The Lapland bunting is a very rare winter visitor in the UK, with the occasional pair breeding. Learn all about this tundra bird, including what it looks like, its call, favoured habitat and breeding with your expert birder’s guide.

By Dominic Couzens

Published: Monday, 04 December 2023 at 13:49 PM


The Lapland bunting (Calcarius lapponicus) is a very rare bird in the UK and a lot of birdwatchers, including very keen ones, have never seen one.

However, if you spend a lot of time on the coast in autumn and winter, especially the east coast, you might well run into one.

In this guide we take a closer look at the Lapland bunting, revealing what it looks like, its call, diet and breeding.

Interested in learning more about Britain’s songbirds? Check out our guides to tits, warblers and blackbirds.

Buntings guide

Buntings are a group of seed-eating birds that bear many of the same characteristics as finches. Learn all about these special songbirds, including six species to look out for in Britain, with your expert guide to buntings.

Yellowhammer flying in a flock/Credit: Getty

Lapland bunting identification

The Lapland bunting can be confused with a skylark. It has a similar shape to a lark, with a quite heavy body and long wings, and it is also often found in flocks of larks, including on migration.

In the winter, in common with larks and other buntings, it forages on the ground for seeds. If you do find one, check several features: the yellow bill, blackish corners to its cheek, reddish shoulders, mottled black on the breast and a brown wing-bat bordered by white.