Dental Disease in Lop Rabbits: The Silent Problem Most Owners Miss
I didn’t notice anything was wrong for almost three months. My friend Mochi was eating — just less enthusiastically than usual. She was drinking water. She was moving around. Nothing dramatic. No screaming alarm bells. And then my vet found molar spurs on both sides of her jaw, and I felt like the worst rabbit owner in the world. Dental disease in Lop rabbits is exactly that kind of problem — quiet, hidden, and devastating by the time you spot it.
If you’re reading this because you’re worried about your Lop’s teeth — good. That instinct is right and this guide is for you.
If you’re reading this as a new Lop owner just trying to get ahead of things — even better. Lop rabbits dental disease is one of the leading causes of chronic suffering and shortened lifespans in this breed, and the vast majority of owners have no idea until it’s already serious.
I’m going to walk you through everything I’ve learned — from the anatomy that makes Lops uniquely vulnerable, to the subtle signs I missed for months, to what treatment actually looks like and how to prevent it going forward.
This is the guide I wish I’d had before my rabbit’s first dental check.
🦷 Why Lop Rabbits Are Built for Dental Problems
To understand dental disease in Lop rabbits, you have to start with anatomy — because the problem is literally built into the breed.
Lop rabbits were selectively bred for their distinctive floppy ears and flat, rounded faces. That adorable compressed skull shape is the same reason they are significantly more prone to dental disease than upright-eared rabbit breeds.
Here’s what’s happening inside that flat face: the teeth and jaw bones are the same size as any other rabbit. But the skull they’re packed into is smaller and more compressed. The result is teeth that don’t have enough room to sit in a natural alignment.
According to the RSPCA’s rabbit dental health guidance, dental problems are among the most common health issues seen in domestic rabbits — and brachycephalic (flat-faced) breeds like Lops face a structurally higher baseline risk than other breeds.
This misalignment — called malocclusion — means the teeth don’t grind against each other correctly. Instead of wearing down evenly the way healthy rabbit teeth should, they develop sharp points called spurs that dig into the tongue and cheeks with every single chew.
Think about what that means for a moment. Every mouthful of food. Every chew. Pain.
That’s what Lop rabbits dental disease often looks like from the inside — not a dramatic event, but a slow accumulation of discomfort that your rabbit is doing everything they can to hide from you.
🔍 What Actually Causes Dental Disease in Lop Rabbits
There are several causes, and most of them interact with each other. Understanding these helped me stop blaming myself entirely and start thinking about prevention more practically.
This is the root cause for most Lops. The breed standard that creates floppy ears also creates a skull that doesn’t give teeth adequate space to grow straight. No amount of diet or care fully eliminates this risk — it’s structural. What diet and care does is slow it down significantly.
This is the biggest preventable cause. Rabbit teeth grow continuously throughout their life — roughly 2–3mm per week. The grinding motion required to chew long-strand hay is what naturally wears teeth down. Without enough hay, teeth overgrow. Pellets and greens don’t create the same grinding action. If you’re not sure your rabbit is eating enough hay, read my guide on the best hay for Lop rabbits — it covers exactly why hay is the foundation of dental health.
A diet built around pellets, fruit treats, and soft greens with minimal hay is a diet that accelerates dental problems. Soft foods require very little chewing effort and do almost nothing to wear down teeth. I see this pattern a lot — owners who love their rabbits and feed them generously, but with the wrong texture ratio. If you’re unsure about what a balanced diet looks like, my complete Lop rabbit feeding guide breaks down exactly what they should be eating and in what proportions.
Some Lop lines are more severely brachycephalic than others. A rabbit bred for extreme flatness of face carries a higher innate dental risk than one bred with slightly more snout length. This is one reason buying from a responsible breeder who prioritises health over appearance matters so much — though it’s rarely discussed openly enough in the rabbit community.
Falls, rough handling, or even a badly placed enclosure drop can cause jaw misalignment that accelerates dental problems. This is less common than the dietary causes — but worth knowing about, especially for rabbits who were mishandled before you got them.
🔴 The Signs I Missed — And What to Actually Look For
This section is the one I feel most strongly about writing because I lived through the experience of missing these signs for months. I want to be specific about what I noticed — and why I didn’t connect the dots until too late.
Looking back, the signs were there. I just didn’t know what I was seeing.
“She started picking up hay, chewing once or twice, and dropping it. I thought she was just being fussy about the brand. I tried three different hays before it finally occurred to me that maybe it wasn’t the hay at all — maybe it hurt to chew.”
That moment of realisation is one I’ve heard from dozens of other Lop owners. The picking-up-and-dropping behaviour is classic dental disease in Lop rabbits — and almost everyone initially interprets it as pickiness.
Here are the signs that actually point to dental issues — roughly in order from earliest and subtlest to most advanced:
| Sign | What It Means | Stage |
|---|---|---|
| Picking up food and dropping it | Chewing hurts — molar spurs cutting tongue or cheek | Early |
| Preferring soft foods over hay | Avoiding the grinding motion that causes pain | Early |
| Wet or damp chin / drooling | Saliva pooling because swallowing is painful | Early–Mid |
| Eye discharge or watery eyes | Molar roots pressing on tear ducts beneath the eye | Mid |
| Slow, gradual weight loss | Eating less due to pain — over weeks or months | Mid |
| Loud tooth grinding (bruxism) | Audible pain response — distinct from quiet happy grinding | Mid–Advanced |
| Refusing food entirely | Pain too severe to attempt eating — GI stasis risk | Advanced |
| Jaw swelling or abscess | Tooth root infection — serious, requires urgent surgery | Severe |
That last sign — jaw swelling or abscess — is the one that breaks owners’ hearts most. By the time a Lop rabbit abscess is visible from the outside, the infection has been building inside for a long time. Prevention and early detection are everything with dental disease in Lop rabbits.
You might also notice your rabbit becoming quieter than usual, or less interested in interaction. This is worth cross-referencing with my Lop rabbit body language guide — because subtle changes in behaviour are often the very first signals that something is physically wrong.
💔 What Dental Disease Actually Means for Your Rabbit — And for You
I want to spend a moment on this section because I don’t think the emotional weight of Lop rabbits dental disease gets discussed honestly enough.
When my vet confirmed the molar spurs, she said something that stayed with me: “She’s been managing this quietly for a while. Rabbits are very good at not showing pain.”
That hit harder than the diagnosis itself.
The idea that my rabbit had been sitting there, eating carefully, adjusting her chewing, compensating — and I hadn’t noticed — felt like a failure. It took me a while to move past that and into something more useful, which is: now I know what to look for, and I’ll never miss it again.
For your rabbit, dental disease in Lop rabbits means chronic, low-level pain that affects everything — appetite, energy, social behaviour, willingness to be held. A rabbit in dental pain is a rabbit who is spending enormous energy just getting through the day.
For you, it means learning to read the quiet signals. Not waiting for the dramatic ones.
🩺 How Dental Disease in Lop Rabbits Is Diagnosed
This is where I want to be very specific — because how dental disease is diagnosed in rabbits is genuinely different from what most people expect.
A standard physical examination where your vet looks in the mouth is simply not enough to properly assess molar health. The back molars are almost completely inaccessible without sedation. If your vet tells you the teeth look fine based on a quick mouth peek, that is not a complete dental examination.
According to rabbit dental specialists, a thorough dental assessment for a rabbit requires sedation to properly visualise the cheek teeth, and in many cases, a skull X-ray or CT scan to evaluate tooth root health beneath the gum line — because the most serious problems are often invisible from the surface.
When I took my rabbit in for her dental assessment, the full process involved:
- Initial physical observation — weight check, body condition, chin and eye inspection
- Conscious mouth check — front incisors are visible; early indication only
- Sedation — necessary to access back molars safely and without distress
- Full mouth examination under sedation — molar spurs, overgrowth, ulceration of tongue or cheek
- Skull X-ray — checks tooth root lengths and any abscess formation below the gum line
- Dental burring (filing) if needed — smoothing spur points while under sedation
I know that list sounds intense. And yes, the bill was significant. But catching it at the molar spur stage meant we avoided the far more serious — and far more expensive — abscess and jaw surgery stage.
💊 What Treatment for Lop Rabbits Dental Disease Looks Like
The honest truth about Lop rabbits dental disease treatment is this: it is rarely a one-time fix. Because the underlying cause is structural — a skull that doesn’t give teeth the room they need — the problem will recur. Treatment manages it, slows it down, and relieves pain. It doesn’t cure the breed standard.
That reality was hard to sit with at first. But once I accepted it, I was able to approach treatment and prevention as an ongoing part of rabbit ownership rather than a failure I had to fix once and be done with.
Smoothing molar spurs under sedation. Immediate pain relief. Usually needs repeating every 3–6 months depending on severity.
Prescribed post-procedure to help the rabbit eat comfortably while the mouth heals. Usually meloxicam or similar rabbit-safe options.
Surgical removal, antibiotic packing, or marsupialization. Complex, expensive, and requires specialist rabbit vet. Prevention is dramatically preferable.
Critical Care powder mixed with water, syringe fed to maintain gut motility while a rabbit recovers from dental procedures. Vet guidance required.
After my rabbit’s first dental procedure, she was eating hay again within 48 hours. The relief was almost visible in how she moved. It wasn’t until she was comfortable again that I fully understood how much pain she must have been managing before.
If your rabbit has gone off food entirely and you suspect dental pain may be part of the reason, I’d strongly recommend reading my guide on why Lop rabbits stop eating — dental pain and GI stasis are deeply connected, and understanding both gives you a much clearer picture of what’s happening.
🛡️ How to Prevent Dental Disease in Lop Rabbits
You cannot eliminate the genetic risk that comes with being a Lop. But you can significantly reduce how quickly dental disease develops, and how severe it becomes, through consistent daily care. This is where the real power sits.
According to the House Rabbit Society’s dental care resources, diet is the single most impactful factor an owner can control in managing rabbit dental health — specifically, the provision of unlimited grass hay as the foundation of every meal, every day.
Here is what my prevention routine looks like after everything I’ve learned:
- ✓
Unlimited high-quality hay at all times — This is the absolute foundation. Not occasionally. Not most of the time. Always. If your rabbit isn’t eating enough hay, everything else is harder to manage. - ✓
Annual dental check-ups under sedation — Not a casual mouth peek. A proper sedated examination with a rabbit-savvy vet who checks the full mouth including molars. - ✓
Limit pellets to recommended amounts — Pellets are nutritionally fine in the right quantity, but a rabbit filling up on pellets eats less hay — which means less dental wear. Measured pellets only. - ✓
Monitor the chin and eyes weekly — A quick check of the chin (for dampness) and the eyes (for discharge) takes 30 seconds and catches early dental signs before they escalate. - ✓
Watch eating behaviour closely — Any change in how your rabbit eats — slower, pickier, dropping food — is worth noting and investigating rather than dismissing as preference. - ✓
Avoid sugary treats and soft foods as staples — Occasional fruit is fine. A diet built around soft, sugary foods is a diet that accelerates dental disease in Lop rabbits faster than almost anything else. - ✓
Find a rabbit-savvy vet before you need one — Not every vet has extensive rabbit dental experience. Find and register with a specialist vet now, not during a crisis.
🌱 A Word on Guilt — Because It’s Real
If you’ve just found out your rabbit has dental disease — or if you’ve been reading this and realising you might have missed the signs — I want to say this directly: please don’t spiral into guilt.
Dental disease in Lop rabbits is genuinely one of the hardest health conditions to spot early because rabbits hide pain so effectively. Even attentive, experienced owners miss it. That’s not negligence. That’s the nature of caring for a prey animal whose survival instinct is to hide weakness.
What matters now is what you do next. Get the dental check booked. Build the prevention habits. Check in weekly. Feed the hay. That’s all of it.
The rabbit who has just had their dental spurs filed and is tentatively trying their hay again — ears forward, chewing slowly, figuring out that it doesn’t hurt anymore — that moment is worth every difficult thing that led to it. I’ve seen it. It’s one of the best things rabbit ownership gives you.
❓ Frequently Asked Questions
🎯 Final Thoughts — Know More, Act Earlier
Dental disease in Lop rabbits is silent, progressive, and deeply connected to everything else in your rabbit’s health — appetite, energy, gut health, quality of life. Understanding it doesn’t make it less serious. But it does make you a significantly better equipped owner.
The three things I want you to take from this entire guide are simple:
- Hay is not optional. Unlimited grass hay every single day is the most powerful tool you have against Lop rabbits dental disease. Nothing else comes close.
- Annual sedated dental exams are essential. Not a nice-to-have. Essential. The back molars cannot be properly assessed any other way.
- Quiet changes in eating behaviour matter. Picking up and dropping food. Preferring soft over hay. Slower eating. These are not personality quirks — they are signals. Trust them.
Your Lop is counting on you to notice the things they can’t tell you. This guide is here to help you do exactly that.
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- →Lop skull compression makes dental disease structurally unavoidable — management is the goal
- →Insufficient hay is the biggest preventable cause
- →Early signs: picking up and dropping food, preferring soft foods, wet chin, watery eyes
- →Proper diagnosis requires sedation — not just a visual mouth check
- →Treatment manages, not cures — regular dental care is lifelong
- →Prevention: unlimited hay + annual sedated check + weekly home observation
My name is Borni Franklin, and I built MeetLop from scratch — not because I had a background in veterinary science, but because I had a Holland Lop who needed me to figure things out fast.
I came into rabbit ownership the way most people do — excited, underprepared, and Googling everything at midnight. What I found online was mostly generic rabbit content that didn’t speak to Lop-specific needs, didn’t come from a real owner’s experience, and certainly didn’t prepare me for the morning I found my rabbit hunched in the corner with an untouched hay rack.
That frustration is what built this site.