You wouldn’t want to find these beasts at your bird feeder…

By Leoma Williams

Published: Friday, 10 November 2023 at 13:17 PM


Birds have evolved to fill a great diversity of niches, living in vastly different habitats and having varied lifestyles. Thus, they come in many different shapes and sizes, from the tiny to the towering. This list gives you the lowdown on the very biggest birds that currently grace the planet.

The great majority of these big birds belong to just one group – ratites. Ratites are all flightless and, with the exception of kiwis, are all long-legged, long-necked and large. The group contains the ostriches, rheas, cassowaries and emus that all feature on this list, but also the now extinct elephant birds and moa.

What was the largest bird ever?

Elephant birds are thought to have been the largest birds to ever exist, weighing over an estimated 500kg. The very tallest bird, however, was the South Island giant moa, a ratite from New Zealand that stood a whopping 3.6m tall.

Although enjoying a stable population for at least 40,000 years, these colossal birds were quickly wiped out when humans began to settle in Polynesia and realised they were a ready food source. Moa are thought to have gone extinct due to overhunting by around 1500CE.

Read on to learn about the living relatives of these extraordinary ratites, as well as a couple more beefy birds from other taxonomic groups. You can also learn all about the smallest birds in the world here.

The 10 biggest birds in the world (by maximum weight)

Common ostrich (Struthio camelus) 156.8 kg

A male ostrich (Struthio camelus). © Martin Harvey/Getty

The largest on our list weighs as much as a piano and can reach an impressive height of up to 2.8m. The common ostrich, native to large areas of Africa, as well as introduced and feral in parts of Australia, is also the speediest living land bird with running speeds of up to 40mph, and it lays the largest eggs of any bird. Truly a record-breaker!

They are mainly herbivorous, feeding on shrubs, grass, flowers, and seeds, but they can still be pretty dangerous due to their powerful kicking legs. They kill around three people each year in South Africa. One famous (non-fatal) ostrich attack incident involved the musician Johnny Cash, who was slashed at by one of the birds he kept on his property.

Learn more fascinating facts about the ostrich

Somali ostrich (Struthio molybdophanes) 130 kg

Somali Ostriches, Kenya, Africa. © Design Pics/Keith Levit/Getty

Once thought a subspecies of the common ostrich, but now recognised as its own distinct species, the Somali ostrich is on average slightly smaller than its record-breaking relative. It is native to the Horn of Africa in the easternmost part of the continent.

The two extant species of ostrich are a good example of ‘allopatric speciation’, wherein populations of a species are separated from each other by a geographic barrier so that they can no longer interbreed and eventually evolve into separate species. In this case, the geographic barrier is the East African Rift.

You can learn more about how speciation happens with our handy guide.

Southern cassowary (Casuarius casuarius) 85 kg

A Southern cassowary on the beach searching for berries. © bendenhartog/Getty

Although not as intimidating as the ostriches, the positively prehistoric-looking Southern cassowary (one of the world’s weirdest birds) would still tower over a lot of people, at about 1.7m tall. Native to the rainforests of northeastern Australia, New Guinea, Indonesia and Papua New Guinea, they forage the forest floor for fallen fruits, fungi and insects. They are often heard before they are seen, with a distinctive deep booming call that will leave you thinking nervously of Jurassic Park.