Whatever you decide, I'd look for a rescue organization from which to acquire your pet. We rescued a homeless rabbit last year off the street (he was "turned loose" from someone in the neighborhood, which is usually a death sentence for rabbits) and he's been our most expensive pet, having to do all the vet care ourselves (neutering, dental care, as he was sick, etc)(it's $350 to neuter a rabbit at some places!!!! WTF????)
Rescue organizations offer a great deal, most of the time. $50 total, for a spayed/neutered rabbit, with food, hay, toys, litter.
Rabbits are incredibly "subtle" pets, but everything they do is so effing cute. Their body language is totally different from cats or dogs, but jeezOpete -- our rabbit can't even lie down without us saying, "Isn't he precious!"
They are very fastidious critters, and our rabbit is litter box trained. His poop is fabulous for the garden. (NPK is 2.4 - 1.4-0.6). Last summer, he provided enough poop for 12 outdoor plants, with no additional nutes needed (except for molasses). Score!
If I were to start fresh, i.e. no pets, or very few pets, I'd do a bonded pair of rabbits from a rescue place, and make them house rabbits, with an outdoor area available, weather pending. Our bunny has his own room, which he shares with my indoor grow (which is blocked off with office type dividers -- who knew? Rabbits like weed. A LOT!) We have a passel of dogs and cats, so he doesn't have access to the whole house for safety reasons. He also has a three story Bundiminium with attached run and fended rabbit garden outside, but he's got health issues, and isn't adventurous enough to appreciate it.
In about 2 or 3 months there will be a zillion Post-Easter rabbits at the shelters or rescues, so you can have your pick. The smaller breeds (mini-lops, Dutch) have more dental issues, which gets pricey. (that's what we're dealing with). Otherwise figure about $10/week in fresh veggies, food, hay.
Sorry for the novel. I never thought I'd be such a bunny advocate, but they're such great pets.