Neil has kept, bred, and sold budgies at Paradise Pets Swindon since 1988 — over 35 years of first-hand experience with these birds. Tail bobbing in a budgie is one of the most important health signals these birds produce. Most of the time it means nothing. Sometimes it means get to a vet today. Knowing which one you are looking at takes less than two minutes. This guide explains how.
“My budgie’s tail keeps bobbing up and down. Is that normal?”
I hear this regularly. And the answer — genuinely, honestly — is: it depends on one specific thing. Not on how much the tail is bobbing. Not on how old the bird is. Not on whether there are other symptoms. On one thing first, before anything else.
Is the bird at rest?
That question divides every tail-bobbing case I have ever seen into two entirely separate categories. The first category is entirely harmless and requires no action whatsoever. The second category is one of the clearest emergency signals a small bird can produce — and a signal that far too many owners miss, wait on, or underestimate until it is too late.
Thirty-five years of this has taught me that tail bobbing is one of the most useful things a budgie can show you — if you know how to read it. This guide teaches you how.
The Question That Tells You Everything — Is the Bird at Rest?
Before you read anything else, answer this question about what you are seeing.
Is the tail bobbing happening while the bird is sitting still on its perch — not having recently flown, not mid-activity, simply resting — and does the bobbing have a rhythmic quality, moving in time with each breath?
Or did the tail bobbing start after a burst of activity — flying around the room, being active in the cage, being chased or startled — and has it already stopped or reduced significantly within the last two to three minutes?
If the first: keep reading, particularly the respiratory sections. This needs your attention today.
If the second: this is almost certainly normal and I will explain exactly why in the next section.
If you are not certain which one you are looking at — sit near the cage and watch the bird for three minutes without disturbing it. Is the tail moving rhythmically with each breath, or has it settled? The answer will be clear within three minutes.
Normal Tail Bobbing — After Exercise and Exertion
A budgie that has just been flying — zooming around the room during out-of-cage time, active in the cage, or startled into rapid movement — will often show visible tail movement for a short period as it recovers its breath. This is entirely normal. It is the bird’s equivalent of a person being slightly out of breath after running up the stairs.
The tail bobs because the bird is using abdominal muscles more actively than usual to drive deeper breathing. As the breathing demand decreases with recovery, the tail bobbing reduces and stops. In a healthy bird, this takes one to two minutes at most.
If you have just watched your budgie fly several circuits around the living room and noticed the tail bobbing when it landed — watch it for ninety seconds. If the bobbing is already slowing and has largely stopped within that window, you are looking at post-exercise recovery. This is not a sign of anything wrong. It is a sign that your bird was getting exercise, which is exactly what it should be doing.
The important thing is the timeframe. A few minutes of tail movement after activity — normal. Tail movement that persists for ten minutes, twenty minutes, or that is present when the bird has been sitting still for an hour — not normal, and needs the investigation I describe in the sections below.
The Tail Bob That Is Never Normal — Respiratory Distress at Rest
Now for the other category. The one that matters.
A budgie that is sitting on its perch — not having recently flown, not stressed or startled — and whose tail is moving rhythmically with each breath is a bird that is working harder to breathe than a healthy bird should.
The mechanics: breathing in budgies normally involves very little visible body movement. The chest and abdomen maintain a relatively still posture between breaths. When the respiratory system is compromised — airways obstructed, air sacs damaged, lungs working below normal capacity — the bird recruits additional muscles to maintain adequate oxygen intake. Those muscles include the muscles around the tail base. The visible result is a tail that bobs down with each exhalation and up with each inhalation, consistently, rhythmically, at rest.
This is one of the clearest visible signs a bird can show that something is wrong with its respiratory system. It is not subtle once you know to look for it. And it is never normal.
The reasons a budgie’s respiratory system can be compromised are several — I cover the most common ones below. But the cause, in the first instance, is less important than the fact that it is happening. A bird showing tail bobbing at rest needs to be assessed by a vet with bird experience today. Not next week. Not in a few days when you can get an appointment. Today.
This is not overcautious advice. Small birds have limited respiratory reserve. A bird that is already working hard enough to show visible respiratory effort at rest has very little additional capacity. Decline from that state happens faster than owners expect, particularly if something in the environment continues to challenge the compromised system.
Respiratory Infection — The Most Common Cause
Bacterial and viral respiratory infections are the most frequent reason for tail bobbing at rest in UK pet budgies. They develop when the bird’s immune system is unable to clear a pathogen from the respiratory tract — which can happen in a bird that is nutritionally compromised, stressed, or has been exposed to a new bird or a new environment.
The pattern of illness is typically gradual. The bird may have seemed slightly off for a few days before the tail bobbing becomes obvious. Slightly less vocal. Slightly less active. Appetite a touch reduced. These are the early signs that were present before the visible respiratory effort became apparent.
By the time tail bobbing at rest is visible, the infection is not early stage. The bird has been managing the infection for some time and is now at the point where its respiratory capacity is measurably reduced.
Treatment is antibiotics — prescribed by a vet after examination, sometimes with a swab to identify the specific pathogen. It works well when started at an appropriate stage. It becomes less effective the longer it is left.
The other respiratory signs to look for alongside the tail bobbing: any sound to the breathing — clicks, wheezes, a raspy quality. Any discharge from the nostrils. Any change in the bird’s voice — a different quality to the chirping, or a reduction in vocalisation. These confirm that what you are seeing is respiratory in nature.

Air Sac Mites — The Budgie-Specific Cause Most UK Owners Have Never Heard Of
This one deserves its own section because it is common in UK budgies, it is entirely invisible to the naked eye, and it is one of the most underdiagnosed causes of respiratory symptoms in pet budgies.
Air sac mites — Sternostoma tracheacolum — are parasites that live in the trachea, air sacs, and lungs of affected birds. They are transmitted between birds through direct contact — particularly between a parent bird feeding pups, which is why they can persist in breeding populations. A budgie purchased from a seller who has an undetected air sac mite problem may arrive in your home already infected.
The symptoms: respiratory tail bobbing, a clicking or squeaky sound when the bird breathes, reduced exercise tolerance, and — in significant infestations — an audible wheeze or rasp. The bird may cough or seem to be clearing its throat. In severe cases, the respiratory distress can be significant.
You cannot see air sac mites. There are no visible parasites, no skin changes, nothing external that reveals their presence. Diagnosis is made by a vet through clinical examination — listening to the chest, sometimes using a torch held against the bird’s throat to illuminate the trachea, and identifying the characteristic signs.
Treatment is antiparasitic medication — administered as drops. It is effective, particularly when caught early. A bird that has had air sac mites for a long time without treatment may have more significant respiratory damage that limits the extent of recovery, which is why catching it early matters.
If you have a budgie with respiratory tail bobbing and you have recently bought it, or if it lives with other budgies from the same source — mention air sac mites specifically to the vet. It is a differential diagnosis worth ruling out.
Aspergillosis — The Slow One That Is Easy to Miss
Aspergillosis is a fungal infection of the respiratory system — caused by Aspergillus mould — that produces respiratory symptoms slowly and subtly in the early stages. A bird with early aspergillosis may show only mild tail bobbing, slightly reduced activity, and a modest change in voice quality. These signs can be easy to attribute to other causes or dismiss as minor.
As the condition progresses, respiratory compromise increases. The tail bobbing becomes more pronounced, breathing may become audibly laboured, and the bird loses weight and condition as the infection puts increasing strain on its system.
Aspergillosis is difficult to diagnose definitively without imaging or endoscopy. It is worth raising with a vet if respiratory tail bobbing has been present for some weeks without a clear cause, particularly if the bird has had any exposure to damp bedding or mouldy food — the primary sources of environmental Aspergillus.
Treatment is possible with antifungal medication but is prolonged and not always successful, particularly in advanced cases. Earlier diagnosis gives significantly better outcomes than late diagnosis.
Heart Disease and Fluid — In Older Birds
Older budgies — those from five years onwards — can develop cardiac disease. The heart works less efficiently, fluid can accumulate in the body cavity, and the resulting pressure on the air sacs reduces the bird’s breathing capacity. The visible result is tail bobbing at rest, often alongside a distended abdomen, reduced activity, and reduced exercise tolerance.
This is not a curable condition in the way that an infection is curable. But it is manageable — diuretics and supportive care can significantly improve a bird’s quality of life and extend the comfortable period. The key is not to assume that an older bird’s declining respiratory capacity is simply old age and leave it unmanaged. An assessment and, where appropriate, treatment can make a meaningful difference to how the bird’s later months or years go.
If your bird is five or older and has developed respiratory tail bobbing — see a vet with avian experience specifically, not a general practice that rarely handles birds. The assessment of cardiac disease in a budgie requires a level of familiarity with the species that varies significantly between practices.
How to Tell Which One You Are Looking At — The Two-Minute Assessment
You do not need to diagnose the specific cause. That is the vet’s job. But you do need to determine, before you decide what to do, whether you are looking at post-exercise bobbing or respiratory distress at rest. Here is how.
Step one: note what the bird was doing in the five minutes before you noticed the bobbing. Was it active — flying, being chased by the other bird, just returned from out-of-cage time? Or was it sitting quietly when you noticed?
Step two: time how long the bobbing has been happening. Look at the time right now. Watch the bird without disturbing it for two to three minutes. Is the bobbing reducing? Is it clearly slowing down as the bird settles? Or is it consistent — the same rhythm, with every breath, showing no sign of reducing?
Step three: look at the bird’s overall posture. A bird in post-exercise recovery is alert, upright, bright-eyed, clearly aware of its surroundings. A bird in respiratory distress often has a slightly puffed or hunched posture, half-closed eyes, and may be sitting lower than its usual position. These are different presentations.
Step four: listen. Move close to the cage and listen to the bird’s breathing. A healthy bird breathes in silence. A bird with respiratory compromise may produce audible sounds — clicks, wheezes, a slight rasp. Any audible breathing sound in a resting bird is a vet-today signal regardless of what the tail is doing.

What Else to Look For Alongside the Tail Bob
Any of these alongside persistent tail bobbing at rest adds urgency to the situation.
Audible breathing sounds. A click, wheeze, or rasp with each breath. Healthy budgies breathe silently.
Discharge from the nostrils. Any wetness, crustiness, or discolouration around the cere is abnormal. It indicates the infection has reached the upper respiratory tract.
A change in voice quality. Budgies chirp constantly. A bird that is chirping less than usual, or whose calls sound different — raspier, quieter, a different quality — has a respiratory system that is not functioning normally.
Puffed feathers. Feathers fluffed at rest, particularly combined with respiratory tail bobbing, indicate a bird that is unwell. The puffing is an attempt to retain heat as the body struggles.
Sitting lower than usual. A bird that has moved from its usual high sleeping perch to a lower position — or is on the cage floor — is conserving energy. This is a late sign.
Reduced appetite or droppings. A bird in respiratory distress often eats less, producing fewer or smaller droppings. Check the cage floor.
The more of these that accompany the tail bobbing, the more urgently the vet needs to see the bird.
- “It’s probably just hot in the room” — Heat can cause slightly increased respiratory rate in birds, but does not produce rhythmic tail bobbing at rest in the way respiratory pathology does. If the room temperature is normal or mild and the bird is tail-bobbing at rest — heat is not the explanation. Respiratory compromise is.
- “It’s been doing it for a week so it can’t be that serious” — A week of respiratory tail bobbing means a week of the bird managing a compromised system while the underlying cause progresses. Duration does not indicate severity in a reassuring direction. A week of respiratory symptoms is a week the problem has been developing. Act now.
- “It stopped for a while so I thought it was getting better” — Respiratory conditions in birds wax and wane depending on the bird’s activity level, the temperature, and fluctuations in the underlying condition. Temporary improvement is not resolution. If tail bobbing at rest has been occurring on and off, the cause has not gone away.
- “I can’t get a vet appointment until next week” — A budgie with respiratory tail bobbing at rest cannot wait a week. Call a vet and describe what you are seeing — most practices will fit an urgent case in sooner when the symptoms are explained clearly. If your usual vet cannot accommodate urgent small animal cases, find one who can. Ask us for a recommendation if you are in the Swindon area.
- “It’s old — I expect it to breathe differently at its age” — Age-related cardiac and respiratory changes do occur in older budgies. They also need veterinary management, not acceptance. An older bird with respiratory tail bobbing deserves an assessment and, where possible, treatment that improves its quality of life for whatever time it has remaining.
When to See a Vet — No Grey Area Here
- Tail bobbing appeared after a burst of flight or activity, is clearly slowing down, and has largely stopped within two minutes.
Post-exercise recovery. Normal. No action needed. If it concerns you, watch the bird for another five minutes to confirm it has fully resolved and the bird appears entirely normal at rest. - Tail bobbing is present at rest, consistent with each breath, and has not reduced after two to three minutes of observation.
Respiratory distress. Call a vet today. Describe what you are seeing — persistent tail bobbing at rest, how long it has been present, any other symptoms. Ask to be seen today. - Tail bobbing at rest with any audible breathing sound — click, wheeze, or rasp.
Urgent. Call a vet this morning. Audible breathing in a resting bird indicates significant respiratory compromise. Air sac mites, respiratory infection, or aspergillosis are the most likely causes. All need treatment that cannot be delayed. - Tail bobbing at rest alongside puffed feathers, a bird sitting on the floor, discharge from nostrils, or significantly reduced activity.
Emergency. Call a vet immediately. Do not wait for a convenient appointment. Keep the bird warm while you arrange to be seen. - Tail bobbing that has been present intermittently for several days and you have been waiting to see if it resolves.
Stop waiting. Call a vet today. Whatever has been causing this has now had several days to develop. The window for effective early intervention is closing. - Bird is five or older and developing respiratory tail bobbing for the first time, with a distended-looking abdomen.
Possible cardiac disease. Vet with avian experience, this week. Not necessarily an emergency at this specific moment but not something to leave unassessed. Cardiac management can significantly improve quality of life in older birds when started in time.
What I Tell Owners at the Counter
When someone describes tail bobbing to me, the two questions I ask first are: was the bird active immediately before it started, and is the bird sitting still right now with it still happening?
The answers to those two questions resolve the situation in most cases within sixty seconds. Either I am telling them their bird was getting some healthy exercise and what they saw is normal recovery — or I am telling them to call a vet today and explaining why this cannot wait.
The reason I am direct about this is that I have seen the outcomes of both responses. The owners who acted quickly on respiratory tail bobbing, with the right vet, got their bird treated and recovered it. The owners who waited — sometimes a week, sometimes longer — sometimes got there in time and sometimes did not. Small birds decline faster than the waiting period most owners allow themselves.
This is one of the few situations in budgie ownership where my consistent advice is: do not wait to see if it gets better. Respiratory compromise does not tend to resolve on its own in a captive bird. It tends to progress. Get it seen.
Come in if you want to talk through what you are seeing before you decide. We are at Manor Garden Centre, Cheney Manor Industrial Estate, Swindon, SN2 2QJ — open every day. Or call us on 01793 512400. If you bring the bird, we can look at it with you and help you assess. If the situation looks urgent, we will tell you so clearly.
Visit Us at Paradise Pets Swindon
We stock budgies year-round — all UK-bred, all handled from a young age. If your budgie’s tail is bobbing and you are not sure what you are looking at, come in with the bird or call us to describe what you are seeing. We have dealt with this situation many times and we will give you an honest assessment of what needs to happen next.
We also stock a full range of cockatiels, canaries, and finches, alongside guinea pigs, rabbits, and gerbils and hamsters.


