Newts and lizards can be mistaken for each other, despite being very different. This guide, from Amphibian and Reptile Conservation, explains how to tell them apart.

By Amphibian and Reptile Conservation

Published: Thursday, 17 August 2023 at 14:42 PM


Mistaking a lizard for a newt – or vice-versa – is a common mistake. They both have similar bodies, comprising four legs and a long tail and both sport a similar brown or black coloration.

The general confusion between amphibians and reptiles doesn’t help. This quick guide will help you to identify the small, brown four-legged creature you’ve spotted.

What’s the difference between newts and lizards?

What are newts?

Newts are amphibians. This means that they live both on land and in freshwater at certain times of their lives.

Newts breed and spawn in ponds or other bodies of water during the spring and early summer. So, in the UK, if you find an animal resembling a lizard swimming in your garden pond, then it is likely a newt.

There are three native species of newt in the UK: the smooth, palmate and great crested. Great crested newts look very different to the other two and are a lot rarer. All newts spend a fair amount of the year on land, which is when they tend to get confused with lizards. In this terrestrial phase, they lose their characteristic crests and breeding season coloration.

What are lizards?

Lizards are reptiles. There are three species in the UK – the common lizard, the sand lizard and the slow-worm. The slow-worm has no legs and is often mistaken for a snake, and the sand lizard is a rare species confined to scattered heathland sites in southern areas of England and Wales.

So, the common lizard is really the only lizard that could be misconstrued as a newt.

There are at least 7,000 different lizard species across the world, from the largest, the Komodo dragon to the smallest, a chameleon called Brookesia nana.