Plan your rabbit operation with real numbers — annual meat production, monthly feed costs, and hutch space needed based on your breeding does, litter size, and target market weight.
Meat rabbits are one of the most efficient protein producers available to the homesteader — they can produce 6 lbs of meat per lb of feed consumed (on par with chicken) in a fraction of the space of larger livestock. The math is compelling once you run the numbers.
Meat rabbits are a practical protein source for homesteaders with limited land. A trio of does and one buck can produce 150–200 lbs of meat per year in a 10x10 foot shed, making rabbits exceptionally land-efficient compared to any other meat animal.
The most popular meat breeds are New Zealand White, Californian, and Rex — all reliably reach 4–5 lbs dressed weight at 8–10 weeks of age. Flemish Giants are popular but slower-growing. American Chinchilla and Silver Fox are heritage breeds with excellent meat qualities worth considering.
Rabbit manure is a cold fertilizer — it can be applied directly to garden beds without composting, unlike hot manures from cattle or pigs. A productive colony generates significant fertilizer value on top of meat production.
One rabbit yields about 2–3 lbs of dressed meat. To eat rabbit once per week, you need to harvest roughly 50 rabbits per year. With 3 breeding does producing 5 litters of 7 kits each at 85% survival, you'd get about 90 market rabbits — enough for weekly meals with surplus to share or sell.
New Zealand White is the commercial standard for a reason — fast growth, good feed conversion, consistent carcass quality, and wide availability. Californians are a close second. For direct-to-consumer or restaurant sales, heritage breeds like Rex or Silver Fox can command premium prices.
A small starter operation (3 does, 1 buck, 4 wire cages) can be set up for $300–$600 including breeding stock ($20–$50 per animal), cages ($50–$100 each), feeders, waterers, and a nest box per doe. Ongoing cost is primarily feed — roughly $30–$60/month for a 3-doe operation.
Yes, but with precautions. Rabbits tolerate cold better than heat — temperatures above 85°F can cause heat stress and reproductive failure. Outdoor hutches need solid tops and three solid sides for weather protection, and shade is critical in summer. Below 20°F, nest box management becomes important to prevent newborn kit deaths from hypothermia.
Most meat breeds reach 4–5 lbs live weight (2.5–3.5 lbs dressed) at 8–10 weeks of age. Fryers (8–10 weeks) are the most tender and common. Roasters are harvested at 12–16 weeks for larger carcasses. Beyond 16 weeks, meat quality declines and feed efficiency drops significantly.