Spring migration is one of the most spectacular wildlife events in North America, and one of the most rewarding to photograph. Between late March and late May, billions of birds move northward along ancient flyways, stopping to rest and feed in parks, wetlands, and backyards across the continent. For wildlife photographers, this is the calendar event worth planning your entire spring around.
This guide covers exactly what gear you need to capture birds in flight, perched in spring foliage, and moving through their stopover habitats.
When and Where to Find Spring Migration
Migration timing is tightly tied to weather and latitude. As a general rule:
- Late March – early April: Waterfowl, raptors, and early warblers moving through the South and Mid-Atlantic
- Mid-April: Shorebirds, sparrows, and warblers flooding through the Midwest and Great Lakes
- Late April – May: Peak warbler diversity in the Great Lakes, New England, and the upper Midwest
- May: Shorebirds and late migrants pushing into Canada
The best locations are migrant traps, points of land jutting into large bodies of water where birds concentrate before crossing. Magee Marsh in Ohio, Point Pelee in Ontario, High Island in Texas, and the shores of Lake Michigan are legendary.
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The Most Important Piece of Gear: Your Lens
No piece of gear matters more for bird photography than your telephoto lens. Birds are small, fast, and almost always farther away than you want them to be. For serious migration photography, you need at least 400mm of reach. More is better.
| Lens | Best For | Price |
|---|---|---|
| Sony 200-600mm f/5.6-6.3 G OSS | Best zoom value for birding, sharp at 600mm | ~$2,000 |
| Nikon Z 100-400mm f/4.5-5.6 S | Faster focusing, great in dim forest light | ~$2,700 |
| Canon RF 100-500mm f/4.5-7.1 L | Compact, optically superb, great IS | ~$2,900 |
| Sigma 150-600mm Sport | Budget option, excellent for the price | ~$1,400 |
| Tamron 150-500mm f/5-6.7 | Lightest 500mm zoom, great value | ~$900 |
[AFFILIATE LINK: Sony 200-600mm G OSS] | [AFFILIATE LINK: Tamron 150-500mm] | [AFFILIATE LINK: Sigma 150-600mm Sport]
Camera Body: What You Actually Need
For birds in flight, you need fast autofocus and a high burst rate. Any modern mirrorless body from the last three years handles this well. The real differentiator is the autofocus subject recognition, cameras that can lock onto and track a bird’s eye in flight change the game completely.
| Camera | AF Tracking | Burst Rate | Price |
|---|---|---|---|
| Sony a9 III | Best-in-class, global shutter | 120fps | ~$6,000 |
| Sony a7R V | Excellent bird eye AF | 10fps | ~$3,500 |
| Nikon Z9 | Outstanding wildlife AF | 20fps RAW | ~$5,500 |
| Canon EOS R7 | Great bird AF on a crop sensor | 30fps | ~$1,500 |
| OM System OM-1 Mark II | Pro bird AF + weather sealed | 50fps | ~$2,200 |
[AFFILIATE LINK: Canon EOS R7] | [AFFILIATE LINK: OM System OM-1 Mark II]
Supporting Gear That Makes a Real Difference
Monopod or Gimbal Head
Handholding a 600mm lens for hours is exhausting and reduces keeper rate. A monopod gives you stability without sacrificing the mobility you need to track birds. A gimbal tripod head is the gold standard for serious bird-in-flight work, it makes a heavy lens feel weightless.
- Jobu Design BWG-Pro2 Gimbal Head. [AFFILIATE LINK], best professional option
- Benro MonoPod MAD38A. [AFFILIATE LINK], lightweight, folds flat for hiking to locations
Extra Batteries and High-Speed Cards
Burst shooting at 20-30fps fills cards fast and drains batteries faster. Bring at least 3 charged batteries and use the fastest UHS-II cards you can afford.
Camouflage and Concealment
Birds that see you coming don’t stick around. A simple camo jacket or a small portable hide dramatically increases how close you can get, and how long birds stay comfortable near you.
- Vortex Realtree Camo Jacket. [AFFILIATE LINK]
- Tragopan Photography Blind. [AFFILIATE LINK], the standard for serious birders
Camera Settings for Spring Bird Photography
Birds in Flight
- Shutter speed: 1/2000s minimum, 1/3200s for sharp wing tips at full extension
- Autofocus: Continuous AF, bird/animal eye-detection enabled
- Burst mode: High speed, don’t be afraid to shoot 50+ frames per pass
- ISO: Auto, max 6400 on modern sensors
Perched Birds in Foliage
- Shutter speed: 1/400s to 1/800s to freeze small movements
- Aperture: f/5.6–f/8 for eye-sharp focus with some background separation
- Focus mode: Single point AF on the eye
Top 5 Spring Migration Photography Tips
- Go early, birds are most active in the first 2 hours after sunrise, especially in migration season
- Face the light, keep the sun behind you so birds are front-lit and colors are vivid
- Patience pays off, find a good spot and wait for birds to come to you rather than chasing them
- Shoot for the background, a clean, out-of-focus background makes a bird portrait. Move until you have one.
- Visit after storms, birds pile up at good stopover sites after north winds ground them. Post-frontal mornings in May are legendary.
Frequently Asked Questions
What is the best focal length for bird photography?
400–600mm is the sweet spot for most bird photography. Shorter focal lengths (200-300mm) can work for large birds like herons and egrets, but you’ll struggle with small warblers and shorebirds at distance.
Can I photograph birds with a crop sensor camera?
Yes, a crop sensor gives you effectively 1.5–1.6x the reach, so a 400mm lens becomes a 640mm equivalent. The Canon EOS R7 and OM System OM-1 are favorites specifically because of this reach multiplier.
When is the absolute peak of spring migration?
In the Great Lakes and Upper Midwest, the first two weeks of May are legendary. “warbler week” around Magee Marsh typically falls in late April to early May and consistently produces some of the best close-range bird photography opportunities in North America.