Rabbite Cafo
29-29/1 ซอย สุขุมวิท 101/1 ถนน สุขุมวิท 101/1 โครง ดิ เอ ฟ เวอร์ รี่ Bang Chak, พระโขนง Bangkok 10260
The mission is the draw here. Skip generic animal cafes; this one rehomes rabbits that were dumped at the door by owners who lost interest. The 100-baht minimum spend funds the rescue work, and Uncle Aung (the abandoned rabbit that started it all in 2015) set the template for what this place does best.
You walk into a room split between cafe seating and a central rabbit enclosure, where both rescued and resident rabbits move freely across cushioned floor space. The operation opened in 2015 after the founder found Uncle Aung, an abandoned rabbit, during his student years. The idea was simple: build a meet-up spot for rabbit owners to swap care advice, then expand it into a shelter for animals that other people discarded.
Since then, the intake model has stayed consistent. Some rabbits arrive in cages left at the entrance by owners who grew bored. Others come through the boarding service, where owners drop off rabbits for vacation care and never return. Guinea pigs have joined the population, adding a second species to the cuddle rotation. The cafe funds the rescue work through a 100-baht minimum spend per visit, covering food, drinks, and time with the animals.
The rabbits that can handle interaction work the room. The ones still adjusting to people stay in quieter sections. Staff screen each animal's temperament and rotate them based on stress levels, so the rabbits you meet on one visit may not be the same crew a week later. Peter Rabbit merchandise fills the retail corner, and the vibe skews cozy rather than clinical.
Parking is available both free and paid around the Sukhumvit 101/1 location, and the cafe sits between BTS Punnawithi and Udomsuk stations (both under a 10-minute walk). Come during the 12 PM to 7 PM window. The rabbit enclosure is the centerpiece, so time your visit when you can sit on the floor and let the animals approach at their own pace.