Complete Ferret Care Guide

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By Lachlan Ortega · Last updated 17 May 2026 · Health content reviewed by Priya Nair (RVN)

Ferrets are the most demanding small pet on this site. They’re obligate carnivores, they need 4+ hours of out-of-cage time a day, they sleep 18+ hours but the awake hours are relentless, they require specific vaccinations, and they have a strong musky smell even when properly cared for. If you can meet all of that, they’re brilliantly entertaining. If you can’t, choose almost anything else.

Are ferrets right for you?

Yes if you can…Skip if…
Commit to 4+ hours/day out-of-cage timeYou’re at work 10 hours a day
Ferret-proof a roomYou can’t tolerate constant low-grade chaos
Afford an exotic vet (vaccines, annual checks, surgery insurance)Your country requires special permits (Australia: legal in most states but check; NZ: illegal)
Live with a slightly musky smellAnyone in the house has scent sensitivities
Keep at least two togetherYou can only commit to one

Legality (check before you commit)

  • Australia: legal in most states. Banned in Queensland and the Northern Territory.
  • New Zealand: banned entirely under biosecurity law.
  • UK: legal, common.
  • USA: mostly legal. Banned in California, Hawaii, NYC, Washington DC.
  • Canada: mostly legal, banned in some cities

Housing

  • Cage: multi-level, minimum 90x60x90cm for two ferrets. The Critter Nation and Ferret Nation series are the de-facto standard. Cage is only for sleeping/eating between out-of-cage sessions.
  • Hammocks — ferrets sleep most of the day in hammock piles. Multiple hammocks, ideally different fabric weights.
  • Litter trays — corner trays in the cage and in their main out-of-cage room. Ferrets back into corners to poop.
  • Food & water — heavy ceramic bowls. Bottles tend to underperform for them.
  • Bedding — fleece is standard. Avoid pine/cedar shavings (same respiratory issues as for other small pets).

Ferret-proofing

Ferrets squeeze through any gap their head fits through. They will:

  • Climb into the back of the fridge through a gap
  • Burrow into furniture
  • Steal small objects and hide them in inaccessible places (it’s called “ferreting” for a reason)
  • Open closed drawers and unzip bags
  • Find any tiny dropped item before you do

Ferret-proof a single room properly before allowing them in any new space. Block all gaps under doors, behind appliances, in cupboards. Move houseplants. Hide cables. Remove rubber-foam-soft anything (ferrets chew foam and swallow it — common cause of intestinal obstruction).

Diet — obligate carnivore

Ferrets have a very short gut and digest carbs poorly. Their diet should be 32-40% protein and 18-22% fat by dry-matter analysis, with minimal carbohydrate.

  • Specialised ferret food — Wysong Epigen, Bob Martin Premium Ferret, James Wellbeloved Ferret Complete
  • OR high-quality kitten food — many ferret keepers feed top-grade kitten kibble (Royal Canin Kitten, Hill’s Science Diet Kitten) as a base
  • OR raw / whole-prey diet — frozen-thawed mice, chicks, rabbit. Commits you to freezer space and a specific routine.
  • NEVER dog food (too low protein, too much fibre), fruit/vegetable treats (they can’t process them), dairy, sugary anything, chocolate
  • “Ferret yogurt drops” and similar sold in pet shops — sugar bombs. Skip.

Free-feed — ferrets self-regulate well on appropriate food.

Vaccinations

  • Distemper — annual. Canine distemper is nearly 100% fatal in ferrets.
  • Rabies — required in some jurisdictions; check yours

Vet warning signs

  • Insulinoma — pancreatic tumour, very common over age 3. Causes hypoglycaemia. Signs: glassy stare, drooling, tremors, collapse. Manageable with medication or surgery.
  • Adrenal disease — hair loss starting at the tail, itching, lethargy. Almost universal in desexed pet ferrets over 3. Treated with implants or surgery.
  • Lymphoma — second most common cancer
  • ECE (epizootic catarrhal enteritis) / green slime disease — severe diarrhea, dehydration. Emergency.
  • Obstruction from swallowed foam, rubber, hair-ball. Sudden vomiting, no appetite, hunched posture. Emergency.

Smell — the honest answer

Ferrets have a distinctive musky smell from skin oil glands. It’s stronger in intact ferrets than desexed ones. Even desexed, well-bathed ferrets have some smell — it’s never going to be smell-free.

  • Bath occasionally — once a month at most. Over-bathing makes the smell worse (skin compensates with more oil).
  • Wash bedding weekly
  • Litter trays scooped daily, deep-cleaned weekly
  • Diet matters — high-quality protein food = milder smell. Fishy food = stronger smell.

Pair or solo?

Ferrets are social. Solo ferrets get depressed. Pair or trio same-sex ideally, or desexed mixed-sex. Bonding is usually easier than for guinea pigs or rabbits because ferrets are play-driven and bond through play-fighting (which sounds and looks alarming but is harmless).

Lifespan

5-9 years with good care. Most pet ferrets live 6-8 years.

Sources

Page last updated 17 May 2026. We re-check our pet-care content regularly and update when something changes.

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