These small but lively birds are a common sight in UK grasslands. Find out more…

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Published: Wednesday, 21 August 2024 at 12:27 PM


A Meadow Pipit (Anthus pratensis) is a common resident in the UK, frequently found in open grasslands, heathlands, and moorlands across the country.

Learn how to identify this small, streaky bird, discover its distinctive song, and explore the habitats where it thrives with our expert bird guide.

What does a meadow pipit look like?

Meadow pipits can be hard to identify – look out for their streaky breasts. Credit: Getty

The pipits are small, streaky-brown birds without any exciting colour, which certainly doesn’t help their PR, and they are difficult to identify, which makes it worse.

So here’s a starter for pipit ID: If you see a bird in open country which looks rather like a miniature thrush, you’re on the right lines. Pipits have streaky breasts and fairly plain upperparts but are smaller than sparrows.

What’s the difference between meadow pipit and a wagtail?

In common with wagtails, they walk on the ground to feed, but unlike wagtails, they have a somewhat gormless, detached way of feeding, as if they are window-shopping.

Meadow pipit habitat and distribution

These little birds are very common and can be seen all year round.

What do meadow pipits eat?

They eat insects and small seeds, which is hardly earth-shattering – their thin bills are typical of those birds that forage for insects.

If you flush them, they go “sip-sip,” hence the name. Meadow pipits have an endearing habit, after being disturbed, of never quite deciding where to land again, meaning that they sometimes fly this way and that, in a state of chronic indecision.

What does the meadow pipit call sound like?