14 Ways to STOP Birds From Flying Into Your Windows!

Birds crashing into windows is a BIG problem.

how to stop birds from crashing into windows

It’s estimated that up to ONE billion birds die each year from window collisions! Not only is this having an impact on local populations, but it’s also incredibly sad to find a dead bird that has been a victim. It just feels so senseless and preventable to me.

Today, we will discuss 14 ways to help STOP birds from colliding with windows.

Before we begin, why exactly do birds crash into windows?

Birds hit windows because they don’t even realize they’re there! Typically, the window reflects vegetation, the sky, or trees, so a bird thinks it’s part of the environment. Or, in some cases, the bird sees through the window and all the way through the house, especially if there is another window on the other side of the room.

As you will see, most of the tips below focus on minimizing the reflections on your window, which helps the bird know there is a window present.


#1. Don’t put your bird feeders in the “danger zone.”

Do you have bird feeders in your yard?

If so, you know that every day the birds randomly get scared by something, and they all take off quickly in different directions. Whether it was a hawk, cat, or something else perceived as a threat, the birds are trying to quickly get away to safety.

Unfortunately, these moments of panic lead to birds flying directly into windows!

Luckily, this carnage can be easily prevented by making sure you don’t place your feeders in the “danger zone,” which is between 3 feet (1 m) and 30 feet (9 m) from your home! Here’s why this strategy helps:

If the feeding station is over 30 feet (9 m) away from your house, the birds should have time to realize they are flying towards a window when they get scared.

And if the feeders are within 3 feet (1 m), they won’t have time to build up enough momentum to harm themselves if they accidentally fly into a window.

Making sure your feeding station is out of the “danger zone” can help save many of your backyard birds!


#2. Put decorative decals on the windows.

Placing a bunch of stickers on your windows can help birds know that they can’t fly through it!

Luckily, there are a lot of fancy decals that look nice. Here are just a few options on Amazon to get you started:

And you can’t just put one sticker on the window in the corner and think you are fine. If you are going to use this strategy, you must cover most of the window. Otherwise, the birds might think they can slip through.


#3. Keep the screens on your windows.

Many people take the screens off their windows during winter since the insects are not around. But, these screens help break up the reflection in the window.

If there are windows that birds can’t stop hitting, try putting the screen back on to see if it helps.


#4. Install window film to help reduce glare.

A variety of films are made to put on windows. For example, some people use them in their bathrooms so no one can see in from the outside. Others use it on windows that face the sun during the day to help keep a room cooler.

Regardless, these window films can help eliminate a reflection on a window and make it look opaque. And the best part is that you can still see through the window from the inside!

Here are a few different options:

  • CollidEscape Window Film
    • This stuff is specially made to help birds. In addition, it helps your air conditioning bill by not allowing in as much heat.
  • WPCTEV Window Film
    • This whole window film is incredibly INEXPENSIVE and comes in various sizes. In addition to helping prevent bird deaths, it conserves heat, blocks out much of the sun, and provides privacy.

If you don’t like either of these two window films, keep searching around online. There are dozens of different decorative options and designs that look great and prevent birds from crashing into windows.


#5. Attach a bird feeder to a problem window.

Do you have ONE window that seems to be your main problem? If so, you should consider putting a bird feeder DIRECTLY on the window.

Ok, I know this tip sounds a bit counterintuitive at first. But please hear me out!

Click HERE to see the window bird feeder I use!

I have had a bird feeder hanging off my kitchen window for many years. And I can’t recall ONE time that a bird has run into the window.

First, the bird feeder helps break up reflections the window causes.

Second, since the birds come to the feeder for food, it seems to train them that there is a window there!

Having a window bird feeder is loads of fun. It’s incredible to stay still and watch them from only a few feet away. This tip is HIGHLY recommended. 🙂


#6. Attach tape to the outside of the window.

Once again, with this strategy, we are trying to get rid of the deadly reflection that birds see on windows.

To help them out, attach strips of tape to the outside of a window in a grid pattern. If you buy 1/4″ (6 mm) tape, then space it 4″ apart. 1/8″ (3 mm) tape needs to be spaced an inch apart.

The least expensive tape you can use is chart tape. You can buy either black or white. The negative to this option is that it’s not very aesthetically pleasing.

If you want the tape to look nicer, you can buy this CollidEscape Window tape. I like that you can see through it when looking out from the inside. In my opinion, it’s also less noticeable and more pleasing to the eye.


#7. Replace existing windows with “bird-friendly” glass.

If you need new windows, you can actually buy windows that are specially made to PREVENT window collisions.

I am definitely not a window expert, so you will want to talk to a window company to get the details and prices. But from my research, there are ways to create a window to be “visible” to birds but is still transparent to people. Some of the strategies include fritting, silk-screening, ultraviolet coatings, or having a pattern etched or sandblasted into the glass.

In addition, if a window is installed facing slightly downward (~ 20 degrees), the glass won’t reflect the trees or sky!


#8. Try putting this on the outside of your windows.

Acopian BirdSavers, also known as Zen Windows, is a product that you can install on the outside of your window.

YouTube video

Described simply, this product hangs paracord, spaced about 4 inches (10 cm) apart, from above the window downward. The paracord breaks up the reflection of the glass so birds won’t try to fly through.

I think it’s pretty impressive that a company provides detailed instructions on how to make the exact product they are selling. This act alone shows pretty clearly that they have a mission to help as many birds as possible. 🙂


#9. Close curtains and blinds whenever possible.

how to stop birds colliding with windows

When you leave the house, or you’re not using a room, close the curtains or blinds! Even when you are in a room, try to keep vertical blinds halfway closed.

Doing this is especially important if there are windows on the other side of the room, which may trick a bird into thinking it can fly through your house.

Super simple, but super effective!


#10. Paint the windows!

If you want to have some fun, or are looking for a unique kids activity, try painting the outside or inside of your problem windows with washable paint.

Tempera paint is a great choice and comes in a variety of colors.


#11. Install shutters that can close.

exterior shutters to stop birds from flying into windows

There is probably no better solution to stop birds from hitting your windows than installing a shutter that can close OVER the window.

When you close the exterior shutter, you are making the window disappear! And from what I’m told, exterior shutters are not that hard to install.

This strategy is probably best if the window that birds are colliding with is in a room that’s not used often. That way, you can keep the shutter closed the majority of the time. If not, you will have to constantly open and close the shutter whenever you leave or get home.


#12. Hang a wind chime in front of the window.

This tip is easy to implement but potentially very effective. Try hanging a wind chime, or two, in front of the window!


#13. Keep your windows dirty!

Did I just give you permission to never wash your windows?

Yes, I did. 🙂

The cleaner your windows, the more they will have a reflection. On the other hand, if your windows are dirty or streaky, they won’t have as much of a reflection, which ultimately saves birds’ lives.

Honestly, I think it’s just irresponsible to clean your windows. Or at least that’s what I’m going to tell my wife next time she wants me to clean them. 🙂


#14. Try a sunshade.

If you don’t like any of my other ideas, maybe you will enjoy this last one.

On the exterior or interior of your window, you can install a sunshade that quickly goes up and down. Many people use these to keep the sun out of a room during parts of the day.

If you look around, there are remote-controlled ones, which makes them super convenient to lower and raise from inside your house. 🙂


How do you stop birds from colliding with windows?

I know many people use a combination of the above strategies. Let us know your experiences below!

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27 Comments

  1. Hi Scott I loved the article, but stickers don’t work. Please tell me you sell WindowAlerts in your store. These are decals you put on the outside of your window and to you they may look like an etching, but the birds see ultraviolet which catches their attention. I’ve used them for many years, and they work.

  2. Hey Scott – Several years ago, we were also concerned about bird strikes/deaths from our windows. We came across the Acopian Birdsavers method (paracord). https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P_jy7qAY_-k We now are in our 4th Spring and without a doubt this works.
    100%? No! BUT…
    Before we made our Birdsavers, we probably killed 2-3 birds a year with numerous other “head bangers”. Since then we’ve probably only have had a few “head bangers” per year and only 1 fatality.
    We used the plastic j-channel header concept with the paracord. It’s a little “cleaner” looking than knotted paracord taped to the top of the window. Still, it is really cheap and anyone will see a decrease.
    I saw Mary’s issue with wind… Although we also have substantial winds…calm to 50+mph gusts, we don’t suffer from Mary’s issue. Our paracord is approximately 2 inches from the glass. That said, I also like her solution! Well Done Mary!!

  3. Stickers did not work for me. I tried the paracord idea – it did not work because the cord tangled in the wind leaving big gaps. I sometimes get 50 mph wind even though I live in an urban neighborhood. I would not put a wind chime where it can hit the windows. I ended up making my own paracord barrier. I strung a horizontal support wire across the length of my house above the windows. I hung two horizontal plastic pipes across that span, one just below the support wire and the other a foot below my windows. I strung vertical paracord 3 inches apart between the pipes. Then I hung weights in the lower pipe so the wind could not cause the whole thing to thrash in the wind. This structure was 18 inches from my windows as they are casement windows that I keep open sometimes. Even so the wind can cause some havoc but no broken glass.

  4. I have finally found a fool proof covering for my windows. It is black pea netting. I used to get birds flying into my windows all the time even using all sorts of decals and not washing them for three years. I simply put four nails on the corners of my windows and hung the netting. I can wash them by simply unhooking from the bottom nails.It does not interfere with my view out the windows and I have not had a bird death since.

  5. Dear Scott this is a great article with a lot of helpful advice. I am a member of Rotary and am part of our District’s team focusing on the Environment in Scotland South. I hope to convey your message to our members. Our Scottish passerines are facing severe threat from urbanisation, garden destruction, loss of habitat generally and climate change anything we can do to stop this must be done, you offer simple ways that can make a difference. Thank you.

  6. For a few years our local wildlife center passed out free a fantastic deterrent. On a 2′ string tie several 2′ strips of mylar so equal length on either side (it moves and flashes even in no wind) tie string at top of the window and weigh down the string with something that will not break the window (like a small pine cone). (Your comment section does not let me attach a drawing but can send it to you.)

  7. The only thing that works for me is to put pea netting in front of mt windows. I tried leaving them dirty, all sorts of stickers but simple cheap pea netting works.

  8. It is important to stress that reflections are often so clear nothing put on the inside of windows can be seen. I paint owl eyes on the outside of my windows. The yellow and black triggers an instinctive response to avoid. Also crow cutouts in black on the outside work well.

  9. I purchased a product called Bird Strike Preventer. It’s similar to the paracode product but uses thick fishing line. You can barely see it when looking out the window and we haven’t had but a couple of bird strikes in the past two years and the birds survived.

  10. I accidently discovered the perfect way to stop all window collisions for two windows on my huge garage that birds tend to strike way too often. A grizzly bear tore the door off the locked garage to get to a freezer full of food. It then proceeded to smash all four big windows in the garage. I put plywood over all the windows to keep the weather out and enclosed all of my buildings with a 10000 volt electric fence to keep marauding bears away. I got the doors replaced with new motorized ones and the windows will be replaced this spring. No birds hit the windows that are boarded up, so when I get the new windows, I will install a hanging curtain on the outside of the garage that is not ruined by rain and will keep the curtain covering the windows during the most critical time for bird activity from May through September.

  11. Good article. We leave our screens up year round, and have done this for years. It has make a significant difference. Thanks for posting this, as so many people think that if a bird is able to rally after a window strike, that they are ok. When in fact, they can be suffering from internal injuries, or head injuries.

  12. Scott, our bird feeding station is, perhaps, unusual. Our 2-story house has a deck on the 2nd story, right outside our living room. (Bird watching room). Two sliding doors access
    the deck. Those doors are Killers. They have grids, inside the
    double panes. I have used inexpensive masking tape, 1 inch
    wide, to criss/cross the panes, and this has been very effective. Probably not everybody’s idea of great aesthetics,
    but…..sure beats little feathered corpses.

  13. Thank you so much for ALL the information you have put on here! I found your site looking for ways beyond just stickers to prevent window crashing, which is positively devastating each and every time it happens. You have several methods here that I had not heard before and will try the feeder on the problem window immediately. I have enjoyed reading your whole site so much. How extensive! So generous of you to publish all this info. Thank you.

  14. I question the WPCETV film as a solution. Their own description says they are reflective. This may be worse than nothing. Note: this is my speculation, not having tried the product.

  15. I feed all my birds by putting seeds down in the driveway. There are evergreen trees that line the driveway. So should something spook the birds they, all at once, fly into the trees. Should something really spook the birds, they would fly to the shrubs in the back yard. We have never had any issues where birds would fly into a window. The windows are at a distance

  16. I like the acopian cords and may try.
    I have painted similar stripes on my picture window with a yellow highlighter. It seemed to work but has worn off. Apparently the birds can see the yellow better that we humans.

  17. I made the Acopian BirdSavers. They’re super easy and cheap to make. And they work 100%. I was using the window decals before but still had bird strikes. I’ve got these on 4 windows!

  18. I put my birdfeeders im the maple trees, far from the window. The maple trees are literally at the back of the backyard! I also keep the windows dirty to help.

  19. I leave the venetian blind down and partly slanted on the window which overlooks the bird feeder, plus the screen is still there on the outside so I’ve not been aware of any bird collisions in that spot.

  20. NUMBER 13 IS A CLASSIC !!!!!!!!!!!!!!!! I LOVE THAT ONE. MY CHOICE I FEEL THAT WINDOW WASHING IS REALLY OVER USED. THE RAIN IS DESIGNED TO DO THAT FOR US!!! MY STORY AND I AM STICKIN’ WITH IT