This small, greenish bird has a soft, lilting song, a sure sign that spring is here. Learn all about this tuneful member of the warbler family – including appearance, song and migration patterns – with our birder’s guide

By Dominic Couzens

Published: Thursday, 23 February 2023 at 12:00 am


The chiffchaff is lovable, but to many it is the willow warbler’s gorgeous, gentle song, a soft lilting down the scale, that proves spring is really here.

A small, greenish bird the size of a tit, the willow warbler (Phylloscopus trochilus) is easily missed among the fresh spring leaves of birches and willows.

In this guide we take a closer look at the willow warbler, including what they look like, their song and nesting habits.

Interested in learning more about Britain’s birds? Check out our guides to finches, tits, woodpeckers and thrushes.

Warblers of the UK

Warblers are a group of small, often green-brown birds with varied songs. Learn more about these spring and summer songsters with our guide to the warblers of Britain.

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What does a willow warbler look like?

Willow warbler and chiffchaff are often linked as one of the species pairs in Britain that are hardest to tell apart by sight. However, the willow warbler has longer wings and is slightly paler below than chiffchaff, with browner legs and a flatter forehead, with a more obvious pale eyebrow but less obvious eye-ring. It is often a question of judgment and never easy tell them apart.

An older name, linked to its diminutive stature as a bird not bigger than a tit, is willow wren.

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The willow warbler has longer wings and is slightly paler below than chiffchaff/Credit: Getty

Willow warbler song

The willow warbler has one of the loveliest, most gentle of all British bird songs, and its charm is magnified by its context, as one of the first songs from a summer visitor heard in the year, often before the end of March.

It is a sweet, almost sighing phrase that slips quietly down the scale and seems then to disappear on the breeze.