what do robins eat
Robins are omnivores that mainly eat insects, worms, and soft fruits, with their exact menu changing through the seasons.
Quick Scoop
Core diet: what robins eat
- Insects and other invertebrates: beetles, caterpillars, spiders, snails, millipedes, centipedes, flies, true bugs, termites, and sowbugs.
- Earthworms: a favorite food, especially when they hunt on lawns and freshly dug soil.
- Fruit and berries: cherries, grapes, plums, blackberries, sloes, hawthorn, holly berries, and other soft garden fruits.
- Seeds and plant foods: some soft seeds, sunflower hearts, suet, crushed peanuts, and raisins, especially at feeders.
In simple terms: robins love wriggly protein (worms and bugs) and soft, juicy fruits more than hard seeds.
How their menu changes by season
- Spring: High-protein insects and worms to fuel breeding and feeding chicks; mealworms are especially valuable if you’re helping from the garden.
- Summer: Similar mix of insects and worms, with more fruits and berries as they ripen.
- Autumn: Gradual shift toward berries and other fruits as insect numbers drop.
- Winter: Insects and worms when they can find them, plus berries, suet, fat balls, mealworms, and other high-energy foods from feeders to survive cold nights.
What to feed robins in your garden
- Great choices:
- Live or dried mealworms and “calcium worms”.
* Suet pellets, suet nuggets, and fat balls (preferably good-quality, no netting).
* Soft fruits and berries (e.g., chopped grapes, apple pieces, berries).
* Crushed or shredded peanuts, sunflower hearts, a robin-friendly seed mix.
* Small amounts of mild grated cheese as an energy boost.
- How to offer it:
- Use a ground feeder tray or low platform; many robins prefer feeding near the ground rather than on high hanging feeders.
* Provide fresh water for drinking and bathing, especially in frost.
Things to avoid or limit
- Very hard, whole peanuts or large seeds that are difficult for robins to crack.
- Salty, heavily processed foods (like salty bacon or seasoned scraps), which are not healthy for birds.
- Mouldy food or spoiled fat, which can make birds ill.
European vs American robins (quick view)
| Robin type | Main natural foods | Extra notes |
|---|---|---|
| European robin (red-breasted garden robin in UK/Europe) | Insects, beetles, worms, fruit, seeds, suet. | [3][1][5]Readily visits bird tables and ground trays, loves mealworms and suet mixes. | [1][3][5]
| American robin (larger thrush in North America) | Insects, earthworms, and a wide range of fruits and berries; relatively fewer seeds. | [6][10][7]Often seen on lawns hunting worms in spring/summer, then switches to berry-heavy diet in fall/winter. | [10][7]
Little story-style example
Imagine a cold March morning: a robin follows you as you dig a flower bed, darting in to grab exposed earthworms. Later in the year, the same bird hops through a hedge heavy with hawthorn and holly berries, topping up on sugary fruit before returning to your garden tray of mealworms and suet pellets.
TL;DR: Robins eat mostly insects and earthworms in the warmer months, and switch to fruits, berries, and high-energy foods like suet and mealworms in colder weather; if you’re feeding them, focus on soft, protein-rich and fatty foods rather than hard seeds.
Information gathered from public forums or data available on the internet and portrayed here.