to give the rabbit a flat resting surface. Rabbits are prone to sore hocks on extended wire contact.
Plan for 60 to 90 minutes with two people. The hutch ships flat with screws and a basic instruction sheet, and the frame goes together without surprises. The hardest steps are seating the asphalt roof straight and getting the door latches aligned. A power screwdriver shortens the build noticeably.
No. The 48 inch footprint is sized for dwarf and small breed rabbits. A Flemish Giant or any rabbit over 8 pounds needs a larger hutch or a converted shed for full time housing. For larger breeds, look at the Trixie Natura with extended run or build a custom outdoor enclosure.
Update log
- Jun 21, 2026: Review published.
- Jun 25, 2026: Current Amazon price and availability refreshed.
Pricing and availability are pulled live from Amazon on every visit, never hardcoded.


