How Tall Should A Fence Be To Keep Rabbits Out Of A Garden? | No More Nibbles

A 24-inch fence with 1-inch mesh and a buried outward skirt blocks most rabbits, while 30–36 inches helps when snow builds up.

Rabbits don’t ruin a garden by wiping it out overnight. They do it by taking a bite here, a bite there, then coming back until the new growth never gets a break. If you’ve watched seedlings vanish at the soil line or found clean, angled bites on beans and lettuce, you already know the pattern.

A fence works because rabbits are creatures of habit. They follow edges, slip under loose spots, and squeeze through gaps that look too small. Your goal isn’t a tall wall. It’s a barrier with no easy “under, through, or around.” Get that right and most rabbit pressure drops fast.

Fence Height That Stops Most Garden Rabbits

For most home gardens, a fence that stands 24 inches (2 feet) above ground is the sweet spot. University guidance often lands on this height for cottontail rabbits when the mesh openings are small enough and the bottom edge is secured so rabbits can’t nose under it. A fence with 1-inch mesh chicken wire is a common pick for vegetable beds because it blocks adult rabbits and most juveniles. The University of Georgia’s garden fencing notes use a 2-foot fence with a 12-inch outward apron that’s buried to slow digging and lifting at the edge. UGA garden fencing notes lay out that approach.

Height alone won’t save you if the bottom is loose. Rabbits don’t need to dig like a woodchuck to get in. Many will simply push at a soft spot until it gives. That’s why a “buried skirt” or pinned apron matters as much as the top edge.

When 24 inches is enough

A 24-inch fence usually holds when:

  • The garden sits on level ground, with no dips under the fence line.
  • The fence is tight to the soil, with a skirt/apron or buried edge.
  • You’re dealing with cottontails, not larger jackrabbits.
  • Snow doesn’t pile up against the fence for weeks.

When to aim higher than 24 inches

Go taller when conditions hand rabbits a boost. Snow is the big one. A rabbit can’t climb a well-built wire fence in the way a squirrel can, yet snow turns a 24-inch fence into a 12-inch fence. Iowa State Extension notes that fencing 24 to 36 inches tall is often enough, with extra height helping when rabbits can reach higher after heavy snow. Iowa State’s rabbit fencing guidance points out that deep snowpack changes what rabbits can reach.

How Tall A Garden Fence Should Be For Rabbits In Snowy Areas

If you get long winters or steady drifts, plan for 30 to 36 inches above ground. After storms, shovel a narrow strip along the outside edge so the fence stays tall where it counts.

Regional notes also differ by species. Nebraska Extension reporting has recommended a 2-foot fence for cottontails and a 3-foot fence for jackrabbits, with the lower edge either buried a few inches or flared outward and staked down. UNL fencing guidance gives that 2-foot vs. 3-foot split.

Mesh Size, Material, And The Small Gaps Rabbits Use

Fence height gets the headline, yet rabbits beat fences through holes and gaps. Keep these details tight:

Pick a mesh that blocks juveniles

One-inch openings are a common baseline for chicken wire. If young rabbits show up in spring, smaller openings cut down on slip-through attempts. Hardware cloth costs more, yet it stays rigid and resists chewing.

Choose metal that keeps its shape

Chicken wire works, yet it bends and can tear if it gets hit by tools or a wheelbarrow. Welded wire stays straighter and holds tension better. You can also add a strip of hardware cloth along the bottom 8–12 inches.

Seal the easy gaps

Most fence failures happen at transitions: gate corners, post bases, and spots where the ground slopes. If you can slide two fingers under the bottom edge, a rabbit can often slide its nose in and start pushing. That’s why stakes, pins, and a skirt matter.

Build Details That Make Rabbits Give Up

A rabbit fence is only as strong as its weakest five feet. Build it like a simple system: posts for strength, mesh for the barrier, and a bottom detail that keeps the fence tight to the ground.

Set the posts so the mesh stays tight

For light wire, posts every 6–8 feet keeps the fence from bowing inward. Corners carry the most tension, so they need sturdier posts or bracing. If your fence line is short, more posts is often cheaper than trying to rescue a sagging run later.

Add a buried skirt or outward apron

An apron is a strip of wire that runs outward along the soil, then gets pinned down and covered with a few inches of soil or mulch. Rabbits tend to dig at the base, right against the fence. When they hit wire that extends outward, they stop or move on. The UGA approach uses a 12-inch apron bent outward and buried several inches. That UGA layout is simple and works well for vegetable plots.

Use a gate that closes like a fence panel

Gates are where most gardens lose the battle. A gate that swings and leaves a 2-inch gap at the latch is an open door. Use the same mesh on the gate as the fence, then add a kick board or a tight bottom rail so the gap stays narrow. If the ground dips, hang a short flap of mesh that brushes the soil when the gate is closed.

Table 1 (after ~40% of content)

Garden Situation Fence Height Target Bottom Edge Detail
Flat yard, cottontails, light pressure 24 inches 12-inch outward apron, pinned and covered
Mixed slopes or uneven soil 24–30 inches Apron plus extra ground pins at dips
Snow piles against fence 30–36 inches Apron; keep outside edge shoveled after storms
Raised beds clustered together 24–30 inches Apron or buried edge; tight gate seams
Kids, pets, tools bump fence often 30 inches Stiffer welded wire; apron with strong pins
Jackrabbits or larger rabbits reported locally 36 inches Apron or buried edge; taller gate panel
High-value greens near rabbit shelter (hedges, brush) 30–36 inches Apron plus hardware cloth strip at base
Short temporary fence for one season 24 inches Apron pinned with many U-staples

Layout Choices That Reduce Pressure Around The Fence

Even a solid fence lasts longer when the outside edge is easy to inspect. Rabbits like to hug shelter. If tall weeds, boards, or stacked pots sit along the fence line, rabbits can hide while they work at weak spots. Keep a clear strip on the outside so you can spot a lifted edge or a new hole in the wire. Also, physical barriers are the go-to option for rabbits, as noted in University of Minnesota guidance on keeping animals out of gardens.

Trim the outside edge and remove hiding spots

Keep grass trimmed along the fence. Pull weeds that grow into the mesh. Move lumber piles a few feet away. These simple habits make it harder for rabbits to work the fence unseen.

Put the tastiest crops deeper inside

Leafy greens and new seedlings are rabbit magnets. Place lettuce, peas, beans, and young brassicas closer to the center of the plot. Plant stronger-scented crops like onions, chives, and herbs along the fence line. This won’t stop a hungry rabbit, yet it can lower the urge to test the fence day after day.

Common Fence Mistakes And How To Fix Them Fast

Most rabbit problems trace back to one of four issues: gaps, sagging, loose bottoms, or gate leaks. Walk the fence line after rain, after mowing, and after the first hard freeze, since soil movement can open seams.

Gap under the fence after heavy rain

Fix: push the fence down, then add two or three ground pins in that spot. If water keeps cutting a channel, add a small berm of soil on the outside edge and pack soil back over the apron.

Mesh pulled loose at a post

Fix: re-staple or re-tie the mesh, then add a second fastener 2–3 inches away. Light wire tends to tear at single attachment points, so spread the load.

Gate that never fully meets the ground

Fix: add a low sweep made from the same wire, attached to the gate so it drags on the soil when closed. If the ground is uneven, a flexible sweep beats a rigid board.

How To Tell If Rabbits Are Still Getting In

A fence that’s doing its job changes the pattern inside the bed. New bites should stop. If they don’t, check two clues: outer-row damage and base scuffs.

  • Outer-row damage can mean reach-through nibbling or one entry point nearby.
  • Base scuffs point to a spot that needs more pins or a tighter apron.

Walk the perimeter once, then pull gently on the bottom edge every few feet. The loose place is the one the rabbit will use.

Table 2 (after >60% of content)

Check Item What To Look For Fast Fix
Bottom edge contact Daylight under fence, soft soil, lifted apron Add pins; pack soil back over apron
Post attachments Wire pulling away, torn mesh near staples Add more ties; spread fasteners
Gate seams Gap at latch side or under gate Add wire sweep; adjust latch tension
Corner tension Sagging runs and bowed mesh near corners Brace corners; tighten mesh
Snow line Snow bank against fence for days Shovel outside edge; raise height next season
Reach-through bites Plants nibbled right beside the fence Move crops inward; add inner buffer row

Fence Height Answer In One Practical Set Of Targets

If you want one plan that works in most yards, build for 24 inches above ground, then add a 10–12 inch outward apron pinned down and covered. If you get regular snow banks, shift the fence height to 30–36 inches. This matches the common extension guidance that 2 feet handles most cottontails, while 3 feet adds margin and can help with larger rabbits in some areas. The UNL rabbit fencing notes spell out that 2-foot versus 3-foot thinking.

One last detail: don’t treat the fence as a one-time job. Give it a quick walk once a week during peak growth, and after storms. Ten minutes of checking saves weeks of replanting.

References & Sources

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