How To Make Homemade Guinea Pig Toys: 10 Easy DIY Ideas

Guinea Pigs18 February 20215 min read
🔄Last Updated: 16 March 2026Originally published: 18 February 2021

Guinea pigs are curious, social animals that need daily enrichment to stay happy and healthy. The good news? You don’t need to spend a fortune — most of the best guinea pig toys can be made from everyday household items. Here are 10 safe, simple homemade guinea pig toy ideas that cost next to nothing.

Safety first: Only use plain, untreated brown cardboard (no glossy print, glue, or stickers). Avoid anything with sharp edges, small removable parts, or toxic materials. Always supervise your guinea pig with new toys.

1. Toilet Roll Hay Dispenser

The classic DIY guinea pig toy. Stuff an empty toilet roll with Timothy hay and tuck the ends in loosely. Your guinea pig will push, pull, and gnaw at the roll to get the hay out. For extra challenge, cut small slits in the sides and poke hay strands through them. Replace daily as the cardboard gets soggy.

2. Cardboard Box Hideout

Cut one or two guinea pig-sized holes in the sides of a shoebox or small delivery box. Place it upside down in the cage with a handful of hay inside. Guinea pigs feel safest when they have a private hiding spot, and they’ll love nibbling the edges of the cardboard over time. Replace when it gets too chewed or damp.

3. Paper Bag Foraging Toy

Take a small brown paper bag (remove any handles), fill it with hay and scatter a few small treats (a slice of pepper, a sprig of parsley) inside. Scrunch the top loosely closed. Your guinea pig will rustle, push, and tear at the bag to find the hidden goodies. This mimics natural foraging behaviour and provides great mental stimulation.

4. Tunnel System

Connect several large cardboard tubes (paper towel rolls work, or ask at a carpet shop for the wider centre tubes) end to end with gaps between them. Guinea pigs love running through tunnels — it satisfies their prey-animal instinct to have covered pathways. Ensure all tube diameters are at least 12cm wide so no piggy gets stuck.

5. Herb Garden Platter

Arrange a selection of guinea pig-safe herbs on a plate or in a shallow dish — parsley, coriander, basil, dill, and mint are all safe and loved. This acts as both a foraging enrichment activity and a nutritious supplement to their hay diet. A great way to use up herbs that are going past their best in your fridge.

6. Veggie Kebab

Thread chunks of bell pepper, cucumber, and carrot onto a wooden skewer (use an apple wood stick or untreated wooden dowel) and wedge it vertically between the cage bars. Guinea pigs will stretch up and nibble pieces off the stick, encouraging natural standing behavior. Remove the stick once the veg is eaten to avoid splinters.

7. Cardboard Maze

Cut and fold large cardboard boxes into a mini maze with dead ends, corridors, and open areas. Place treats at the end of some corridors. This is best used during supervised floor time outside the cage. Change the layout regularly so your guinea pigs don’t memorise the route — the novelty is what provides the enrichment.

8. Hay Sock

Take an old, clean cotton sock and stuff it with hay. Cut 3–4 small holes in the sides. Your guinea pig will pull hay through the holes, toss the sock around, and generally have a great time rummaging. Use a sock without elastic or silicone grips, and replace it when it gets chewed through.

9. Digging Box

Fill a shallow plastic container (a cat litter tray works perfectly) with 2–3 inches of shredded recycled paper or clean topsoil. Scatter treats, herb sprigs, and hay on top and mix them in. Guinea pigs will dig, burrow, and forage through the substrate — this mimics their natural grassland behaviour and provides excellent enrichment.

10. Apple Wood Chew Bundle

Gather a small bundle of apple, willow, or hazel twigs (ensure they’re from untreated, unsprayed trees) and tie them together with a short piece of natural jute string. Guinea pigs need to chew to wear down their continuously growing teeth, and safe wood chews are far better than plastic alternatives. Wash and dry the twigs before offering them.

Safe Wood for Guinea Pigs

Safe ✓ Avoid ✗
Apple Pine (toxic oils)
Willow Cedar (toxic oils)
Hazel Yew (highly toxic)
Birch Cherry (cyanide risk)
Beech Any treated/painted wood

How Often Should I Rotate Toys?

Guinea pigs benefit most from variety and novelty. Rotate 2–3 toys in and out of the cage every few days. This prevents boredom and keeps each toy interesting. Cardboard toys should be replaced as soon as they get soggy or heavily chewed. Wood chews can last weeks.

Frequently Asked Questions

Are toilet rolls safe for guinea pigs?

Yes — plain brown cardboard toilet rolls are safe for guinea pigs to chew and play with. Avoid rolls with printed patterns, glossy coatings, or glue residue. The small amount of cardboard they may ingest while chewing is harmless and will pass through their digestive system.

Can guinea pigs play with cat toys?

Most cat toys are not suitable for guinea pigs. Cat toys often contain small bells, feathers, catnip, or elastic strings that could be swallowed or cause entanglement. Stick to guinea pig-specific or homemade toys made from safe, natural materials.

What household items can guinea pigs play with?

Safe household items include plain cardboard boxes, toilet and paper towel rolls, brown paper bags (handles removed), clean cotton socks, and ceramic dishes for hay or herbs. Always ensure items are clean, untreated, and free from sharp edges, ink, or adhesives.

RN

Dr. Rachel Nguyen

BVetMed CertAVP(ZM) MRCVS

Dr. Nguyen is one of the UK's few vets with an RCVS Certificate in Zoological Medicine. She works at an exotic-specialist referral practice in London and keeps her own reptile collection. Rachel reviews our reptile, bird, fish, and small animal content.

📋 Exotic Animal Specialist 🎯 Exotic & Zoological Medicine