Rabbit emergency vet in West Tokyo and Musashino
These are source-cited public clinic listings for emergency call planning. Call before travel to confirm address, emergency intake, and whether a rabbit-savvy or exotic vet is on duty now.
Clinic verification
- Last verified: 2026-06-03
- Verification method: public clinic or institution pages checked; third-party sources are used only where no official clinic page was found.
- Before travel: call ahead. A 24-hour hospital may still need to confirm whether rabbit/exotic coverage is available at that moment.
- Go now if your rabbit has red-flag signs, but call while preparing to travel.
Clinics to call
Mitaka Veterinary Medical Group / Japan Veterinary Medical Group
Musashino · 2-6-4 Nakamachi · ☎ 0422-54-5181 / night emergency 080-5487-6682
24-hour rabbits listed West Tokyo
Official site states 24-hour emergency care, 365 days a year, and includes rabbit transport guidance.
みわエキゾチック動物病院 / Japan Exotic Animal Medical Center
Komagome, Toshima-ku · 1-25-5 Komagome
exotic/rabbit specialist appointment
Public professional sources identify Miwa Exotic Animal Hospital as a Tokyo exotic-animal hospital; use for specialist routing and call before travel.
Daktari Animal Hospital Tokyo Medical Center
Shirokanedai, Minato-ku · 5-14-1 Shirokanedai Apartment 2F · ☎ 03-5420-0012
24/7 emergency general emergency Central Tokyo
Official Japanese site states 24-hour, 365-day emergency outpatient care. Call to confirm rabbit/exotic handling.
What to say when you call
- I have a rabbit emergency. Do you treat rabbits or exotic small mammals right now?
- State the main sign and how long it has been happening.
- Ask whether to come immediately, what to bring, and whether another clinic is better if no rabbit vet is on duty.
- Confirm the address, phone number, after-hours fee, and intake process.
Sources
Related city and region pages
Source-cited guidance; veterinary review pending.
Emergency FAQ
Can this wait until tomorrow?
Do not wait overnight if your rabbit is not eating, not passing droppings, weak, collapsed, breathing abnormally, bleeding, bloated, exposed to toxins, or rapidly worsening. Call an exotic-capable or rabbit-savvy vet while preparing to travel.
What should I tell the clinic first?
Start with the main sign, when it began, appetite, droppings, urine, breathing, posture, pain signs, recent surgery, heat exposure, trauma, and any possible toxin or medication exposure.
Should I use a product or home treatment first?
No. Products, food changes, supplements, and home care should only be discussed after a veterinarian has assessed the emergency risk. They are not substitutes for urgent veterinary care.