Neil has run Paradise Pets Swindon since 1988 — over 35 years of keeping, breeding, and advising on budgies. A budgie drinking noticeably more water than usual is one of those symptoms that owners often dismiss — and occasionally should not. This is his honest guide on what it means and what to do.
A retired gentleman came in one afternoon and told me something that I have heard, in various forms, many times over the years.
“My budgie has started emptying his water dish every day,” he said. “Used to last him two or three days. Now it is gone by lunchtime.”
He had noticed the change. He had been paying attention. That alone puts him ahead of a lot of owners — because changes in water consumption in a budgie are easy to miss if you are not watching, and they are one of the more useful early indicators that something may have shifted.
Now, the honest answer in most cases is that the explanation is simple and harmless. A hot day. A change in diet. A new food that is drier than what the bird was eating before. These things can all change how much a budgie drinks, and they require nothing more than acknowledgement.
But in some cases — and this is the part worth knowing — significantly increased drinking in a budgie is an early sign of a health problem that is much easier to address when caught at this stage than later. Knowing which situation you are in is the whole point of this article.
After 35 years of working with budgies at Paradise Pets, here is how I think about it.

How Much Water Should A Budgie Drink?
Before we go into causes, it helps to have a sense of what normal looks like — because “too much” is a relative term, and what seems like a lot to one owner is entirely normal for another bird.
A healthy budgie typically drinks between 3 and 5ml of water per 100g of body weight per day. In practical terms, a standard budgie weighing around 35 to 40 grams will drink somewhere between 1 and 3 teaspoons of water daily. That is not a large amount. A water dish that has not visibly reduced over one or two days is not unusual.
What changes this baseline significantly:
- Temperature — a budgie in a warm room in summer will drink noticeably more than the same bird in a cool room in winter. This is normal physiology.
- Diet — a bird eating mostly dry seed drinks more than one eating plenty of fresh vegetables, which contain significant moisture. If you have recently reduced fresh food, expect water consumption to rise.
- Activity level — a more active bird uses more water. A bird that has recently been given more out-of-cage time, or a new companion to interact with, may drink more simply because it is more active.
- Medication — some medications, particularly certain antibiotics, increase thirst as a side effect.
- Moulting — some birds drink slightly more during a heavy moult.
If any of these explain the change you have noticed, and the bird is otherwise normal — eating well, active, alert, producing normal droppings — you are most likely looking at a normal variation rather than a health concern.
If the change is significant, unexplained, and persistent, keep reading.

The 6 Real Causes of Excessive Drinking in Budgies
Cause 1: Environmental Heat — The Most Common Explanation
This is where I start with almost every case of a budgie suddenly drinking more, because it is the most frequent explanation and the most easily confirmed.
Budgies regulate their body temperature partly through increased water intake and through what is called gular fluttering — a rapid vibration of the throat that increases evaporative cooling. When the ambient temperature rises, their water consumption rises with it. A budgie in a UK home in July, particularly one near a south-facing window or in a room where the temperature regularly climbs above 25°C, may drink two to three times its usual amount.
- What is the room temperature? Above 25°C regularly — heat-driven drinking is very likely. Check with a thermometer if you are not certain.
- Is the cage in direct sunlight? A cage in a south or west-facing window can reach temperatures that are dangerous to a budgie in summer. Even if the room feels comfortable to you, the cage may be significantly warmer.
- Did the drinking increase around the same time temperatures rose? A correlation with the UK spring and summer is a strong indicator.
- Is the bird showing any other signs of heat stress? Wings held slightly away from the body, open-mouth breathing, or sitting very still are signs the bird is overheating rather than just warm.
What to do
Move the cage out of direct sunlight. Ensure the room has adequate ventilation — a gentle breeze is fine, a direct draught on the cage is not. Ensure fresh water is available at all times in warm weather and change it more frequently in hot conditions. If the bird is showing signs of heat stress rather than just drinking more, move it to a cooler part of the home immediately.
Cause 2: Dietary Changes — Often The Owner Does Not Connect The Two
This one requires no medical concern at all, but it surprises a lot of owners because the connection between diet and water consumption is not obvious until you think about it.
A budgie that has switched from a diet with plenty of fresh vegetables — which contain 85 to 95 percent water by weight — to a predominantly seed-based diet will drink significantly more from its water dish to compensate. The bird has the same water requirement; it is just sourcing it differently. Similarly, a bird that has been given drier treats or pellets where it previously ate fresh food will compensate through the water dish.
- Has the amount of fresh food in the diet recently changed?
- Has a new food been introduced that is drier than what the bird was eating before?
- Has the bird stopped eating certain foods it previously ate — such as cucumber or lettuce, which are very high in water?
- Has anything changed about how food is offered — different times, different amounts?
What to do
If diet explains the change, the solution is to offer more fresh vegetables — which simultaneously improves nutrition and reduces the compensation drinking. Cucumber, lettuce, and leafy greens all have very high water content and are safe for budgies. The change in water dish consumption should reduce within a few days of reintroducing fresh food.

Cause 3: Kidney Disease — The Medical Cause That Matters Most
I want to be honest here because this is the cause that makes excessive drinking in a budgie worth taking seriously when simpler explanations do not fit.
Kidney disease — specifically a condition called polyuria and polydipsia, or PU/PD, meaning excessive urination and drinking — is one of the recognised health conditions in budgies that presents early as increased water consumption. The kidneys lose their ability to concentrate urine effectively, the bird loses more water than it should through excretion, and it compensates by drinking more.
The important thing about kidney disease in budgies is that it is far more manageable when caught early — when the symptom is increased drinking and relatively little else — than when it progresses. Many birds live comfortably for years with managed kidney disease once it is diagnosed and treated. The ones who do less well are the ones whose owners assumed the increased drinking was just thirst.
- Significantly increased water consumption that is persistent — not just on a hot day, but every day for a week or more
- Watery droppings — the liquid portion of the droppings is noticeably larger than usual, sometimes soaking into the cage liner rather than sitting on it
- Wet feathers around the vent area — from the increased liquid in droppings
- No obvious environmental explanation for the change — the room is not hot, the diet has not changed
- Bird is slightly less active or seems quieter than usual, even if still eating
- Any weight loss alongside increased drinking
What to do
Avian vet — the diagnosis requires blood and urine testing, which a vet can do relatively quickly. Do not wait on this one if the drinking has been significantly elevated for more than a week without a clear environmental or dietary explanation. Early diagnosis and appropriate management — which may include dietary adjustments, supplements, and in some cases medication — can extend and significantly improve a bird’s quality of life. A vet visit based on increased drinking is not an overreaction. It is exactly the right use of the early warning system your bird is giving you.
Cause 4: Diabetes — Less Common, But Real
Diabetes mellitus occurs in budgies, though it is less common than kidney disease as a cause of excessive drinking. It produces a very similar clinical picture: the bird drinks excessively, urinates excessively, and may eat more than usual while losing weight — because glucose is being lost in the urine rather than used by the body.
- Persistently increased drinking and urination with no environmental explanation
- Increased appetite alongside weight loss — eating more but getting thinner
- Very watery droppings — more liquid than solid
- Lethargy or reduced activity despite eating normally
- Sweet smell to the droppings — not always present but reported in some cases
- Obesity prior to the change — overweight budgies are at higher risk
What to do
Avian vet — diabetes in budgies is diagnosed through blood glucose testing. It is manageable in some cases, particularly if caught early and supported by appropriate dietary changes. The key risk factor is a seed-heavy, high-fat diet over a long period — which is one of the many reasons a balanced diet matters throughout a budgie’s life, not just when problems arise.

Cause 5: Infection — Particularly Chlamydophila
Certain systemic infections — particularly Chlamydophila psittaci and some other bacterial or viral infections — can cause increased thirst as part of a wider pattern of feeling unwell. The drinking in this case is usually accompanied by other signs: the bird may be slightly quieter than usual, the droppings may have changed, and over time the bird may become visibly less well.
If increased drinking is appearing alongside any other change in behaviour or condition — reduced vocalisation, changed droppings, slight puffing at times of day when the bird would normally be active — infection is worth considering alongside the metabolic causes.
What to do
Vet visit — infections require proper diagnosis to identify the organism involved and prescribe appropriate treatment. Do not attempt to treat a suspected infection without veterinary guidance. Chlamydophila in particular is zoonotic — it can spread to humans — which makes the vet visit relevant not just for the bird but for the household.
Cause 6: Medication Side Effects
If your budgie is currently on or has recently completed a course of veterinary medication — particularly certain antibiotics, antifungals, or anti-parasitic drugs — increased thirst can be a direct side effect of the medication rather than a sign of a new problem.
This is worth knowing because owners sometimes become alarmed by increased drinking during treatment, thinking the bird is getting worse, when the drinking is actually a predictable consequence of the medication.
What to do
If your budgie is on medication and has developed increased thirst, contact the prescribing vet and describe what you are seeing. Do not stop the medication without veterinary advice — but do flag the symptom so the vet can advise whether it is expected in this case or whether it warrants further investigation.
When Drinking More Is Definitely Not A Problem
I want to end the causes section by being equally clear about the situations where increased drinking genuinely is not a concern.
- Hot weather or a warmer room than usual — consistent with temperature, bird otherwise normal. Normal physiology.
- Reduced fresh food in the diet — bird compensating for less dietary moisture. Fix the diet and the water consumption normalises.
- A new companion bird — sometimes two birds at a water dish creates the impression of more consumption than one bird alone was producing.
- Post-bathing — some birds drink more after bathing. Normal.
- Moulting period — some increase in drinking during a moult is normal.
- The dish is smaller — if you have changed to a smaller water dish, it looks emptier faster even if the bird is drinking the same amount.

What I Check When An Owner Tells Me Their Budgie Is Drinking More
- Is the room warm or has the temperature recently risen?
Yes — heat-driven drinking, monitor and ensure no overheating. - Has the diet changed recently?
Less fresh food — dietary compensation, improve the diet. - What do the droppings look like?
Noticeably wetter or more liquid than usual — kidney disease, diabetes, or infection. Vet visit. - How long has the increased drinking been going on?
A few days around a hot spell — probably environmental.
Over a week with no change in weather or diet — vet visit. - Is the bird otherwise completely normal?
Yes — monitor for a week, address environmental or dietary factors.
Any other change at all — vet this week, not next month. - Is the bird on any medication?
Yes — contact the prescribing vet to confirm whether increased thirst is expected. - Has the bird lost any weight?
Weigh the bird on kitchen scales — weight loss alongside increased drinking is a vet visit today.
How To Monitor Your Budgie’s Water Consumption Properly
If you want to actually measure whether your budgie is drinking more than usual — rather than relying on the impression that the dish empties faster — here is a simple approach.
- Use a measured water dish — fill it to a consistent level each morning and note how much has been consumed each evening
- Account for evaporation — in warm weather, a small amount of water will evaporate from an open dish. This is typically a few drops a day, not a significant amount
- Weigh your bird weekly — a small set of kitchen scales takes thirty seconds and weight loss is often the first measurable sign of illness, appearing before other symptoms
- Note the droppings — photograph them if they look unusual. A vet can often learn a great deal from a description or photo of changed droppings before the bird has even been examined
- Keep a simple note for a week — if you are concerned, write down what you observe each day. Patterns become clearer over a week than they do in a single observation
What Not To Do
| What people do | Why it is wrong | What to do instead |
|---|---|---|
| Restrict water to see if drinking reduces | A bird that is drinking more for any reason — including illness — needs access to water at all times. Restricting it is dangerous. | Always ensure fresh water is freely available |
| Add supplements to the water without vet advice | Many over-the-counter supplements alter the taste of water and can cause the bird to drink less, worsening dehydration | Plain fresh water only, unless a vet has prescribed otherwise |
| Wait months before seeing a vet | Kidney disease and diabetes are more manageable when caught early — waiting allows preventable deterioration | If increased drinking is persistent and unexplained, vet within a week or two |
| Assume it is always just the heat | Heat is the most common explanation — but not the only one, and not always the right one | Use the checklist — rule out environmental causes, then seek veterinary advice |
| Change the water less often because it empties faster | A bird drinking more needs fresher water more often, not less | Change the water at least once daily, twice in warm weather |

Frequently Asked Questions
My budgie is drinking a lot but seems perfectly fine — should I be worried?
If the bird is completely normal in every other way — alert, active, eating well, producing normal droppings, no weight loss — and there is a clear environmental or dietary explanation for the increased drinking, it is reasonable to monitor for a week before deciding whether a vet visit is needed. If the increased drinking persists beyond a week with no clear explanation, a vet visit is worthwhile even if the bird seems well. Many metabolic conditions present early as a single changed behaviour before any obvious illness develops.
How do I know if my budgie’s droppings are too watery?
A normal budgie dropping has three parts: a dark solid portion, a white or cream urate portion, and a small clear liquid portion. In a healthy bird, the liquid portion is minimal — the dropping sits on the cage liner rather than soaking into it. Droppings that spread widely, soak into paper, or are predominantly liquid are wetter than normal. If this is consistent rather than occasional, it is worth mentioning to a vet alongside the increased drinking.
Is it normal for a budgie to drink more in summer?
Yes — increased water consumption in warm weather is completely normal and expected. A budgie in a warm UK home in summer may drink significantly more than the same bird in winter. The concern arises when drinking is elevated persistently, in a cool environment, with no dietary explanation.
Can I give my budgie anything other than water?
Plain fresh water is the correct and complete answer for a budgie’s drinking needs. Fruit juices, herbal teas, flavoured waters, and most supplements are unnecessary and some are harmful. The only exception is a vet-prescribed electrolyte or supplement solution. If your bird is unwell and not drinking, that is a vet conversation — not a reason to add things to the water yourself.
My budgie has always drunk a lot — is that normal?
Some individual birds do drink more than average consistently, and for those birds their personal baseline is normal. What matters with water consumption is change — a bird that has always been a heavier drinker and is otherwise healthy is less concerning than a bird that has suddenly started drinking significantly more than it previously did. Know your bird’s normal and watch for deviations from it.
Where can I get budgie health advice in Swindon?
Come and see us at Paradise Pets, Manor Garden Centre, Cheney Manor, Swindon SN2 2QJ. Or ring us on 01793 512400. For health concerns that may need veterinary attention, we will help you work out the urgency. For genuine medical symptoms, go straight to an avian vet — we can recommend one locally if needed.
One Last Thing From Me
The retired gentleman who came in about his budgie emptying the water dish by lunchtime — his bird was fine. The room had a south-facing window that had been getting full sun all morning since the clocks changed, and the temperature in that corner of the room was running about six or seven degrees warmer than the rest of the house. We moved the cage, he added more fresh vegetables back into the diet, and within a week the water consumption was back to normal.
That is the most common ending to this story. A simple explanation, a simple fix.
But I am glad he came in rather than simply dismissing the change. Because the cases where the explanation is not simple are the ones where the owner who noticed something early and acted on it is the one whose bird got treatment in time.
Know your bird’s normal. Notice when it changes. And if the change does not have an obvious explanation — do not leave it too long.
Concerned About Your Budgie? Come And See Us — Or Speak To An Avian Vet
For persistent unexplained increased drinking, watery droppings, or any weight loss alongside these signs — speak to an avian vet. For everything else, come in or ring us and we will help you work out what is going on. Free advice, no obligation. Over 35 years of hands-on budgie experience.


