Neil has kept, bred, and sold budgies at Paradise Pets Swindon since 1988 — over 35 years of first-hand experience with these birds. Budgie vomiting is one of the most serious symptoms these birds can show — and one of the most consistently misread. The sign most owners miss is not the vomiting itself. It is what the vomiting looks like compared to something entirely normal. This guide draws that line clearly.
Someone comes in and says their budgie has been bringing up food.
The first thing I do is ask them to describe exactly what they saw.
Because there are two completely different things that can look like a budgie bringing up food. One of them is entirely normal — a sign of affection that every healthy budgie does. The other is a medical emergency. They can look similar to an observer who does not know the difference. And confusing one for the other — in either direction — has real consequences.
Owners who see normal bonding behaviour and assume it is vomiting arrive panicked at the vet with a healthy bird. Owners who see vomiting and assume it is normal bonding behaviour wait at home while the bird deteriorates. Both situations happen regularly. Both are completely preventable with one clear piece of knowledge.
That knowledge is what this guide provides. First, the distinction — quickly and clearly. Then everything you need to know about actual vomiting in budgies: why it happens, what it means, and what to do.
The Sign Most Owners Miss — Check the Head Feathers First
Before anything else, go and look at your bird’s head.
Look specifically at the feathers on top of the head, around the cere, and along the sides of the face. Is there seed, wet debris, or any sticky residue in the feathers in those areas?
If yes — this is vomiting. A bird cannot direct vomit away from itself. The uncontrolled ejection of crop contents sends material in all directions, including onto the bird’s own head. Seed stuck to the top of the head is one of the most reliable single indicators of true vomiting in budgies, and it is the one that most owners do not notice unless they know to look for it.
If the feathers are clean and dry, and the material you saw was directed toward a specific object — a mirror, a toy, your finger — with the bird performing a characteristic bobbing motion beforehand, this is almost certainly regurgitation. Regurgitation is a voluntary, directed process. It looks controlled because it is controlled. The bird is choosing to do it, and the material goes where the bird intends.
I have written in detail about the regurgitation versus vomiting distinction in our guide on why budgies regurgitate. Read that alongside this guide if you are not yet certain which situation you are in. The present guide assumes you are dealing with the medical situation — actual vomiting — and covers that comprehensively.

Vomiting Versus Regurgitation — The Complete Distinction
I want to spend a moment completing this distinction properly before moving on to causes, because getting it right is the whole foundation of what follows.
Regurgitation is voluntary, calm, and directed. Before it happens, the bird bobs its head rhythmically — a slow, deliberate up-and-down pumping motion. The material produced is a compact, semi-digested ball of seed, directed toward a specific target. The bird returns to normal behaviour immediately. The head feathers are clean. There is no distress.
Vomiting is involuntary and uncontrolled. There is no head-bobbing beforehand. The bird may shake its head, appear uncomfortable, or seem to heave. Material is scattered — on the cage bars, on toys, on the perches, and on the bird itself. The bird does not return immediately to normal behaviour. It often sits hunched or puffed afterward. The head feathers have wet or sticky material in them.
One more distinction worth knowing: regurgitation produces partially digested seed — food that has been in the crop and has begun to be broken down. Vomiting can produce seed that appears relatively undigested, or it can produce fluid, mucus, or material that is very different from normal food. The appearance of what is produced is another piece of information.
If you are looking at scattered material with debris on the bird’s head and a bird that seems unwell afterward — this guide is for you. Keep reading.
Sour Crop — The Most Common Cause
Sour crop is the most frequent cause of vomiting I see in UK pet budgies, and it is entirely treatable when caught and addressed promptly.
The crop is the first chamber in a bird’s digestive system — a muscular pouch where food is held after swallowing and before it progresses to the proventriculus and gizzard. In a healthy bird, food passes through the crop efficiently. When the crop becomes infected — by bacteria, yeast, or Trichomonas — the normal movement is disrupted. Food ferments in the crop rather than progressing. The bird vomits the fermented contents.
The smell is a distinctive indicator. Vomit from a bird with sour crop often has a sour, yeasty, or fermented odour — noticeably different from the neutral smell of normal regurgitation. If you are close to the bird and can detect an unusual smell alongside the vomiting, sour crop is the most likely cause.
Other signs alongside the vomiting: the crop may feel unusually soft or swollen when gently palpated. The bird may be lethargic and less interested in eating. Droppings may be abnormal — more watery, or with changes in the green and white components.
Treatment is antifungal medication for a yeast-based infection, or antibiotic for bacterial causes — the specific type determined by a vet after examination, sometimes with a swab or crop wash. It is effective when the right medication is prescribed. It is not effective when owners try to manage sour crop at home without veterinary diagnosis — because the cause (yeast versus bacteria versus Trichomonas) determines the treatment, and incorrect treatment can worsen the situation.
Do not attempt to massage the crop or encourage vomiting at home. Take the bird to a vet.
Megabacteria — The One That Looks Like a Healthy Bird Getting Thinner
Macrorhabdus ornithogaster — commonly called megabacteria, though it is technically a yeast-like organism — is one of the most common and most underdiagnosed conditions in UK pet budgies. The reason it is underdiagnosed is that it is easy to miss.
A bird with megabacteria often appears to eat normally. The seed bowl empties. The bird is active enough. It does not look dramatically ill. But it is losing weight — slowly, consistently, week by week — because the infection in the proventriculus is disrupting digestion. The bird is eating but not retaining adequate nutrition from what it eats.
The vomiting associated with megabacteria is not always dramatic. The bird may vomit intermittently rather than constantly. The more noticeable sign is the combination of continued apparent eating alongside progressive weight loss, and the presence of undigested or poorly digested seeds in the droppings.
Check the keel bone — run a finger along the central breastbone. In a healthy bird at normal weight, there is muscle on either side of the bone and it is not sharply pronounced. In a bird losing weight from megabacteria, the keel bone becomes increasingly prominent — less flesh either side, the bone feeling like a sharp ridge. This can progress over weeks before the owner notices it unless they are specifically checking.
Diagnosis is made via faecal smear — a simple test that a vet with bird experience can perform in-house. Treatment is antifungal medication. It works, particularly when the bird is not severely debilitated. The challenge is catching it before significant weight loss has occurred, which requires the owner to know to look for the early signs.
If your budgie has been vomiting occasionally and losing weight despite appearing to eat — megabacteria is the first thing to test for. Mention it specifically to the vet.
Toxin Ingestion — When It Starts Suddenly
A budgie that vomits suddenly — without a gradual build-up, without preceding changes in behaviour, without an obvious illness developing over days — may have ingested something toxic.
The toxic substances most likely to cause acute vomiting in a pet budgie:
Heavy metals. Zinc from cage fittings, galvanised wire, cheap painted toys, or galvanised bells. Lead from old painted surfaces the bird has chewed. Heavy metal toxicity causes vomiting, neurological signs, and rapid deterioration. This is the reason I always advise checking every metal component in a budgie’s cage before it goes in.
Toxic plants. A budgie given access to a houseplant it should not have reached — avocado, daffodil, lily, philodendron, dieffenbachia — can develop acute vomiting alongside neurological or cardiovascular signs depending on the plant. If the bird has had any access to plants outside its cage, identify what those plants are and tell the vet.
Chemical residues. Cleaning products used near the cage, insecticides, recently applied varnish, paint fumes. A bird that vomits after something in its environment was cleaned or treated has potentially ingested or inhaled a chemical irritant.
If sudden vomiting coincides with any of these possibilities — tell the vet what the bird may have been exposed to. This information directly affects what treatment is appropriate and how urgently it needs to happen.
Sudden vomiting with a suspected toxic cause is a vet-today, same-hour situation. Do not wait.
Proventricular Dilation Disease — The Progressive One
Proventricular Dilation Disease — PDD — is a viral condition affecting the nerves of the gastrointestinal tract, causing the proventriculus and other digestive organs to dilate and lose their normal motility. Food that enters cannot be properly processed or moved along.
The presentation includes vomiting, weight loss despite apparent eating, and a distinctive sign in the droppings: undigested seed visible in the faecal component. When a bird that is eating whole seeds passes whole seeds in its droppings rather than digested matter, this is a strong indicator that the gizzard and proventriculus are not functioning correctly.
PDD is progressive and currently has no cure, though management with anti-inflammatory medication can slow progression and improve quality of life. Early diagnosis matters for management decisions and for preventing spread to other birds — PDD is contagious between birds.
If your budgie has chronic vomiting with undigested seeds in the droppings and progressive weight loss — PDD is a differential diagnosis the vet should consider, alongside megabacteria. The two conditions share presenting symptoms and require different management.
Egg Binding — In Female Budgies Only
A female budgie that cannot pass an egg may vomit as part of the abdominal distress associated with the blockage. Egg binding is a life-threatening condition — a bird that cannot pass an egg can die within twenty-four to forty-eight hours if the obstruction is not resolved.
The signs alongside vomiting in a potentially egg-bound female: sitting low in the cage or on the floor, a swollen or distended abdomen, straining movements, lethargy, and tail bobbing from abdominal effort. The bird may also have walked with a wide stance or seemed unable to grip a perch normally.
If you have a female budgie and any of these signs accompany the vomiting — this is an emergency vet visit, today, immediately. Egg binding does not resolve without intervention. The longer it is left, the lower the bird’s chances.
Keep the bird warm in transit — warmth relaxes the muscles and can sometimes allow passage of the egg without intervention, but this is not reliable enough to wait on at home. Vet first.
What to Do Right Now — Before You Get to the Vet
If you have confirmed that your budgie is vomiting — debris on the head feathers, material scattered randomly, bird seems unwell — here is what to do while you arrange to see a vet.
Keep the bird warm. A sick bird loses heat faster than a well one. Place a heat lamp at one end of the cage, or a wrapped warm water bottle against one side. Around 30 degrees Celsius. Keep the other side cooler so the bird can move away from the heat. Do not let the bird get cold.
Remove the mirror if there is one. A bird that is vomiting does not need the additional stimulus of a mirror directing it to repeat the behaviour. Remove it temporarily.
Provide easily accessible food and water. A vomiting bird may not be eating much, but fresh water needs to be available at all times. Hydration is important in a bird that is losing fluid through vomiting.
Do not attempt home treatments. I hear about people giving honey, probiotic drinks, or human digestive remedies to vomiting budgies. None of these address the cause. Some of them worsen the situation. The correct treatment depends on the specific cause, which requires a diagnosis. Supportive warmth while you get to the vet — nothing else.
Call ahead to the vet. Tell them you have a budgie that is vomiting — confirmed by material on the bird’s head feathers, scattered material in the cage, and the bird seeming unwell. This helps them triage the urgency correctly when you arrive.
- “It’s just bringing up food — they do that sometimes” — Budgies regurgitate voluntarily as a bonding behaviour. They do not vomit without a cause. If the material is on the bird’s head, on the bars, scattered randomly, and the bird looks unwell — “they do that sometimes” is not the correct interpretation. Confirm the distinction and act accordingly.
- “It’s been vomiting for a few days but it’s still eating” — A bird that is still eating but vomiting regularly may have megabacteria — eating normally while the infection prevents proper digestion. The fact that the bird is still eating does not mean the situation is stable. Check the keel bone. If it is becoming more prominent, the bird is losing weight despite eating. That needs a vet.
- “I’ll see if it improves over the weekend” — Vomiting in a budgie does not spontaneously resolve over a weekend in the way that mild human nausea might. It is a symptom of a specific condition that requires specific treatment. Waiting over a weekend means two more days of deterioration in a bird that already has limited reserves.
- “The vet said it was probably just stress” — Stress does not cause vomiting in budgies in the direct sense. Stress suppresses immunity and can allow latent conditions to become active — but the vomiting itself has a physical cause. If a vet has suggested vomiting is stress-related without investigating further, a second opinion from a vet with specific bird experience is worth seeking.
- “I gave it some apple cider vinegar — I read it helps with sour crop” — Apple cider vinegar is not a treatment for sour crop. Sour crop caused by bacterial infection requires antibiotics. Sour crop caused by yeast requires antifungal medication. Vinegar does not provide either. The delay in seeking appropriate treatment that home remedies cause is the problem, not the vinegar itself.
When to See a Vet — Crystal Clear
- Confirmed vomiting — material on the bird’s head feathers, scattered in the cage, bird seems unwell or puffed.
Vet today. Call ahead, describe what you are seeing. This applies regardless of how many times the vomiting has occurred — even once, confirmed as vomiting, warrants same-day assessment. - Bird is eating but losing weight — keel bone increasingly prominent — with occasional vomiting episodes.
Vet this week, and ask specifically about megabacteria testing. Bring the bird in and ask for a faecal smear. The sooner this is diagnosed, the better the treatment outcome. - Sudden onset vomiting with possible toxic exposure — new metal objects in cage, access to plants, recent cleaning or chemical use nearby.
Vet today, urgently. Tell the vet specifically what the bird may have been exposed to. Toxin ingestion moves fast in a bird this small. - Female bird vomiting alongside sitting low, swollen abdomen, or straining movements.
Emergency — vet today immediately. Keep the bird warm in transit. Egg binding does not wait. - Chronic vomiting with undigested whole seeds visible in droppings and progressive weight loss.
Vet with avian experience, soon, for thorough investigation. PDD and megabacteria are both in the differential. Both require specialist assessment. - You saw the bird bobbing its head, material went to a specific target, bird’s head feathers are clean, bird returned to normal immediately.
Regurgitation — not vomiting. Read our guide on why budgies regurgitate to understand what you are seeing and whether any action is needed.
What I Tell Owners at the Counter
When someone describes their budgie bringing up food, the first question I ask is always the same: was there anything on the bird’s head?
That question resolves the majority of these conversations quickly. Head feathers clean, directed behaviour, bird returned to normal — regurgitation. Material on the head, scattered cage, bird looks off — vomiting.
The owners who catch vomiting early — who notice the head feathers, who come in or call on the day it happens rather than waiting — give their bird the best chance of a full recovery. Sour crop treated promptly resolves well. Megabacteria caught before significant weight loss is lost responds well to treatment. The conditions that cause vomiting in budgies are, in most cases, manageable when addressed at the right time.
What does not work is waiting. A budgie’s small body size and high metabolic rate mean that deterioration from a vomiting illness progresses faster than most owners expect. The days that are lost waiting are days the bird does not have.
If you are not sure what you are looking at — come in. Bring the bird or a clear video on your phone. We are at Manor Garden Centre, Cheney Manor Industrial Estate, Swindon, SN2 2QJ — open every day. Or call us on 01793 512400. We will help you work out quickly whether what you are seeing is a concern or not.
Visit Us at Paradise Pets Swindon
We stock budgies year-round — all UK-bred, all handled from a young age. If your budgie is vomiting or showing signs of illness, come in and talk to us before you decide what to do. Bring the bird if you can, or a video of the behaviour on your phone. Free advice, no obligation — and if we think it needs a vet today, we will tell you so clearly.
We also stock a full range of cockatiels, canaries, and finches, alongside guinea pigs, rabbits, and gerbils and hamsters.


