Yellow-browed warbler

A yellow-browed warbler perched on a twig, poised to take off. It's a small warbler with a whitish belly and mossy green back, with a bright yellow stripe over the eye

Yellow-browed warbler © Tim Melling

A yellow-browed warbler perched on a twig, looking towards the camera. It's a small warbler with a whitish belly and mossy green back, with a bright yellow stripe over the eye

Yellow-browed warbler © Tim Melling

A yellow-browed warbler perched on a twig. It's a small warbler with a whitish belly and mossy green back, with a bright yellow stripe over the eye

Yellow-browed warbler © Tim Melling

Yellow-browed warbler

Scientific name: Phylloscopus inornatus
This charming little warbler is an increasingly common sight in autumn, when migrants pass through the UK.

Species information

Statistics

Length: 9-10.5 cm

Conservation status

Classified in the UK as Amber under the Birds of Conservation Concern 5: the Red List for Birds (2021). Protected in the UK under the Wildlife and Countryside Act, 1981.

When to see

Mainly September to November

About

Yellow-browed warblers are small leaf warblers, related to chiffchaffs and willow warblers. They breed in taiga forests in Siberia and spend the winter in Southeast Asia. Migration between the two regions shouldn't bring them anywhere near the UK, but each autumn sees large numbers recorded here, particularly along eastern coasts. Over the last 50 years they've become much more common, rising from a handful of records each year to well over a thousand.

At first it was assumed that these birds were just wayward strays (known as vagrants), which took a wrong turn and are doomed never to return to their breeding grounds. More recently, scientists are theorising that we may be seeing a new migration route developing, with yellow-browed warblers migrating between western Siberia and an unknown wintering area in West Africa.

In the UK, yellow-browed warblers are most common in October. They're usually found in coastal trees and scrub, particularly in sycamores. They often give away their presence with their distinctive call. Like goldcrests, they're restless and rarely stay still for long. Most records come from the north and east, but they can turn up almost anywhere, with a few inland records each year. Occasionally they spend the winter here, or appear in spring.

How to identify

A small warbler, between the size of a goldcrest and a chiffchaff. It has a moss green back and whitish underparts. It has two yellowish-white bars on each wing and a long, bright yellow stripe above each eye. It often gives itself away with its call: a high-pitched 'tse-u-weet', which sounds a little like a coal tit.

It could be mistaken for the much rarer Pallas's warbler, but that has an extra stripe on the crown and a lemony-yellow patch on the rump.

Distribution

Most common on the Northern Isles, the east coast of Scotland and England, and the far southwest of England.

Did you know?

Yellow-browed warblers often join mixed flocks with other birds, including tits, chiffchaffs and goldcrests.