What to Do If You Find a Baby Hummingbird: A Simple, Safe Guide

Seeing a baby hummingbird alone can be emotional — they’re tiny, fragile, and incredibly adorable. But acting too quickly can sometimes do more harm than good. This guide explains how to tell whether a baby hummingbird actually needs help and what you should (and should NOT) do.


🐥 First — Is It Really Alone?

Most of the time, baby hummingbirds are not abandoned. Hummingbird mothers spend a lot of time away from the nest gathering food and may only return every 20–30 minutes.

✔️ If the baby is in the nest

  • Leave it alone.
  • Observe from a distance.
  • Do not touch or hover near the nest.

✔️ If the baby is out of the nest but looks healthy

It may be a fledgling learning to fly. This is normal.

Signs of a healthy fledgling:

  • Feathers mostly developed
  • Eyes open
  • Attempts to flutter or hover

In this case, the mother is likely nearby and still caring for it.


🚨 When a Baby Hummingbird Does Need Help

Intervene only if:

  • It is injured
  • It is on the ground and too young to fly
  • The nest is destroyed
  • You have watched for several hours and the mother never returns

Signs of distress

  • Eyes closed and unresponsive
  • Bald or partially feathered outside the nest
  • Obvious injury or predators nearby

🆘 What You Should Do

1️⃣ If the nest is intact

Gently place the baby back in the nest if it is clearly a nestling.
Myth-buster: Mother birds do NOT abandon babies due to human scent.

2️⃣ If the nest is gone or unreachable

Contact a licensed wildlife rehabilitator immediately.
Search: “Wildlife Rehab Near Me” or check your state’s wildlife department.

Keep the baby:

  • Warm
  • Quiet
  • Safe from pets and children

Do not attempt to raise a hummingbird yourself — it’s illegal in most places and extremely difficult without the right diet and care.


❌ What NOT to Do

  • ❌ Don’t feed sugar water or nectar unless instructed by a rehabilitator
  • ❌ Don’t bring it inside “to take care of it”
  • ❌ Don’t give water (risk of drowning)
  • ❌ Don’t keep handling it
  • ❌ Don’t post on Facebook groups first — call a professional

Hummingbirds require a precise balance of nectar and insects; improper feeding can be fatal.


💚 The Best Help Is Often Doing Less

The majority of found baby hummingbirds are simply learning to fly or waiting for mom. Observing from a respectful distance is usually the most helpful and safest option.

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