The African grey parrot (Psittacus erithacus) has been the subject of decades of scientific research, most famously the 30-year study by Dr. Irene Pepperberg with a bird named Alex.
That research demonstrated that African greys don't just mimic speech: they use words meaningfully, understand that absent objects still exist, and can communicate needs with a specificity that no other bird approaches. Our bird care guides cover every companion species, but African greys require a guide of their own because keeping one poorly is far worse than not keeping one at all.
Two subspecies are commonly kept: the Congo African grey (P. e. erithacus), larger at 13 inches with a bright red tail, and the Timneh African grey (P. e. timneh), smaller at 10-11 inches with a maroon tail. Timnehs are considered less neurotic, start talking earlier, and are recommended for first-time African grey keepers.
African Grey Appearance: Congo vs. Timneh and Physical Traits
Both subspecies are primarily medium grey with white feather edges that give the plumage a scalloped texture. The Congo grey has a vivid red tail and a black beak.
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The Timneh has a maroon tail, a horn-colored upper mandible, and slightly darker overall plumage. Both have bare white facial patches that flush pink with emotion, a useful indicator of the bird's mood.
African greys weigh 400-600 grams (Congos heavier, Timnehs lighter) and have a wingspan of approximately 18-20 inches. Their beaks are powerful: a full-grown African grey can exert enough pressure to crack a Brazil nut and easily break a human finger bone.
They are not birds that tolerate rough or forceful handling.
Macaws and African greys both require expert-level commitment, so our macaw care guide is a useful comparison if you're deciding between large parrot species.
Soft fruits like banana are easy for African greys to hold and eat, and our guide on banana for pet birds confirms portion guidelines.
- Congo grey: 13 inches, bright red tail, black beak, more common in trade
- Timneh grey: 10-11 inches, maroon tail, paler beak, generally calmer temperament
- Facial patch: White, flushes pink-red during excitement or stress
- Eyes: Yellow iris in adults, dark grey in juveniles (useful for rough age assessment)
African Grey Intelligence and Personality: What the Research Actually Shows
Dr.Pepperberg's Alex could identify 50 objects by name, seven colors, five shapes, and quantities up to six. He used phrases in context, asked for specific foods, and on the night before he died said to Pepperberg: "You be good.
I love you. I'll see you tomorrow." Whether that was rote or intentional remains debated, but it illustrates the depth of engagement these birds reach.
In captivity, this intelligence creates a bird that needs 3-4 hours of daily mental engagement: foraging activities, training sessions, novel objects, and social interaction. An under-stimulated African grey develops feather-destructive behavior, self-mutilation, and stereotypic screaming.
A well-engaged grey is a wonder to live with. An ignored grey is a welfare crisis.
Cockatoos and African greys both bond intensely to their keepers, and our cockatoo care guide outlines the emotional demands that distinguish the two.
African greys hold the top position in nearly every ranking, which is why they lead our best talking birds guide with extensive evidence on their cognitive ability.
African Grey Housing: Cage Size, Enrichment, and Stability
The minimum cage for an African grey is 36 x 24 x 48 inches with bar spacing of ¾ to 1 inch. This is a floor requirement.
A larger flight cage or dedicated bird room is ideal for a species that needs this level of physical activity. Stainless steel construction is worth the cost: African greys can destroy powder-coated cages and ingest the coating flakes.
African greys are creatures of habit and react badly to change. Rearranging furniture, introducing new objects too quickly, or moving the cage can trigger feather plucking episodes in sensitive individuals.
Introduce any change gradually: new toys placed outside the cage before going in, cage moves done in increments over days.
Keepers who want a medium-sized parrot before committing to a grey often start with a conure, and our conure care guide covers what that step looks like.
African greys are explicitly not recommended for beginners, which our best birds for beginners guide addresses by steering new keepers toward smaller species.
African Grey Diet: Calcium, Pellets, and Variety
African greys have a documented calcium metabolism problem: they cannot absorb and utilize calcium as efficiently as most other parrots, making dietary calcium intake especially important. A diet of 65-70% quality large parrot pellets plus daily dark leafy greens covers most nutritional needs.
Harrison's Adult Lifetime Coarse is a widely used and respected option.
Variety in the vegetable component prevents nutritional gaps and keeps the bird mentally engaged with its food. Rotate through at least 8-10 different vegetables across the week rather than offering the same item daily.
Apple is one of the safest fresh foods for African greys and our article on apple for birds confirms the seed-free preparation method.
Grapes make excellent foraging enrichment for African greys and our guide on grapes for birds covers safe frequency for large parrots.
- Pellets: Harrison's Coarse or Roudybush Maintenance, 65-70% of total diet
- Calcium foods: Kale, broccoli, almonds, cooked legumes (high bioavailable calcium)
- Vegetables: Sweet potato, carrot, bell pepper, snap peas, cooked corn
- Protein sources: Cooked egg, cooked chicken (small amounts), legumes
- Toxic foods: Avocado, onion, garlic, chocolate, caffeine, alcohol, fruit pits, rhubarb
African Grey Health: Feather Plucking, Calcium, and Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease
Feather destructive behavior is the most common health complaint in African greys and has both medical and psychological causes. Medical causes, including bacterial infections, fungal infections, and Psittacine Beak and Feather Disease (PBFD), must be ruled out before behavioral causes are addressed.
PBFD causes progressive feather loss and deformity with no cure.
Aspergillosis, a fungal respiratory infection, is particularly common in African greys. It presents as labored breathing, tail bobbing, and weight loss.
African greys are sensitive to poor air quality, mold, and dusty environments. Good ventilation and a HEPA air purifier are genuine medical needs, not optional accessories.
Watermelon is safe and hydrating for African greys and our guide on watermelon for birds covers serving size for large parrots.
Some grey owners keep a parrotlet as a second bird in a separate cage, and our parrotlet care guide covers whether the two species can coexist in the same home.
| Condition | Key Signs | Urgency |
|---|---|---|
| Hypocalcemic seizure | Sudden collapse, tremors, disorientation | Emergency vet immediately |
| PBFD | Progressive feather loss, deformed pin feathers | Avian vet within days |
| Aspergillosis | Labored breathing, tail bobbing, weight loss | Avian vet within 24 hours |
| Feather plucking | Chewed or missing feathers on body | Avian vet to rule out medical causes |
| Psittacosis | Watery droppings, lethargy, eye discharge | Avian vet within 24 hours |
Training African Greys: Communication, Enrichment, and Building Trust
African greys don't train the way smaller parrots do. They learn by observation as much as by direct instruction, and they learn constantly, whether you intend to teach them or not.
This means your behavior around the bird shapes its behavior. Shouting at the bird, reacting with alarm to its vocalizations, or inconsistent rules produce a neurotic, unpredictable bird.
The most effective approach with African greys is station training: teaching the bird a specific spot to go to on cue. Combined with target training (touching a colored stick), you can teach the bird to station on a perch, go to its cage, and stay in a safe location during household activity.
This gives the bird a sense of agency that reduces anxiety significantly.
Strawberries are an excellent antioxidant-rich supplement for African greys and our article on strawberries for birds covers how often to offer them.