Sexing your Rabbits
- Jessica O'dwyer
- Jul 23, 2022
- 3 min read
Sexing Rabbits and Sexing Baby Bunnies.
It’s almost a joke - you go to the pet store or rabbit breeder, buy two of the cutest bunnies you ever did see, and the sales clerk assures you they are both Does. He even checks them for you on the spot. Yep, girls. A couple of months later, one of the rabbits is pregnant.
...Oops!
How to tell male rabbits from female rabbits.
It is not easy and even professionals get mixed up. However, I found it easier by using this guide on the Raising Rabbits website, please check out this link to get more information, https://www.raising-rabbits.com/.
Sexing rabbits can be subject to operator error. The likely cause of the misidentification of a rabbit’s gender is simply not knowing exactly how to sex a rabbit.
Once you know It is not hard to tell male from female, but it is easy to make a mistake if you don't examine the bunnies carefully.
This is because in little bucklings,
Their equipment hasn’t descended, and
Without sufficient pressure, the penile sheath does not protrude enough for you to tell the difference between buck and doe.
If you don’t apply enough pressure on the vent area for fear of hurting the bunny, nothing will protrude at all. That is where sexing rabbits can get tricky, especially if they won't stay in the position long enough to get a decent look.
I have three very skittish baby buns who won't stay still long enough to let me check, also the best position to check them is with them lying on their back and most rabbits hate being on their back as it makes them vulnerable as prey animals.
How to Tell the Gender of a Rabbit
Place the kit in your lap bottom side up. We place the head against our tummy and the tail towards our knees, what you’ll see... the anus and the privates are normally scrunched together, like two doorways facing each other in a short hallway. With the kits simply flipped over, you don’t see much of anything.


In these views, the vertical slit on the tail side is part of the anus, and the opening for the privates is tucked into the crevice and barely visible.
So here's what you do.
Pinch the tail between the first two fingers, and place the thumb on the fur in the vent area.
Pull on the tail gently but firmly, and press downward on the vent with the thumb.
This will open up the works so you can tell what is what.


Picture #3,
You can see that a tubular structure is clearly protruding, and it has a circular opening.
Yep, this is a little buck. Circle openings that protrude alot equal bucks.
Picture #4
With a bit of firm pressure on the vent, you can see an opening that stretches to a slit without hardly protruding at all, even if you push a little harder with your thumb. Linear openings that don't protrude hardly at all equal Does.
Here is the key to getting it right:
Push with enough pressure that little boy protrusions do not stay hidden.
Do not be afraid to apply firm pressure, without pushing clear to the backbone, of course.
Here are a couple of close-up pictures:


Correct holding position
bottoms-up in our lap, head against our stomach, and hind end towards the knees

The gender of adult rabbits is much easier to identify.
Again, at first glance, their hind ends don’t look all that different, because the openings are still facing each other. But on the adult buck, you can now see two long grayish areas on either side of the vent. These are thinly furred scrotal sacs - a dead giveaway to his Buckhood.


Applying the same techniques as we did to the bunnies, grasp the tail between your first two fingers and apply gentle but firm pressure to the vent with the thumb.

If you happened to miss the scrotal sacs, a buck will offer an obvious protrusion from the vent.
It doesn’t take much pressure at all to reveal the privates.
With the doe, nothing actually protrudes. As you apply firm pressure, you’ll discover the same slit you found on the bunny, and it will be easier to reveal it. If it looks like there’s a bit of a protrusion, it is only because you are pressing downward on the vent.
For more info about sexing rabbit kits, https://www.raising-rabbits.com/sexing-rabbits.html





Comments