All you need to know about the great spotted woodpecker

By British Trust for Ornithology (BTO)

Published: Tuesday, 21 March 2023 at 12:00 am


As a garden bird enthusiast, there are few sights more captivating than a great spotted woodpecker flashing into view. Sleek and dapper, they dart into gardens, alight at breakneck speed and feed in improbably acrobatic positions.

Youngsters are ushered by their parents into gardens; a behaviour that is designed to help these fledglings towards independence, showing them where to find a reliable meal. It is a strategy that seems to work.

How big are great spotted woodpeckers?

Great spotted woodpecker are about 22-23cm long and have a wingspan of about 34-39cm. they weigh approximately 85g

What do great spotted woodpeckers eat?

Great spotted woodpeckers take a wide variety of foods in gardens, happily hammering peanuts, chiselling suet-blocks or clearing trays of mealworms.

As long as they can get a good grip on a feeder and can reach the food inside, they will sample most things.

A great spotted woodpecker’s tongue can protrude some 40mm beyond the tip of its bill – so not many garden bird foods are out of their reach.

How to spot a great spotted woodpecker

Identifying a great spotted woodpecker is relatively easy.

There are just two black and white woodpeckers in Britain: the great spotted woodpecker and the lesser spotted woodpecker.

The former are about the size of starlings and are fairly widespread, while the latter are only about the size of greenfinches and are worryingly – and increasingly – scarce.

When perched, the great spotted woodpecker has two large white shoulder patches whereas the lesser spotted woodpecker has several white bars.

Lesser spotted woodpeckers also lack pale red under-tail coverts, which are akin to red underpants, which great spotted woodpeckers have.

Juvenile great spotted woodpeckers can be distinguished from adults of the same species by the presence of a red skull cap and pale red under-tail coverts.

Adult great spotted woodpeckers, by contrast, have a black skull cap and bright red under-tail coverts.

Adult males can be distinguished from adult females through the presence of a small rectangle of red feathers on the back of the head.