Mouse and Rat Care
In this article
Mouse and Rat Care: How to Keep Pet Rodents Healthy and Safe
By Dr Duncan Houston
If your mouse or rat suddenly looks quiet, stops eating, or starts making breathing noises, things can go downhill very quickly. These are prey animals, which means they hide illness until they are already quite unwell.
The goal is not just to care for them, but to catch problems early and prevent the common mistakes that lead to disease.
This is where most owners either get it right or unknowingly create risk.
Quick Answer
Mice and rats stay healthy with a pellet-based diet, clean and well-ventilated housing, social interaction, and early detection of illness. The biggest risks are poor diet, dirty cages, and missed early signs like reduced eating or breathing changes. If your rodent stops eating, becomes lethargic, or shows laboured breathing, this should be treated as urgent.
What Most Owners Get Wrong About Rodent Care
In practice, disease in mice and rats is rarely random.
It usually comes back to:
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Incorrect diet
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Poor cage hygiene
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Lack of ventilation
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Delayed response to early symptoms
The mistake I see most often is assuming small animals are “low maintenance.” They are not. They are just very good at hiding problems.
Understanding Normal Behaviour vs Early Warning Signs
Healthy rodents:
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Are alert and responsive
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Eat and drink consistently
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Groom regularly
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Explore their environment
Early warning signs:
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Sitting hunched or withdrawn
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Eating less or slower
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Rough or unkempt coat
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Subtle breathing noise or sneezing
Decision Checkpoint
If your rodent’s behaviour changes for more than 12 to 24 hours, assume something is wrong until proven otherwise.
What Should You Feed Mice and Rats?
The Correct Base Diet
The safest and most consistent option is:
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High-quality pelleted rodent food
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Balanced protein and fat
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No selective feeding
This removes guesswork and prevents nutritional imbalance.
The Problem With Seed Mixes
Seed diets are one of the biggest drivers of disease.
They are:
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High in fat
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Nutritionally inconsistent
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Linked to obesity and long-term health issues
Rodents will pick out the high-fat parts and ignore the rest.
Safe Extras
You can add small amounts of:
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Vegetables like peas and squash
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Cooked grains
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Occasional protein such as egg
Keep this as a supplement, not the main diet.
Decision Checkpoint
If your rodent is gaining weight, leaving parts of its food behind, or becoming less active, the diet needs adjusting.
How Much Should They Eat and Drink?
Typical intake:
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Food: 5 to 15 g per 100 g body weight daily
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Water: 10 to 15 ml per 100 g body weight daily
Rats generally drink more than mice relative to their size.
What Matters Clinically
A drop in appetite is one of the earliest and most important warning signs.
If your rodent has not eaten properly for 12 to 24 hours, that is already a concern.
Housing Setup: What Actually Keeps Them Healthy
Cage Design
Best setup:
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Well-ventilated wire or metal cage
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Solid base for bedding
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Escape-proof and secure
Avoid:
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Poor airflow
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Damp environments
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Overcrowding
Bedding
Use:
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Paper-based bedding
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Dust-free materials
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Adequate depth for burrowing
Avoid:
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Cedar or scented wood shavings
These are strongly linked to respiratory disease.
Hygiene
Ammonia buildup from urine is one of the most underestimated risks.
Decision Checkpoint
If you can smell the cage, it is already harming their respiratory system.
Social Needs and Handling
Rats should be kept in groups whenever possible.
Mice can be more variable, but still benefit from social structure depending on sex and setup.
Handling should be:
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Gentle
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Consistent
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Supportive of the body
Avoid:
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Grabbing suddenly
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Lifting by the tail tip
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Waking abruptly
Real-World Insight
Most aggression in rodents is fear-based and caused by poor early handling or stressful environments.
Common Diseases in Mice and Rats
Chronic Respiratory Disease
This is the most common issue, especially in rats.
Signs:
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Sneezing
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Noisy breathing
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Red staining around eyes or nose
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Reduced activity
This condition is often chronic and requires management.
Tumors
Very common in rats, especially females.
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Mammary tumors
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Pituitary tumors
Decision Checkpoint
Any lump should be checked early. Waiting reduces treatment success.
Parasites
Signs:
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Itching
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Hair loss
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Skin irritation
Usually treatable, but spreads easily.
Digestive and Stress-Related Issues
Triggered by:
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Diet changes
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Poor hygiene
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Overcrowding
Severity Guide: How Worried Should You Be?
Low Risk
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Normal behaviour
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Eating and drinking
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No visible symptoms
Monitor at home.
Moderate Risk
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Slight lethargy
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Reduced appetite
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Occasional sneezing
Vet check within 24 to 48 hours.
High Risk
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Laboured breathing
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Not eating
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Hunched posture
Needs prompt veterinary care.
Critical
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Collapse
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Severe breathing difficulty
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Unresponsive
Emergency.
When Is This an Emergency?
Seek immediate veterinary care if:
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Your rodent is struggling to breathe
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There is sudden collapse
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They have stopped eating for more than 24 hours
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They are severely lethargic or unresponsive
Rodents deteriorate quickly. Delays matter.
What Should You Do Right Now?
If your rodent seems unwell:
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Check food and water intake
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Assess breathing and activity
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Clean the environment
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Separate from other animals if needed
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Monitor closely over the next 12 to 24 hours
When to escalate
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No improvement within 24 hours
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Symptoms worsen at any point
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Breathing or eating is affected
Common Mistakes Owners Make
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Feeding seed-heavy diets
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Not cleaning cages often enough
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Ignoring early subtle signs
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Keeping rats alone
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Waiting too long to act
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Overcrowding housing
These are the most common reasons rodents become sick.
How to Prevent Problems
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Use a consistent pellet diet
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Maintain strict cage hygiene
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Provide enrichment and social interaction
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Quarantine new animals for 4 to 6 weeks
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Monitor behaviour daily
Prevention is far easier than treatment.
FAQs
Can mice and rats live together?
No. They have different behaviours and housing them together can cause stress and injury.
How long do mice and rats live?
Mice typically live 1.5 to 2 years. Rats usually live 2 to 3 years.
Is sneezing normal?
Occasional sneezing can occur, but repeated sneezing is usually an early sign of respiratory disease.
Should I take my rodent to the vet?
Yes. Early intervention is critical, especially for breathing issues and tumors.
Can mild illness go away on its own?
Some minor issues can improve, but many common rodent diseases progress without treatment.
Final Thoughts
Mice and rats are not fragile, but they are unforgiving when care is inconsistent.
The key is not doing everything perfectly.
It is catching problems early and avoiding the common mistakes that cause them.
If your rodent is eating, active, and breathing normally, you are usually in a safe zone.
If those change, that is your signal to act.
If you are unsure whether a symptom is something to monitor or something more serious, the ASK A VET™ app can help you track changes over time and get guidance before small problems become bigger ones.