Welcome a new flock of birds that eat peanuts! You’ll be impressed with the species you’ll attract by offering peanuts at your feeders.
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What Types of Birds Eat Peanuts From Feeders?
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Why You Should Offer Peanuts to Birds
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Peanuts are like a secret weapon for people who love feeding birds. Your feathered friends will go nuts for the fat- and protein-packed treat that is super easy for backyard bird-watchers to serve. They can be an expensive item to offer on a regular basis, but they’ll bring in a wide variety of new birds. “If you like offering peanuts for birds, but find them a bit pricey, mix out-of-shell peanuts with black oil sunflower seeds. Both can be fed from the same feeder,” says birding expert Kimberly Kaufman.
Peanuts in almost any form are a lifesaver in the depths of winter, but they will draw a huge crowd year-round. Put out the peanut feeders, and let the bird circus begin!
Birds That Eat Peanuts
Don’t get discouraged if you don’t attract peanut eaters right away. Remind yourself that it’s worth the wait. Just look at the variety of birds that eat peanuts you can add to your backyard:
Jays
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Jays seem to sense whenever peanuts are put out within a 5-mile radius. You won’t see them in your yard for months or years, but as soon as you offer peanuts in a shell, they can appear within days or even hours! If you’ve ever attempted to grab a big handful of potato chips, you’ll laugh when you watch jays try to do the same with peanuts. Discarding those that don’t fit, they stuff as many as possible into their throat pouch and bill. All blue-colored jay species are enthusiastic peanut eaters—and stashers, caching their treasures under tree bark, in crevices or beside rocks to retrieve later.
Woodpeckers
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Every woodpecker, from the adorable downy to the giant pileated, eagerly snatches peanuts to eat on the spot or store for a later day. Whole, chopped or shelled—when it comes to these snacks, they are not picky.
Learn more about the best foods to attract woodpeckers.
Small Songbirds
![Tufted Titmouse](https://preprod.birdsandblooms.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/TtitmouseKAC010506.jpg?fit=683,1024)
Chickadees, titmice and nuthatches may be small, but they’re among the biggest peanut fans, employing assorted techniques for claiming their prizes. Songbirds are known to hammer the shell, holding it down with their feet. They carry off shelled nuts to stash or eat elsewhere, and they also eagerly devour chopped ones. All of these little gray birds usually take their treats to go, but you can bet they come back again and again. All five North American titmice—tufted, black-crested, juniper, bridled and oak—stop by feeders for a peanut snack.
Northern Cardinals
![Female Red Cardinal Bird on Wooden Deck eating a peanut](https://preprod.birdsandblooms.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/GettyImages-1179895317.jpg?fit=700,467)
Serve these beauties peanuts out of the shell as whole or half nuts, or chopped to attract cardinals. The pyrrhuloxia, the “desert cardinal” of the Southwest, loves this food just as much as its bright red relative.
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Wrens
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Shelled or chopped peanuts are favored by these perky-tailed birds. If the nuts aren’t chopped, wrens work to break off manageable bits. Any species of wren in the neighborhood may visit a peanut feeder, and once a bird finds it, it’ll soon be a regular. Find out what wrens eat and how to attract them.
Native Sparrows, Juncos, Towhees and Doves
![Small chipping sparrow feeding on a nut in my garden during sprintime](https://preprod.birdsandblooms.com/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/GettyImages-1393003132.jpg?fit=700,467)
Keep an eye on the ground beneath peanut feeders, where white-throated, white-crowned, golden-crowned, song and other native sparrows, plus juncos, towhees and doves, often gather to eagerly peck up bits that other birds have dropped.
Can birds smell or taste their food?
Surprise Guests
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When you serve peanuts, expect the unexpected! Bluebirds, robins, crossbills and other not-so-common feeder birds might visit peanut feeders. “Catbirds, orioles and tanagers happily consume the broken-off pieces from birds pecking the larger nuts,” Scott says. So will thrashers, robins mockingbirds, bluebirds and birds that usually eat insects, fruit and other soft foods.
Shell or No Shell?
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At the end of the day, it doesn’t really matter—they’re going to get eaten. Many birds eat peanuts in almost any form. Keep in mind that they do require different types of feeders. So make sure you align your feeder with your feed.
It can be fun to watch birds with those large, in-shell peanuts, taking them off to crack or cache. “Don’t underestimate the attractiveness of peanuts in the shell,” says Scott Edwards, guest editor of the National Bird-Feeding Society. “Blue jays seem to prefer them this way, and woodpeckers, chickadees and titmice will take them on as well.”
Peanuts out of the shell tempt cardinals, mockingbirds and more. Serve them chopped and birds that typically eat soft foods, such as tanagers, wrens, bluebirds and thrashers, come to the peanut feast.
Raw or roasted? It’s a common question, and both are beloved by birds, but “we generally recommend against salted peanuts,” says Holly Grant, project assistant for Project FeederWatch at the Cornell Lab of Ornithology.
Expand the menu with more foods you aren’t feeding birds yet.
Keep Peanut Feeders Clean
Don’t give birds your leftovers from the ball game. If it’s damp or rainy in your area, clean out those feeders because like other seed, peanuts can get moldy. If you know it’s going to be rainy, conserve by just putting out a few peanuts at a time.
After you finish reading about birds that eat peanuts, learn about birds that eat peanut butter.
Battling Squirrels
Yes, it’s true that squirrels love peanuts just as much as birds. First of all—good luck. They sure can be persistent! However, there are a few peanut feeders designed to be squirrel-proof. Most are for out-of-shell peanuts. Otherwise, find a good squirrel baffle to keep those furry critters away.
Another option—buy or make a peanut feeder designed for squirrels! Many readers swear by the theory that if you give the squirrels their own place to eat, they’ll leave the bird feeding area alone.
About the Experts
Holly Grant works as a project assistant for Project NestWatch and Project FeederWatch for the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. Holly has a bachelor’s degree in conservation biology from SUNY College of Environmental Science and Forestry.
Scott Edwards served as guest editor of the National Bird-Feeding Society, an organization that aimed to help people make the hobby of backyard bird feeding better.