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Cockatiel Egg Binding Signs: Emergency Symptoms and What to Do

4 min readMay 13, 2026

If you have a female cockatiel, cockatiel egg binding signs are one of the most important things you can learn to recognize. Egg binding — also called dystocia — is when a hen can't pass an egg, and in a small bird like a cockatiel, it can become fatal within hours.

Here's what's happening, what to watch for, and exactly what to do.

What Is Egg Binding?

Egg binding occurs when an egg gets stuck somewhere along the reproductive tract. The egg presses on internal organs, blocks blood vessels, prevents the bird from passing droppings, and — if it sits on the trachea — interferes with breathing (AAV Basic Care for Companion Birds, 2019).

Cockatiels are unusually prone to reproductive problems because many become chronic egg layers without a male present. Hormonal triggers like long daylight hours, soft nesting material in the cage, and certain interactions can drive a hen to lay repeatedly, eventually depleting her of the calcium and energy needed to pass eggs.

Common Signs

Watch closely for any combination of these signs in a hen:

Early Signs

  • Fluffed-up feathers, especially the body feathers
  • Sitting on the cage floor instead of perches
  • Tail bobbing — the tail pumps up and down with each breath
  • Heavy or labored breathing
  • Straining — visible pushing as if trying to defecate, but without producing droppings
  • Lethargy, sleeping more than usual
  • Loss of appetite

Worsening Signs

  • A visible swelling in the lower abdomen — sometimes you can actually see or feel the egg
  • Eyes partially closed
  • Drooping wings
  • Inability to perch
  • Weakness, falling off the perch
  • No droppings or watery droppings only
  • Pale beak and feet

Critical Signs (Immediate Emergency)

  • Open-mouth breathing
  • Collapse, lying on the cage floor
  • Paralysis of the legs (egg pressing on nerves)
  • Cloacal prolapse — pink/red tissue protruding from the vent

When to Worry

Every case of suspected egg binding is an emergency. Small birds can die within hours. If you see any combination of fluffed feathers, sitting on the cage floor, tail bobbing, and straining, call an avian or exotic vet immediately — day or night.

Do not wait to see if she "passes it overnight." Cockatiels often deteriorate fast.

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What To Do at Home Before the Vet

While you arrange transport:

  1. Move her to a warm, quiet, dim environment. A small carrier or box with a soft towel on the bottom is ideal.
  2. Provide gentle heat. A heating pad set low under HALF of the carrier — never under all of it — keeps her in the 85–90°F range. Heat helps muscles relax and is one of the most useful supportive measures.
  3. Increase humidity gently. A bowl of warm water nearby, or a quick spritz from a clean spray bottle, can help — without soaking her.
  4. Offer electrolyte or sugar water at the corner of the beak if she's alert and can swallow. Never force water into the airway.
  5. Do NOT try to manually remove or massage out the egg. It can break inside the bird and cause peritonitis or internal bleeding.
  6. Avoid handling more than necessary. Stress worsens egg binding.
  7. Provide a perch in the carrier if she can use it — but expect she may need to rest on the floor.

How a Vet Treats Egg Binding

Veterinary treatment may include:

  • Calcium injections — many bound eggs pass after a single dose
  • Fluids and oxygen support
  • Pain relief
  • Lubrication and manual extraction under anesthesia if the egg is positioned safely
  • Egg "collapse" procedure — the vet may carefully aspirate the contents of the egg if removal is impossible
  • Hormonal medications to prevent further egg laying
  • Surgery for severe cases

Many cockatiels recover well with prompt treatment. Repeated episodes call for hormonal management to prevent chronic egg laying.

Prevention

To reduce egg binding and chronic laying:

  • Limit daylight to 10–12 hours/day in the cage
  • Remove nesting material, dark "huts," and small enclosed spaces
  • Avoid stroking the back or under the wings — it can trigger reproductive hormones
  • Feed a balanced diet rich in calcium (pellets, leafy greens) — not just seed
  • Avoid mirrors for chronically laying hens
  • Provide regular vet checkups for laying hens

Still Not Sure if Your Cockatiel Needs a Vet?

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