Updated
Rabbit food check
Can Rabbits Eat Cherry Pits?
Avoid
Cherry pits, stems, and leaves should stay away from rabbits. If your rabbit already got some, call your vet if appetite, poop, or comfort changes.
Cherry PitsAsk your vet if they ate it
If your rabbit ate cherry pits and seems off, has stopped eating, or you do not know the amount, call a rabbit-savvy veterinarian or pet poison hotline.
Skip cherry pits on purpose
Cherry pits, stems, and leaves should stay away from rabbits. If your rabbit already got some, call your vet if appetite, poop, or comfort changes.
If your rabbit already got cherry pits
Check the amount, remove the rest, and watch appetite, poop, posture, and energy. Call a rabbit-savvy vet promptly if anything seems off.
Reset after the cherry pits scare
Offer familiar hay and water, then keep the room calm so you can notice whether your rabbit returns to normal eating and litter habits.
Make the cherry pits answer simple
Skip cherry pits as a planned food. Rabbits do best when the routine stays built around hay, water, appropriate greens, and measured pellets instead of human foods that crowd out fiber.
Replace cherry pits with normal rabbit food
Offer hay first, then familiar greens or the measured pellets your rabbit already handles well. A plain reset is more useful than trying to find a fancy substitute.
Put cherry pits away before floor time
The easiest prevention happens before your rabbit is loose: clear snack plates, sweep dropped pieces, and keep grocery bags away from the exercise area.
Give helpers a clear rule for cherry pits
Tell kids, guests, and tired adults the same thing every time: rabbit treats come from the rabbit shelf. That keeps kindness from turning into random snack sharing.
Use cherry pits as a household reminder
Once the answer is clear, make the room easier to manage. Keep this food off low tables, close bags before floor time, and point helpers toward the rabbit shelf so nobody has to guess during a busy moment.
How to handle it
- Do not offer cherry pits on purpose; call your vet for advice if your rabbit got into it.
- Move the food out of reach before floor time.
- Note the amount and when it happened so you can explain it clearly.
Avoid
- Leaving it where a curious rabbit can grab a bite.
- Waiting to see what happens if your rabbit stops eating or pooping.
Watch
- No appetite
- No or fewer poops
- Hunched posture
- Unusual quietness
Portion
No useful serving size. Keep it out of the food routine.





