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Background/Objectives: The vibrotactile system, which is essential for guiding behavior in nocturnal rodents such as mice and rats, provides critical sensory input. To investigate the role of vibrotactile sensory inflow in neonatal locomotion, we used previsual rat pups that underwent bilateral vibrissectomy. Subsequently, their motor behavior was evaluated in an open field test. Methods: A total of 42 previsual pups from four litters were assigned to either bilateral vibrissectomy or sham surgery groups on postnatal days (PND) 9–12, with group allocation balanced across litters. Results: Open-field testing on PND 13 revealed that while vibrissectomy (VE) did not affect gross locomotor activity—such as distance traveled, speed, acceleration, or freezing episodes (all >0.05)—it significantly altered spatial behavior. To quantify spatial patterns of curvy tracks, we analyzed trajectorial compaction within the central zone, lacking the tactile guidance of the walls: trajectories were smoothed using virtual coatings scaled to the vibrissal length (16 mm). For each track, an individual linearized reference path was generated and subjected to identical smoothing. The compaction ratio—calculated as the coated area of the smoothed linearized reference divided by the coated area of the experimental track—was significantly greater in VE pups than in sham controls (p = 0.03). This effect was not attributable to differences in the path length traveled within the central zone. The increased compaction persisted when the smoothing scale was increased 2–3 fold (32–64 mm radii, approximating the pups’ mean body size), but not at smaller scales (2–4 mm). Conclusions: These results demonstrate that tactile input specifically modulates the spatial, rather than locomotor, components of nonvisual navigation. Consequently, the track compaction may serve as a sensitive marker for assessing vibrotactile function in developing laboratory rodents.