Neil has been keeping, breeding, and selling budgies at Paradise Pets Swindon since 1988 — over 35 years of daily first-hand experience with these birds and the people who keep them. Strawberry season in Britain produces a predictable wave of questions at the counter about what budgies can and cannot eat from the fruit bowl. The leaf question comes up every summer without fail. This is his honest, complete answer — not just yes or no, but everything a budgie owner needs to know about strawberries, their leaves, and how to offer them correctly.
A mother came in one July morning with her daughter — the daughter was perhaps seven or eight years old and had a budgie called Mango. The daughter had been in the garden picking strawberries and had given Mango a strawberry leaf through the cage bars before her mother had a chance to stop her. The mother wanted to know whether she needed to be worried.
I told her no.
Strawberry leaves are safe for budgies. The daughter had not harmed her bird. Mango had, if anything, been given something genuinely interesting to investigate.
The mother relaxed immediately. Then, with the slightly sheepish smile of someone who has just realised she drove to a pet shop in a minor panic, she asked whether the whole strawberry was also safe.
Yes, I told her, in moderation.
And the seeds on the outside?
Also yes.
And the white bit in the middle?
Still yes.
She laughed. The daughter looked pleased with herself. Mango, presumably, was still investigating the leaf.
I tell this story because it captures something I see every summer. Strawberries sit in a bowl in most British kitchens from June to August, and budgie owners — quite reasonably — want to know what is safe to share. The honest answer is more permissive than most owners expect, with a few specific things worth knowing. Here is all of it.
The Direct Answer — Can Budgies Eat Strawberry Leaves
Yes. Strawberry leaves — from the common garden strawberry, Fragaria × ananassa, and from wild strawberry, Fragaria vesca — are safe for budgies. They contain no compounds that are toxic to birds. They have been eaten by budgies in captivity without documented harm.
The concern that circulates online about strawberry leaves typically involves one of two misunderstandings. The first is confusion with other plants — the Solanaceae family, which includes plants like tomato, potato, and nightshade, does have leaves that contain compounds harmful to birds; strawberries are not in this family and do not share these compounds. The second is a general precautionary approach that treats any unverified plant material as potentially dangerous; this is a reasonable default for unknown plants but strawberry leaves are well-established as safe for birds and do not belong in the unverified category.
- Strawberry leaves are non-toxic to budgies — they contain no alkaloids, glycosides, or other compounds associated with bird toxicity; they are not on any credible list of plants harmful to parrots or small birds
- The leaves contain tannins, which give them a slightly astringent taste — this is the reason some budgies investigate a strawberry leaf enthusiastically and others ignore it; individual taste preference varies considerably; neither response is a health concern
- Wild strawberry leaves have a long history of use in herbal preparations — specifically for their mild astringent and antioxidant properties; while I am not recommending strawberry leaves as medicine for budgies, their history in human use is further evidence that their compounds are not acutely harmful
- Offer leaves that are fresh, unsprayed, and washed — the leaf itself is safe; pesticide or herbicide residue on the leaf is not; a strawberry leaf from a garden where chemicals have been used needs washing thoroughly; a leaf from a chemical-free garden or from an organic source can be offered as is after a quick rinse

What About the Whole Strawberry — Fruit, Seeds, and All
Since strawberry leaves are safe, the natural next question is about the fruit itself, and this is where a slightly more considered answer is needed — not because strawberries are dangerous, but because the high sugar content means there is a sensible limit to how much is appropriate.
- The strawberry fruit is safe for budgies — it contains Vitamin C, folate, potassium, and antioxidants; it is a genuine source of nutrition rather than just a treat food; budgies typically enjoy strawberry and will investigate and eat it readily
- The seeds — the small achenes on the outside of the strawberry — are completely safe — these are the actual fruits of the strawberry plant in botanical terms; they are tiny, soft, and present no choking hazard; they do not need to be removed before offering strawberry to a budgie
- The white central core is also safe — less nutritious and less flavourful than the red flesh, but harmless; budgies may ignore it in favour of the red parts, which is normal preference rather than a safety response
- Moderation is the relevant consideration, not safety — strawberries are high in natural sugar; a budgie that eats large amounts of strawberry regularly is consuming more sugar than a small bird needs and potentially crowding out more nutritious foods; a small piece two or three times a week is appropriate; daily large portions are not
- Remove uneaten strawberry after a few hours — strawberry softens and ferments quickly, particularly in a warm cage; leaving it in overnight creates a hygiene problem; fresh fruit in the cage for a few hours and then removed is the right approach

How to Offer Strawberry and Strawberry Leaves — The Practical Details
How something is offered matters as much as what is offered, particularly with fresh foods that spoil.
- Wash everything before offering — both the fruit and the leaves; a quick rinse under cold water removes surface residues; for leaves from gardens where pesticides may have been used, wash more thoroughly and allow to dry before offering
- Offer at room temperature rather than straight from the refrigerator — cold food is less appealing to birds and can cause brief digestive discomfort in small amounts; allow refrigerated strawberries to come to room temperature before offering
- Attach the leaf to the cage bars with a clip or skewer — leaves offered this way provide foraging enrichment as well as nutrition; the bird has to work at the leaf rather than simply picking it from a bowl; this is more engaging and more similar to how birds encounter food in a natural context
- Cut fruit into appropriately sized pieces — a slice or small chunk that the bird can hold and manipulate is more useful than a piece so large it cannot be managed; budgies enjoy working at food and a manageable piece is more engaging than a large unwieldy one
- Offer on a separate dish from the main seed supply — fresh food in the seed bowl makes the seeds damp and leads to spoilage; a small separate dish or a clip on the cage bars keeps fresh food separate and makes it easier to remove when the time limit is up
- Remove any uneaten fresh food after two to three hours — this applies to leaves as well as fruit; a fresh leaf that has wilted and been partially eaten after three hours in a warm cage is not the same as a fresh leaf; remove it and offer fresh material next time

Other Parts of the Strawberry Plant — What Is Safe and What to Check
This question sometimes extends beyond the leaf and fruit to other parts of the strawberry plant — the runners, the stems, the flowers. Here is the honest answer on each.
- Strawberry runners — the long stems that the plant sends out to propagate — these are safe; the same plant, the same compounds; a runner with a small plantlet attached is an interesting enrichment item for a bird and presents no hazard
- Strawberry flowers — also safe; the white five-petalled flowers of the strawberry plant are edible and non-toxic; some budgies will investigate and nibble flowers offered alongside leaves; this is fine
- Strawberry stems — safe; the stems have the same tannin content as the leaves and present the same absence of harmful compounds; they are tougher in texture and some birds prefer the leaf or fruit to the stem, but the stem itself is harmless
- The only qualification on all of the above is chemical use — any part of a strawberry plant that has been treated with pesticides, herbicides, or fungicides needs washing thoroughly; strawberries are one of the more heavily treated fruits in conventional agriculture; if you are not certain about chemical history, wash everything more thoroughly than you think necessary or use organic sources

What Else From the Summer Garden Is Safe for Budgies
Since this question comes up most often in summer when the garden is producing, and since owners who ask about strawberries usually have several other plants they are curious about, here is a brief honest guide to common summer garden plants and where they sit for budgie safety.
- Raspberry leaves and fruit — safe; very similar situation to strawberry; the leaves are mildly astringent, the fruit high in natural sugar; fine in moderation
- Blackcurrant and redcurrant — the fruit is safe in small amounts; the leaves of Ribes species are generally considered safe in small quantities though less well-documented than strawberry; offer the fruit in moderation
- Apple — the fruit is safe; the seeds are not; apple seeds contain amygdalin which releases cyanide; always remove the core and seeds before offering apple to a budgie; the flesh is nutritious and most budgies enjoy it
- Peas and their pods — safe and often enjoyed; fresh peas or sugar snap peas are a good summer food for budgies
- Courgette — safe and nutritious; raw or very lightly steamed; the skin, flesh, and seeds are all fine
- Tomato — the fruit is safe in small amounts but high in acidity; the leaves and stems are not safe and should never be offered; if offering tomato, use only the fruit with all green material completely removed
- Rhubarb — never — rhubarb leaves and stalks both contain oxalic acid at levels toxic to birds; rhubarb in any form is one of the clear no entries for budgies; do not offer any part of it

Frequently Asked Questions
My budgie ate a strawberry leaf before I could stop it. Is it going to be okay?
Yes. Strawberry leaves are safe for budgies and a budgie that has eaten one — even a whole one — has not been harmed. There is nothing to do and nothing to watch for. The only scenario that might warrant attention is if the leaf had been treated with a pesticide or herbicide immediately before the budgie ate it and a significant amount was consumed, which is an unlikely scenario in a normal household garden situation. If the leaf came from a normal garden strawberry plant and the bird ate it, you can relax.
Can budgies eat strawberry seeds?
Yes. The small seeds on the outside of a strawberry — technically called achenes — are completely safe for budgies. They are tiny, soft, and present no hazard. This is one of the strawberry-related questions where the answer is unequivocally yes with no caveats required.
How much strawberry is safe for a budgie?
A small piece — roughly the equivalent of a quarter to half a standard strawberry — two or three times a week is appropriate. The limiting factor is not toxicity but sugar content; strawberries are sweet and a budgie that eats large amounts regularly is consuming more sugar than it needs. As part of a varied fresh food rotation alongside leafy greens, carrot, and other vegetables, a moderate amount of strawberry is a perfectly reasonable dietary addition.
Can budgies eat frozen strawberries?
Yes, once defrosted and at room temperature. Frozen strawberries are the same fruit after defrosting and present the same nutritional profile as fresh. The texture changes slightly after freezing — the fruit becomes softer — which some birds actually find easier to eat. Allow frozen strawberries to defrost completely and reach room temperature before offering. Do not offer frozen fruit directly from the freezer.
My budgie ignored the strawberry leaf I offered. Should I be concerned?
No. Individual budgies have strong food preferences and some will investigate a strawberry leaf enthusiastically while others ignore it completely. Neither response reflects anything about the bird’s health. If your budgie is not interested in strawberry leaves, try other fresh foods — broccoli, carrot, kale, apple — and find what it does accept. The nutritional value in a strawberry leaf is modest; there is no dietary gap created by a budgie that simply does not like them.
Are wild strawberry leaves safer than garden strawberry leaves?
Both are safe. Wild strawberry — Fragaria vesca — is the species from which garden strawberries were developed; the compound profile is very similar. Wild strawberry leaves collected from unsprayed countryside locations have the advantage of being less likely to have pesticide residue than commercially grown strawberry leaves; wash both before offering. The safety profile of the leaf itself is the same for both.
Where can I get advice about budgie diet in Swindon?
Come in to Paradise Pets at Manor Garden Centre, Cheney Manor Industrial Estate, Swindon SN2 2QJ — or call us on 01793 512400. If you want to talk through what your budgie is eating, what you could add, or whether something specific is safe, I am happy to go through it. Free advice, no obligation. That is how we have done things here for 35 years.
One Last Thing From Me
The daughter who had given Mango the strawberry leaf — I saw her again at the end of that summer. She had been to the shop twice more during the season, and both times she had come in with a new food question. Could Mango have a piece of the peach they were eating? Could he have a raspberry? Could he have a piece of the corn on the cob from dinner?
Each time, I gave her the honest answer. Peach yes, remove the stone. Raspberry yes, small amount. Corn yes, he would enjoy it.
By the end of the summer she had a budgie with a considerably more varied diet than when the season started, and she had learnt the principle behind the specific answers — which foods are safe, which need caution, and which are outright no.
The strawberry leaf question that started it was the right question. Not because strawberry leaves required a complicated answer — they do not — but because it led her to think about the diet more broadly and ask the questions that produced a better-fed bird.
That is what most food questions actually are. Not emergencies. Starting points for a more informed ownership.
Strawberry leaves are safe. Offer them freely. And while you are at it, think about what else from the summer garden your bird might enjoy.
Questions About What Your Budgie Can Eat? Come In And Ask.
Whether it is a specific food you are not sure about or a broader question about diet, I will give you an honest answer. Free advice, no obligation. That is how we have done things here for 35 years.


