Birdhouse size chart: birdhouse size chart for common backyard birds

If you want birds to actually nest in your yard, the “right” birdhouse isn’t the cutest one — it’s the one with
the correct entrance hole size and interior dimensions for the species you’re trying to attract.

Last updated:
Reading time: ~10–12 minutes

Quick safety note: Not all birds use cavity “birdhouses.” Many species (like American Robins) build open cup nests and need a
nest shelf or platform instead of an entrance-hole box. Choosing the wrong style is a top reason boxes stay empty.

How to use this birdhouse size chart

  1. Pick a target bird (example: House Wren, Chickadee, Eastern Bluebird).
  2. Match the entrance hole first. The hole is the “gatekeeper” for species selection and basic access control.[1]
  3. Match interior floor + height next. Too small = cramped; too big = may encourage competitors.[1]
  4. Install at the recommended height and in the right habitat (open field vs. woodland edge matters).[1]
  5. Improve safety with solid mounting and (when appropriate) predator guards — size alone isn’t enough.[1]

Dimensions below are practical starting points summarized from Cornell Lab of Ornithology’s NestWatch guidance and established bluebird resources.
Always prioritize recommendations specific to your region and target species.
[1][3]

Birdhouse measurements explained (so you don’t build the wrong thing)

  • Floor (interior): inside width × inside depth (example: 4″ × 4″).
  • Interior height: inside floor to inside ceiling (not exterior roof peak).
  • Entrance hole diameter: the clear opening size (round) or width/height (oval).
  • Hole height above floor: distance from the inside floor to the bottom edge of the entrance hole.

Pro tip: If you already own a box, measure the interior — exterior dimensions can mislead because wood thickness varies.

Birdhouse size chart (common North American cavity nesters)

These are “starting-point” sizes; local climate, predators, and competitors can change what works best.
Use the sources below if you want to build to a specific program standard.
[1][3]

Birdhouse size chart — starting-point dimensions (inches with cm in parentheses)
[1][2][3]
Species (example) Interior floor Interior height Entrance hole Hole height above floor Typical mounting height Notes
House Wren 4″ × 4″ (10.2 × 10.2 cm) 8″ (20.3 cm) 1″ (2.5 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 5–10 ft (1.5–3 m) Often likes cover/edges; smaller holes help exclude larger birds.[1]
Chickadee (Black-capped / Carolina) 4″ × 4″ (10.2 × 10.2 cm) 8–10″ (20.3–25.4 cm) 1 1/8″ (2.9 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 5–15 ft (1.5–4.5 m) Woodland edge works well; avoid full sun in hot climates.[1]
Tufted Titmouse 4″ × 4″ (10.2 × 10.2 cm) 8–10″ (20.3–25.4 cm) 1 1/4″ (3.2 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 5–15 ft (1.5–4.5 m) Similar needs to chickadees; keep entrance unperched.[1]
White-breasted Nuthatch 4″ × 4″ (10.2 × 10.2 cm) 8–10″ (20.3–25.4 cm) 1 3/8″ (3.5 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 5–20 ft (1.5–6 m) Often uses mature trees; mount near woodland edge.[1]
Eastern / Western Bluebird 5″ × 5″ (12.7 × 12.7 cm) 8–12″ (20.3–30.5 cm) 1 1/2″ (3.8 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 4–6 ft (1.2–1.8 m) Best in open areas; pair with predator protection and avoid dense shrubs right beside the box.[3]
Tree Swallow 5″ × 5″ (12.7 × 12.7 cm) 8–12″ (20.3–30.5 cm) 1 1/2″ (3.8 cm) 6″ (15.2 cm) 5–15 ft (1.5–4.5 m) Likes open habitat near water/meadows; can compete with bluebirds in some areas.[1]
Downy Woodpecker 4″ × 4″ (10.2 × 10.2 cm) 10–12″ (25.4–30.5 cm) 1 1/4″ (3.2 cm) 8″ (20.3 cm) 6–20 ft (1.8–6 m) Deeper cavity helps with nest safety; mount near woods/edge.[1]
Northern Flicker 7″ × 7″ (17.8 × 17.8 cm) 16–18″ (40.6–45.7 cm) 2 1/2″ (6.3 cm) 12″ (30.5 cm) 6–20 ft (1.8–6 m) Large cavity nester; sturdy mounting is essential.[1]
American Kestrel 8″ × 8″ (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 12–16″ (30.5–40.6 cm) 3″ (7.6 cm) 10–12″ (25.4–30.5 cm) 10–30 ft (3–9 m) Open country; place away from heavy foot traffic; stable mounting matters.[1]
Eastern Screech-Owl 8″ × 8″ (20.3 × 20.3 cm) 16–24″ (40.6–61.0 cm) 3″ (7.6 cm) 15″ (38.1 cm) 10–30 ft (3–9 m) Woodland edge; keep the interior deep and the box stable.[1]
Wood Duck (nest box) 12″ × 12″ (30.5 × 30.5 cm) 24″ (61.0 cm) Oval ~3″ × 4″ (7.6 × 10.2 cm) 16″ (40.6 cm) 6–20 ft (1.8–6 m) Near water; add interior traction/ladder so ducklings can climb out.[1]
Purple Martin (compartment) 6″ × 6″ (15.2 × 15.2 cm) 6–7″ (15.2–17.8 cm) ~2 1/8″ (5.4 cm) or starling-resistant opening N/A (varies by design) 12–20 ft (3.6–6 m) Requires wide-open placement and more active management than most backyard boxes.[1]

Important: Oversized entrance holes can increase predator access and invite competitors.
If you’re unsure, match the hole size to your target species first.
[1][3]

Open-nester shelf chart (birds that don’t use entrance holes)

Many backyard favorites don’t use cavity boxes. If you build a “standard birdhouse” with an entrance hole for these birds,
you may never get nesting success — even if everything else is perfect.

Open-nester shelf / platform starting sizes
Species Recommended structure Approx. base size Placement tip
American Robin Nest shelf (open-front) 6″ × 6″ to 8″ × 8″ (15.2–20.3 cm) Under eaves or on a protected ledge; avoid direct midday sun.
Eastern Phoebe Small platform / ledge About 6″ × 6″ (15.2 cm) Under porches/bridges; needs overhead cover.
Barn Swallow Open ledge or nesting-cup support Varies (support is the goal) Inside barns/sheds/porches; they prefer human structures.

Placement tips that matter as much as size

  • Match habitat: Bluebirds and many swallows prefer open areas; wrens tolerate more cover.[1]
  • Face away from harsh weather: In many regions, avoid openings facing prevailing wind/rain.[1]
  • Give flight space: Don’t tuck the entrance behind dense branches where predators can ambush.
  • Use safe spacing: Some species are territorial. If boxes compete, increase distance or change placement.[1]

Build quality checklist (predators, heat, moisture)

  • No perch: perches are unnecessary for most cavity nesters and can help competitors.[1]
  • Ventilation: small vents under the roof on both sides help reduce overheating.
  • Drainage: drill 4 small holes in the floor so water can escape.
  • Interior traction: rough interior or ladder grooves help fledglings climb out.
  • Predator protection: pole baffles/guards and entrance hole guards can help when appropriate.[1]
  • Safe materials: untreated wood is preferred; avoid toxic finishes inside the box.

Approval-safe note: This page focuses on prevention and responsible nest box practices.
Avoid publishing or following advice that promotes harming wildlife or disturbing active nests.

Common sizing mistakes (and why they backfire)

  1. Oversized entrance holes: invites competitors and increases risk.
  2. Shallow boxes: makes it easier for predators to reach nest contents from the opening.
  3. Wrong bird type: building a cavity box for open-nesting birds (robins/phoebes) = empty box.
  4. No ventilation in hot climates: overheating can be deadly for nestlings.
  5. Poor placement: mounting where predators have easy access or where habitat doesn’t match the target species.[1]

FAQ

What is the most important measurement in a birdhouse size chart?

The entrance hole size is usually the most important because it controls which birds can enter and helps reduce competitor access.
Next most important is interior depth/height, which improves nest safety.
[1]

Can I make one “universal” birdhouse size?

A truly universal box is rare. A medium box (like a bluebird/tree swallow size) can attract multiple species,
but you’ll get better results when you match the hole and floor to a specific target bird.
[1][3]

Do birds reuse birdhouses?

Some species may reuse boxes, but many prefer a clean cavity. Cleaning at the end of the season helps reduce parasites and improves success.
Avoid opening a box unnecessarily once eggs or nestlings are present.
[1]

When should I put up a birdhouse?

Late winter to early spring is a good target in many areas so birds can find the site before breeding season.
Timing varies by species and region.
[1]

Sources & further reading

  1. Cornell Lab of Ornithology — NestWatch: “Right Bird, Right House” and related nest box resources.
    View source
  2. Cornell Lab of Ornithology — NestWatch species example: Eastern Bluebird (box guidance).
    View source
  3. Sialis (Bluebird Research) — entrance hole sizing and bluebird box specs.
    View source

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