What Should You Feed Your Bird?
What Should You Feed Your Bird? That’s the exact question I hear from folks almost every week, and it still makes me smile because I remember asking it myself back when I brought home my first cockatiel years ago. Hey, I’m Joshua Van founder and senior editor around here at our little pet care spot. I’ve been messing around with birds in my house and helping readers sort out their flock for over fifteen years now, through all the trial and error and late-night vet calls.
Let me cut right to it: getting the food right is the one thing that can turn a quiet, plucky bird into a real character who lives a good long life instead of dealing with constant health hiccups. And yeah, it’s not as complicated as the pet store aisles try to make it seem once you get the basics down.
Key Takeaways
- Pellets ought to be the main part around 60-80% of what most birds eat every day for solid pet bird nutrition.
- Fresh veggies every single day beat everything else for keeping them perky and healthy.
- Seeds? Just a sprinkle as treats no more than 10% or you risk weight problems and missing nutrients.
- Skip the avocado, chocolate, onions, and anything iffy always double-check with your bird’s vet.
- Switch slowly, weigh them once a week, and pay attention to their poop and energy that’ll tell you more than anything.
Why Getting the Food Right Matters So Much
I’ve seen it play out dozens of times. Someone walks in with a budgie that’s been on nothing but a colorful seed mix from the big chain store, and pretty soon we’re talking fatty liver or feathers that look dull. Flip the script to a real healthy bird diet and it’s night and day brighter colors, louder singing, way fewer drama-filled trips to the clinic.

Birds out in the wild pick at all sorts of greens, bugs, and bits throughout the day. Our pets still have those same instincts, but we’re the ones filling the bowl. Screw it up and they can end up short on vitamins because their little bodies burn through energy crazy fast. Get it spot on and you’ve got yourself a happy, chatty buddy for ten, twenty, maybe thirty years. I’ve watched it happen in my own flock and with so many of you who write in.
Pellets The Real Backbone of the Bowl
Look, every avian vet I talk to in 2026 still says the same thing: pellets need to be the biggest chunk of the menu. We’re talking 60-80% for most parrots, maybe 50-60% for cockatiels and budgies who like a few seeds, and even the smaller guys like canaries are doing better with at least some pellets mixed in these days.
They give the complete package without your bird playing favorites and only eating the sunflower bits. Stick with the good ones Harrison’s (the organic stuff is fantastic), ZuPreem, Lafeber, Roudybush, or TOPs if you want totally organic. I always start with whatever size and flavor matches the beak. My own grey went straight for the ones with a hint of fruit when we switched, and it made life so much easier.
Fresh Stuff That Keeps Things Fun and Nutritious
Pellets alone aren’t enough you want 20-40% fresh foods in there too. This is the part I actually look forward to every morning. Chop up dark leafy greens like kale, collards, dandelion, Swiss chard, or parsley. Throw in orange things for that vitamin A boost carrots, sweet potato chunks, red peppers, broccoli. Zucchini, peas, green beans, cooked squash… they all disappear fast around my place.
Fruits are fine in smaller bits, maybe 5-10%, because of the sugar. Apples (seeds out, obviously), berries, mango, papaya, kiwi, banana slices wash good, go organic when you can, and switch it up so they don’t get bored. One week my flock was all over pomegranate; the next it was star fruit. Keeps guessing and covers more ground nutritionally.
Seeds and Nuts Treats Only, Folks
I get it, those pretty seed bags look tempting and your bird acts like it’s the best thing ever. But after seeing way too many overweight birds with health issues, here’s the deal: seeds should stay under 10% of the daily eats. Use for training, stuff in foraging toys, or the occasional millet spray. A couple almond pieces for the bigger guys or a pinch of canary seed for the littles. That’s plenty.
Mine still give me the big sad eyes begging for more, but I hold firm and they’re all at perfect weight now.
Stuff That Can Really Mess Your Bird Up
This part always feels like the warning label, but it’s saved more than one bird I know. Safe foods for birds are easy to find, but some common ones are straight-up dangerous. Avocado tops the list any part of it can cause heart trouble fast. Chocolate, caffeine, alcohol, salty snacks? Nope. Onions and garlic can wreck their blood cells. Apple seeds, cherry pits, that stuff has compounds you don’t want near them. Raw beans need cooking, and most birds don’t do well with dairy.
I’ve had too many messages from people who lost a bird after one “tiny bite” of guacamole or a dropped chocolate piece. Don’t chance it. When in doubt, text your avian vet or skip it.
How Much, When, and Keeping It Easy
Feed most of the pellets and fresh stuff in the morning when they’re hungry, then top up with veggies midday. Toss anything fresh after a couple hours so it doesn’t go bad. Rough guide: about a tablespoon or two of pellets per 100 grams of body weight, tweak for how active they are or if they’re molting or raising chicks (extra protein from cooked egg or beans a couple times a week helps then).
Fresh water twice a day minimum. I keep two dishes going so one’s always clean while the other gets washed.
It Changes a Bit Depending on Your Bird
Not every bird eats the exact same way, and that’s part of what makes it fun. Big macaws and cockatoos can handle more pellets and the occasional nut. Cockatiels and budgies do great on 50-60% pellets with a few seeds. Canaries and finches still love seeds but the latest advice pushes pellets higher for longer, healthier lives. Lorikeets need their special nectar.
If you’re unsure, take a quick photo and chat with an avian vet they’ll nail it for your specific bird.
Switching Diets Without the Drama
Most new birds come to us hooked on all-seed. You can’t just yank it away cold that stresses them out and can cause problems. I stretch it over weeks: cut the seeds a little each few days while adding the same amount of soaked pellets (maybe with a drop of fruit juice at first). Weigh weekly on a cheap gram scale don’t let them drop more than a couple percent. Hide pellets in toys, pretend to eat with them at the table, make it a game. My first bird took almost three months but now he dives into his bowl like it’s the best thing ever.
Wrapping It Up From a Guy Who’s Done This Plenty
What should you feed your bird? A solid mix of good pellets, heaps of chopped veggies, smart fruit choices, and just a few seeds here and there plus clean water and plenty of your time. Nail the healthy bird diet and you don’t just have a pet. You’ve got a silly, lively friend who whistles more, plays harder, and actually seems to enjoy life.
I’ve seen it turn around so many birds and the people who love them. Your turn now. Grab some peppers, pick up a bag of decent pellets, and start small. Your bird is totally worth the extra five minutes of chopping.
Tell me in the comments what kind of bird you’ve got and what’s in their bowl right now I read every one and love trading stories.
Frequently Asked Questions
Can my bird get by on just seeds?
Nope, not if you want them healthy long-term. Seeds cause all kinds of shortfalls and extra pounds way too often.
How do I tell if the diet’s working?
Bright feathers, steady weight, normal droppings, and good energy. Yearly vet visits with bloodwork catch anything sneaky early.
Are people-food scraps okay sometimes?
Sure, plain cooked rice, pasta, or veggies nothing seasoned, salty, or buttery.
Do they need extra vitamins or powders?
Usually not with decent pellets and fresh foods. Only add if your vet says so after checking.
What about grit do they need any?
Most parrots don’t these days. Tiny seed-eaters like canaries might like a pinch now and then, but ask your vet.
References
- Smart Pet Mom Bird Diet Guide, December 2025
- ASPCA Poison Control Foods to Avoid for Birds (updated 2025)
- Lafeber Company Bird Food Guide and resources
- University of Florida Small Animal Hospital Avian Care, 2026 updates
- PetMD and Best Friends Animal Society toxic foods lists
- Association of Avian Veterinarians husbandry notes, recent 2025-2026
Go chop up something green and make your bird’s day they’ll thank you with a happy little song. 🐦
No Comment! Be the first one.