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Pests   |   HY-GUARD EXCLUSION   |   Nuisance and Wildlife Control

How to Save Your Garden From Rabbits

Kyla Pehr

By Kyla Pehr

May 13, 2026

How to Save Your Garden From Rabbits
How to Save Your Garden From Rabbits
4:40

According to RubyHome, 55% (71.5 million) of U.S. households have a garden, and for many, that means growing everything from lettuce and tomatoes to carrots and flowers.

But oftentimes, you’re not the only one enjoying your garden.

If you’re noticing chewed leaves, missing seedlings, or overnight damage, there’s a good chance rabbits are the culprit. These small but persistent pests can quickly destroy a garden if left unchecked. And despite the flapper-era slang “dumb bunny” (even recycled in Zootopia), rabbits are anything but dumb.

With the right approach, you can protect your garden from rabbits and prevent long-term damage.

What rabbits are in your garden?

The most common rabbit found in residential areas across the United States is the Eastern cottontail (Sylvilagus floridanus). Known for its brownish-gray fur and signature white tail, this species thrives in most suburban environments, making gardens easy targets.

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Why they’re a problem:

  • Rabbits are active at dawn and dusk, when gardens are often unprotected
  • They prefer edges like fences, brush, and garden beds
  • Diets consist of a wide range of plants, including vegetables, flowers, and woody stems

In drier regions, you may encounter the desert cottontail, but the damage — and the solutions — are largely the same.

Why rabbits so hard to keep out of gardens

Rabbits are highly adaptable, and their survival instincts make them especially difficult to manage.

  • Strong spatial memory helps them return to reliable food sources (like your garden)
  • Rapid learning allows them to avoid traps and ineffective deterrents
  • Heightened senses make them cautious of unfamiliar changes

In short: If your solution doesn’t work quickly, rabbits will figure it out.

How to save your garden from rabbits

To effectively stop rabbits from eating your plants, you’ll need a combination of rabbit control strategies: Exclusion, deterrents, and (if called for) removal.

1. Rabbit-proof your garden (best long-term solution)

If you want to keep rabbits out of your garden, physical barriers are your most reliable defense.

  • Install chicken wire or mesh fencing around garden beds
  • Keep fencing at least 2-3 feet high and buried a few inches underground
  • Block off gaps near fences, sheds, crawl spaces, and brush piles

You can use flat panels or gable guard mesh by HY-GUARD EXCLUSION® Wildlife Exclusion Solutions for rabbit exclusions on decks and sheds, or even foundation vent screens to help keep rabbits from crashing in crawl spaces.

A man using a yellow drill to install a HY-GUARD EXCLUSION Foundation Vent Guard over a foundation vent on a brick wall.

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Rabbit-proofing is especially effective for protecting vegetable gardens and young plants.

2. Use natural rabbit repellents

Professional repellents help keep rabbits away from plants by targeting their strong sense of smell.

Granular repellents like Rabbit Scram™ create a protective barrier around your garden rather than requiring application on each plant. These products are:

  • Long-lasting and weather-resistant
  • Safe for people, pets, and plants
  • Effective for preventing rabbit damage before it starts

For best results, apply repellents around:

  • Garden perimeters
  • Flower beds
  • Newly planted seedlings

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3. Protect high-risk plants

Some plants are more vulnerable than others, especially:

  • Lettuce
  • Beans
  • Carrots
  • Flowers and young shoots

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To save plants from rabbits, consider:

  • Using plant covers or cloches
  • Prioritizing rabbit-resistant plants in exposed areas
  • Rotating plant placement to reduce repeat visits

4. Use live traps (when necessary)

If rabbits are already established, trapping may help reduce activity.

Tips for effective rabbit trapping:

  • Place live traps along well-used paths or near visible damage
  • Use double-door traps so rabbits can see through them
  • Add natural materials like grass or turf to the trap floor
  • Bait with lettuce, apples, carrots, or corn

Keep in mind: Trapping is typically less effective in summer when food sources are abundant. Rabbit control tends to work best when paired with exclusion methods.

How to prevent rabbit damage moving forward

The key to long-term success is consistency.

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To prevent rabbits from destroying your garden:

  • Maintain barriers and repair gaps quickly
  • Reapply repellents as needed
  • Remove brush, debris, and hiding spots nearby

Keep rabbits out of gardens

Rabbits may be clever, but with the right strategy, you can stay one step ahead.

By combining rabbit-proofing, repellents, and targeted control methods, you can save your garden from rabbits and keep it thriving all season long.

And, when in doubt, always bring in a trained nuisance wildlife professional.

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