Ask About Birds
Fine-art print of an American Goldfinch perched on a thistle head, in the Audubon style, one of several gift-worthy bird prints

Gifts & Decor

15 Thoughtful Gifts for Bird Lovers Who Have Everything

The bird lover on your list has a system already. A feeder or three, a pair of binoculars that live by the back door, maybe a life list tucked in a drawer. Buying for that person means finding something that adds to the system rather than duplicating it.

This list starts with what we know best, fine-art bird prints, because a wall is one of the few parts of a birder’s life that never quite gets finished. Then it moves through the categories that round out a gift list without repeating what’s already on the shelf.

Start with a print: the gift that doesn’t need a shelf

A print asks for a spot on a wall, not a spot in a cabinet. That’s part of why it works so well as a gift for someone who already owns most of the practical gear. Nobody has too many birds looking back at them from a hallway.

Owls, for the birder who loves the quiet, watchful species. A Barn Owl in ghostly flight or a Great Horned Owl perched at dusk reads as more portrait than wildlife photo, which is exactly the point. Owls suit a den, a study, anywhere with low light and dark wood.

Goldfinch, for someone whose feeder is already full of them every summer. The American Goldfinch on a thistle head is about as cheerful as wall art gets, and it flatters a kitchen or breakfast nook better than almost any other species.

Bluebird, for the person who put up a nest box and checks it obsessively every spring. An Eastern Bluebird pair at the box is less a picture of a bird and more a picture of a small, hard-won victory. Anyone who’s ever fought off a house sparrow for that box will understand it immediately.

Hummingbird, for the gardener whose whole yard is planted for pollinators. A Ruby-throated Hummingbird at a trumpet vine captures the one species most feeder-owners will admit they’re a little obsessed with.

Eagle, for the veteran, the patriot, or the birder who still stops the car when one crosses overhead. A Bald Eagle in flight carries weight that other species don’t, and it suits an office or a den where the gift is meant to be noticed.

Cardinal, for the birder whose feeder is never without one. Cardinals are consistently the most requested print in the shop, and if that’s the recipient’s bird, our full guide to cardinal gifts goes deeper on which cardinal print suits which person.

Every print here ships from $39 unframed, from $99 framed, or $12 for a digital download if the recipient prefers to choose their own frame. Shipping is free worldwide, and prints go out within a week, so there’s no need to order in October to be safe for December.

What if they already own a print?

Then look at what surrounds the feeder rather than what hangs on the wall.

Window feeders

A feeder that mounts directly to glass, held by suction cups, puts a chickadee or a goldfinch a few inches from the breakfast table. It’s a small gift with an outsized return: nobody gets tired of a bird eating six inches from their coffee cup. Good for apartments and small yards where a pole-mounted feeder isn’t practical, and good for anyone whose eyesight makes a feeder thirty feet out in the yard less rewarding than it used to be. Placement matters more than most people expect: a feeder mounted too far from the window actually raises the risk of collision strikes rather than lowering it.

Heated birdbaths

Winter is the season most feeders keep working and most water sources don’t. A heated birdbath solves a problem the recipient has probably been meaning to fix for two winters running: ice. Birds need open water in January as much as they need seed, and a heated bath is one of the few gifts that changes what shows up in the yard, not just how it’s fed.

Field guides

A physical field guide, not an app, still earns its shelf space with birders over fifty. The pages hold up outdoors, the print is legible without a phone screen glare, and a guide with good range maps for the recipient’s specific region (not a generic national edition) shows you paid attention to where they actually watch birds.

Seed subscriptions

A recurring delivery of black oil sunflower seed, suet cakes, or a nyjer blend removes one small chore from a birder’s month, forever, for as long as the subscription runs. It’s a practical gift that keeps arriving, which makes it feel bigger than its price tag.

Binoculars

For someone still watching through an old, heavy pair, a lighter modern set with better light-gathering glass at dawn and dusk is a genuine upgrade, not a novelty. Look for a mid-range magnification (8x42 is the standard birding spec) rather than the highest zoom on the shelf, since higher magnification usually means a shakier, dimmer image in the field.

How to choose between a print and a gadget

Ask what the recipient already has covered. Most birders past fifty have their feeding setup dialed in exactly the way they like it, and a new feeder style can go unused if it doesn’t fit their existing poles or baffles. A print has no such risk. It doesn’t compete with an established system, it just adds to the house.

If you know the recipient’s signature species, the bird they mention most, the one at their feeder they photograph every year, that’s the print to choose. If you’re buying for someone whose favorite bird you don’t know, a gallery-wall set of three or four species gives them a start rather than committing to one guess.

Gifts that lean into the hobby, not just the birds

A few more categories worth considering, especially for the birder who treats the hobby as seriously as any other pastime.

A weatherproof notebook or life list journal. Birders who keep records tend to keep them for decades, and a well-made log, one that survives a damp morning at the marsh, outlasts a dozen smaller gifts. Look for one with pre-printed columns for date, location and species rather than a blank notebook, since that structure is what makes a life list usable years later.

A subscription to a regional birding publication or society membership. Many state and local Audubon-tradition societies offer memberships that include a print newsletter, guided walks and access to private sanctuaries. For someone who already knows their common backyard birds cold, this is a gift that opens doors a feeder never will.

A bird-call identification tool. Modern handheld or app-based tools that identify birdsong from a recording have become genuinely reliable in the last few years, and for anyone whose hearing has started to decline, a good identification aid restores a part of birding that fades with age faster than eyesight does.

What to avoid

Skip anything that duplicates a specific piece of gear without asking first, especially binoculars and feeders, since serious birders tend to have strong, specific preferences about both. Skip novelty items, bird-shaped mugs, cartoon-print tea towels, unless you know the recipient’s sense of humor well; most birders over fifty are drawn to the naturalism of a well-made print rather than a cartoon version of the same bird. And skip anything requiring assembly or a smart-home app unless you’re certain the recipient wants to manage another device.

Does the occasion change what you should buy?

A little. A housewarming gift for someone moving to a new state points naturally toward that state’s own bird print rather than a species pick. A gift for someone newly retired into birdwatching favors a field guide or binoculars, the tools they’re just starting to build. A gift for a longtime birder favors the print, since their gear is usually already sorted.

FAQ

What’s the single safest gift for a bird lover you don’t know well?

A print of a widely loved species: cardinal, bluebird, or goldfinch. These are the three most universally adored backyard birds in North America, and a fine-art print of any of them is very unlikely to miss.

Should I buy a framed print or unframed?

Framed if you know their decor and want it ready to hang the day it arrives. Unframed, or a digital download, if you’d rather they choose a frame that matches a specific room. Both options cost less than a comparable piece from a gallery.

Is a digital download a real gift?

For the right person, yes. Anyone who already owns frames and likes to print locally, or who wants the art available to reprint at multiple sizes, gets real value from a $12 digital file with none of the shipping wait.

What if they already have a wall full of bird prints?

Look at species they don’t have yet rather than adding a duplicate. A hummingbird or an owl print reads as a deliberate addition to a collection, not a repeat, especially next to a wall that’s mostly songbirds.