Reptiles

King Snake: Care Guide, Diet, Setup & Lifespan

QUICK ANSWER
King snakes are hardy, docile constrictors that thrive in captivity with minimal equipment. They eat readily, tolerate handling well, and live 15-20 years, making them one of the best choices for first-time reptile keepers.

The king snake is one of the most forgiving reptiles you can keep. Captive-bred specimens settle in quickly, eat pre-killed mice without fuss, and rarely show aggression once they trust their keeper. If you're building your first reptile enclosure setup, this species rewards basic husbandry with decades of reliable companionship.

Wild king snakes range across North America, occupying woodlands, grasslands, and desert scrub. That adaptability carries directly into captivity. They tolerate a wider temperature band than most snakes, accept a broader diet, and absorb husbandry mistakes that would stress more exacting species—a bearded dragon's tank requirements, for comparison, leave far less margin for error.

LIFESPAN
15-20 yrs
ADULT LENGTH
3-6 ft
WARM SIDE
85-90°F
HUMIDITY
40-60%

King Snake Enclosure: Size and Substrate Requirements

A hatchling king snake starts fine in a 20-gallon enclosure, but adults need at least a 4x2x2-foot enclosure to move, thermoregulate, and behave normally. Under-sizing the enclosure is the most common husbandry error and leads to stress-related refusals to eat.

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Top-opening or front-opening enclosures both work. Front-opening models are easier to service without alarming the snake. Secure latching is non-negotiable: king snakes are escape artists and will push every seam.

  • Aspen shavings: ideal for burrowing, holds tunnels well, easy to spot-clean
  • Cypress mulch: retains some moisture, good for eastern subspecies needing moderate humidity
  • Coconut fiber: works for desert subspecies at low depth
  • Paper towel: acceptable for quarantine and hatchlings, not long-term

If you're comparing enclosure floors across different reptiles, the leopard gecko substrate guide is a useful contrast because desert lizards and burrowing colubrids use very different materials for traction, humidity, and cleanup.

Provide at least two hides: one on the warm side, one on the cool side. A snake with only one hide will always be stressed. A water dish large enough to soak in completes the setup.

King Snake Temperature and Lighting: Getting the Gradient Right

King snakes are ectotherms that regulate body temperature by moving between zones. You need a genuine gradient, not a single uniform temperature. The warm end should reach 85-90°F, the cool end should sit at 70-75°F, and the ambient mid-tank temperature should stay around 78°F.

Under-tank heat mats are the most reliable heat source for king snakes. Position the mat under one-third of the enclosure floor only. Overhead radiant heat works as well, and the same selection criteria apply as with any heat lamp for reptiles—thermostat compatibility and wattage matched to enclosure volume matter most. Avoid heat rocks: they create dangerous hot spots that burn skin without warming the air or substrate properly.

CARE TIP
King snakes don't require UVB lighting, but a low-output 5.0 UVB bulb on a 12-hour cycle improves vitamin D synthesis and may enhance breeding behavior. It's optional but worth adding if you plan to breed.

Nighttime temperatures can drop to 65°F without harm. Natural temperature cycling supports healthy digestion and seasonal rhythms. Do not heat the enclosure 24 hours uniformly.

King Snake Diet: Feeding Schedule and Prey Size

King snakes are opportunistic predators in the wild, eating rodents, lizards, birds, eggs, and other snakes including venomous species. In captivity, a diet of pre-killed mice covers all nutritional needs. Never offer live prey: even a small mouse can bite and injure a distracted snake.

Prey size should match the widest point of the snake's body. A slight bulge after feeding is correct. A visible lump that doesn't resolve within 48 hours indicates the prey was too large.

  • Hatchlings: pinky mice every 5-7 days
  • Juveniles (1-2 years): fuzzy or hopper mice every 7 days
  • Sub-adults: adult mice every 7-10 days
  • Adults: adult mice or small rats every 10-14 days

Thaw frozen prey in warm water until room temperature. Never microwave prey: it creates hot spots that burn the snake's mouth. Feed in the enclosure or in a separate feeding container; both methods work well.

WARNING
King snakes will eat other snakes, including each other. Never house two king snakes together, even temporarily. A well-fed king snake will still cannibalize a tankmate given the opportunity.

King Snake Health: Common Issues and Prevention

A healthy king snake is alert, has clear eyes, and passes solid urates with soft feces. Respiratory infections are the most common captive illness, usually caused by ambient temperatures that are too cold or humidity that is too high. The first sign is wheezing or mucus visible at the nostrils.

Retained shed (dysecdysis) affects king snakes kept in enclosures that are too dry. The shed should come off in one piece. Retained eye caps are the most serious form: they require a vet visit rather than home removal.

  • Respiratory infection: wheezing, open-mouth breathing, mucus at nose
  • Dysecdysis: retained shed patches, cloudy retained eye caps
  • Mites: tiny moving dots visible around eyes, chin, and water dish
  • Inclusion Body Disease: stargazing, loss of righting reflex (vet immediately)

  • Temperature: maintain gradient 70-90°F at all times
  • Humidity: keep at 40-60%, add moist hide during shed
  • Quarantine: isolate new snakes for 60-90 days
  • Clean water: change water dish every 2-3 days

Annual vet checkups with a reptile-experienced veterinarian catch internal parasites and nutritional issues before they become serious. A fecal float test once a year is inexpensive and worthwhile.

King Snake Handling: Building Trust Over Time

Captive-bred king snakes tame down quickly, but they need time to adjust to a new home. Wait 5-7 days after bringing a new snake home before attempting the first handling session. Let the snake eat at least twice before regular handling begins.

Start with short sessions of 5-10 minutes, three or four times a week. Support the body fully when holding. Avoid grabbing from above: it triggers a defensive response. Reach from the side and let the snake move onto your hand.

✓ PROS
Tames quickly with regular handling
Rarely bites once established
Active and engaging during handling
✗ CONS
Musks when first disturbed
May refuse food during shed
Some subspecies are more defensive than others

Never handle within 48 hours of feeding. Handling a digesting snake causes regurgitation, which stresses the animal and can damage the esophagus if it happens repeatedly.

King Snake Breeding: Cycling and Egg Incubation

King snakes breed readily in captivity when given a winter cooling period (brumation). Reduce temperatures to 55-60°F for 60-90 days starting in November. Cease feeding 2-3 weeks before cooling begins to ensure the gut is clear.

After warming back to normal temperatures in February or March, reintroduce the female to the male's enclosure for supervised pairings. Successful copulation can take 20-60 minutes. Females lay 5-24 eggs approximately 45 days after mating.

Egg Incubation Details
Incubate eggs at 80-84°F in a slightly moist vermiculite substrate (1:1 by weight of vermiculite to water). A commercial reptile incubator gives more consistent results than DIY setups. Eggs hatch in 55-65 days. Do not separate eggs that have stuck together during incubation; forced separation tears the membrane. Hatchlings should shed within 7-10 days and can accept pinky mice after their first shed.
Most captive king snakes reach 3-5 feet. California king snakes average 3-4 feet; Mexican black king snakes often reach 4-5 feet. Females are typically larger than males.
King snakes don't require a basking lamp but do need a thermal gradient. An under-tank heat mat connected to a thermostat maintains the warm side at 85-88°F reliably and uses less power.
Juveniles shed every 4-6 weeks during rapid growth. Adults shed 4-6 times per year. Eyes cloud 5-7 days before shed; do not handle during this period.
Yes. Wild king snakes eat lizards, other snakes, and even rattlesnakes. Never cohouse a king snake with any other reptile regardless of size difference.
No. King snakes are non-venomous constrictors. They kill prey by squeezing. A bite from a startled king snake causes minor scratches, not venom injection.
THE BOTTOM LINE
King snakes are truly beginner-friendly: forgiving on temperatures, eager eaters, and tolerant of regular handling. The California king snake is our top pick for first-time keepers. Comparing colubrids? The corn snake and milk snake are the two closest alternatives. Feeder gut-load options worth knowing: strawberries, blueberries, apples, watermelon, grapes, carrots, leafy greens, romaine, and bananas all work well for loading crickets before feeding.
Best: California King Snake Budget: Florida King Snake
SOURCES & REFERENCES
1.
Thermal biology of Lampropeltis getula in captive environments
Journal of Herpetology, 2018 Journal
2.
Husbandry guidelines for North American colubrid snakes
Association of Reptilian and Amphibian Veterinarians, 2021 Expert
3.
King snake natural history and captive care
University of California Museum of Vertebrate Zoology, 2019 University