Minimum Bird Cage Size by Species
Calculate the minimum cage dimensions for your bird species. Width, height, and bar spacing guidelines.
Bird Cage Sizing Guidelines
The most important dimension is width, not height — birds fly horizontally, not vertically. A cage should be at least 1.5× the bird's wingspan in width. Bigger is always better — cage size directly correlates with bird wellbeing. Birds spending more time in their cage need larger cages; birds with extensive out-of-cage time can tolerate slightly smaller cages (but never below minimums).
Species-Specific Requirements
Budgies/Finches: Minimum 18-20" wide, 1/2" bar spacing. Cockatiels: 24" wide, 5/8-3/4" bars. African Greys/Conures: 30-36" wide, 3/4-1" bars. Macaws/Cockatoos: 40-48" wide, 1-1.5" bars, heavy-gauge steel (these birds bend standard bars). Bar spacing is a safety issue — too wide and small birds can get their heads stuck or escape.
Feather plucking — where birds pull out their own feathers — affects 10-15% of pet parrots. The #1 cause: boredom from inadequate cage size and enrichment. A larger cage with regularly rotated toys, foraging opportunities, and daily out-of-cage time prevents most cases. Once established, feather plucking is extremely difficult to stop — prevention through proper housing is essential.