It’s winter in Maryland. In fact, it’s so much winter I shoveled 10 inches of snow off my driveway this morning. Fortunately, I had company. It wasn’t the kind of company that picks up a shovel and helps out, but still, the American robins darting back and forth over my head were still welcome (if surprising and surprisingly quiet) snow day companions.
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“You know,” I said to them as I leaned on my shovel to watch about 25 birds flock together in my neighbor’s oak. “I think y’all are a little early—aren’t you supposed to be the first harbingers of spring?”
We’re not even a month past the first day of winter in the northern hemisphere. Spring is definitely not here. So why are the robins? Shouldn’t they be sunning themselves in warmer climes?
The short answer: as long as there’s food, American robins—true to their name Turdus migratorius (“the wandering thrush”)—kind of spend their winters coming and going as they please.
Robin Migration (AKA Robin Wandering)
Robins do migrate—but they don’t necessarily follow a more or less straight line from north to south in the fall, then repeat the journey south to north in the spring. In the fall and winter, when the ground freezes, robins lose access to their meal of choice: worms, insects (adult and larval) and (occasionally) snails. That’s when they turn to their winter diet staple: mostly fruit, mostly berries.
The folks at Journey North, a project tracking robin movements run by the University of Wisconsin-Madison, put it this way, “Some robins retreat all the way to southern Texas and Florida (in fact, some of the largest winter flocks documented by the Christmas Bird Count gather in sunny St. Petersburg, Florida), but others winter as far north as they can find berries. So they have an enormous winter range. Robins do migrate, but it has more to do with food sources than with being faithful to the same places year over year.”
In that way American robins are somewhat akin to teenage boys—they tend to go where the best (or most abundant or most easily accessible) food is, stay until it’s depleted, and then move on.
So as long as there are enough berries and other fruits to sustain them, you may see robins off and on throughout the winter across much of North America.
Forget the birdseed though. Robins’ digestive systems, unlike sparrows or other so-called feeder birds, aren’t built for dealing with seed, and their beaks aren’t built for cracking things open. Robin beaks are built for snapping up worms, catching insects, and plucking berries and other fruits. In the winter, a flock of robins can strip a holly bush with impressive speed and efficiency, and very little—if any—violent robin-on-robin aggression.
Food is also one of the reasons that robins, notoriously territorial and aggressive in breeding season, tend to gather and travel in flocks in the fall and winter. Numbers are good for defense, and also for spotting food—if one robin happens on a holly tree full of bright, ripe berries, the whole flock can partake. And then move on.
The tendency of robins to flock in winter may also be one of the reasons people seem to notice them—birds in large numbers tend to stand out when they’re gathered in leafless trees. (That and the beautiful red breast that is sometimes the only splash of color in a winter landscape that looks practically lunar in relentless shades of February white and gray.)

How do Robins Survive the Cold?
Robins are outfitted to survive huge temperature variances. In fact, hot weather seems to stress them more than cold.
If an American robin is healthy, has enough to eat, and is able to main its feathers, the temperature next to its body stays around 104 F—regardless of how cold it is in the world outside. It really is all about those feathers. (And the legs and feet.)

Robins, like most birds, have layers of feathers that perform different functions. When temperatures drop, robins puff the fine, downy feathers closest to their bodies to keep heat in, cold out. The outer feathers act like a kind of overcoat, shedding water and moisture and helping to regulate the bird’s temperature. (It’s an adaptation not limited to robins. Most birds with down feathers fluff them to regulate body heat).
The anatomy of a robin’s (and other bird species) also contributes to their cold adaptations. The bird experts over at the Cornell Lab explain it very well. The simplified version is that “most birds don’t succumb to frostbite because there is so little fluid in the cells of their feet, and their feet are mostly tendons and bones with little muscle or nerve tissue.”
So while blood does flow to their legs and feet, most birds (including robins) benefit from a very fast circulatory system and a “countercurrent heat exchange system.” Because bird legs are thin, the vessels that move blood from the heart to the feet and back again are very close together. That proximity means, per Cornell, “blood flowing back to the body is warmed by blood flowing to the feet. The newly cooled blood in the feet lowers heat loss from the feet, and the warmed blood flowing back into the body prevents the bird from becoming chilled.”
Robins: The Tell-Tale Birds of Spring
If robins are around in winter, why have they always been associated with the beginning of spring in the U.S.? Most likely it has to do with ground thaw, snow melt, and territorial behaviors like singing, worm hunting and nest building. But mostly, it’s the singing.
According to Journey North, which has a fantastic Q+A section I highly recommend for the robin-curious, “the robin’s song remains a reliable indicator that the first wave of spring migration has reached you. This song is one of the first signs that robins are switching from winter behavior to courtship and nesting behaviors associated with spring.”
Robins tend to move north as the ground thaws. The availability of high protein prey, especially worms that emerge with warmer, often wetter weather, is when a robin’s thoughts turn to procreation. And that’s the end of the cooperative fall and winter behaviors.

Which is one of the reasons many robins (primarily males) may stay through harsher winters instead of booking it to St. Petersburg: first access to the choicest nesting grounds. Breeding season is when robins also become more visible with mating displays, nest-building and a lot of time on the ground hunting for the tastiest worms. Until then, they’re all about the berries.
You Can Help Robins with Science from Your Own Backyard
Like many species, including other birds, scientists are starting to see some changes in robin behavior that is likely attributable to climate change. One study of American robins migrating to and from Canada’s boreal forest, showed that they’re beginning to journey south on average about 12 days earlier than in past years, or five days earlier per decade since 1994.

If you want to help scientists studying birds, there are several ways to contribute your observations (not just for robins, but for many of the species you can see outside your windows).
Journey North
You can submit your robin observations directly on the Journey North site (and check out their other migration-related citizen science projects). They also have 2025 maps tracking sightings so you can see where American robins (and other signs of spring) are being observed and follow along (and contribute to) the wanderings of Turdus migratorius.
Cornell Lab of Ornithology
The Cornell Lab has a number of different ways you can contribute to science for birds. Your sightings tracked on eBird (free) contribute to worldwide data for birding, science, and conservation. Want to know what birds are being seen in your neighborhood, eBird has a feature for that. If you’re new to birding, check out their genius birding ID app, Merlin.
You can also contribute to Project FeederWatch (requires subscription) by counting birds at your feeder from November through April. Your observations help scientists monitor changes in the abundance and distribution of birds, including the influence of changes in habitat, disease, and climate.
And mark your calendars for the 2025 Great Backyard Bird Count (February 14-17). Spend time in your favorite places watching birds—then report them to Cornell! It’s easy to participate, “in as little as 15 minutes notice the birds around you. Identify them, count them, and submit your counts to help scientists better understand and protect birds around the world. You can see the results from 2024 here.
Hello – First time on this discussion site. I live in Southwestern Pennsylvania and this afternoon I saw about 20 robins in my yard. I do not ever recall seeing robins around here in December. It has been unusually mild the last few days and am wondering if they are migrating to somewhere else or here to stay. I haven’t seen any before today.
It is the second day of winter and I see 3 robins in my front yard. So exciting.
When you see a robin in December does it mean snow is comeung
I am sitting in my home office on a December day in Calgary Alberta, It’s now well into winter here. The outside temp is -7c/ or 19f. I have lived here my entrie life and I have never seen a Robyn past the end of October that was until today, I looked out to the brown partly snow covered garden and a large male Robyn caught my eye while he was foraging for berries in the bushes. I thought they all migrated out. He’s gone now but it was a pleasent surprise.
Huntington Bay LI 12/8/19. I have a flock of robins on my lawn and in the trees. Easily 30 or more
The robins here in east tn Are trying to mate.there were a male and a female jumping from branch to branch.
its November 12, 2019 in New Brunswick Canada and its cold and rainy and I open my window and heard there song I was quiet surprise!
I have noticed about a week ago that I did not see Robins or any other birds that were here in Western Pa. since spring. Isn’t it early for them to be gone by mid August? When does migration usually occur. I thought is was later in the season, more towards fall,
I am in Canada near Peterborough Ontario. All winter long I have heard Robin chirps and calls. It is of course interesting to know how they survive and what they are thinking and eating during the winter months.
Question: do they use a nest in winter or stay in the thick parts of white pine and white cedar?
I do not know if the male is with its mate? I only see and hear one Robin.
Thank You.
March 13, 2019 Denver in the midst of the cyclone boom phenomenon. 9:30 a.m. Schools and businesses even government offices shut down in anticipation of what could come. Snowy rainy sleet coming down and a flock of robins is all over the neighbor’s lawn. I had to look it up. Who knew?
I bought some lovely Spanish Moss last spring to drape over branches of a tree in my back yard. One morning I went outside and it was completely gone. Ha! Long story short, a Robin who had already built her nest decided to decorate/camouflage her nest with all of my Spanish moss. It was the most beautiful best I have ever seen!
That was so much fun, I’m going to do it again this spring!
We have learned so much about robins in the past four years…every April through July, a male relentlessly attacks our cars (and any guests’ cars that dare park in the driveway). The male will spend hours and hours attacking its reflection in the side view mirrors, and perching on the sills of both front windows of the car, raining rivers (and I mean rivers) of poop down the doors. It is honestly so maddening and absurd that is has just become something we have to laugh about. We’ve tried everything to deter the robin – tin foil hung in long pieces out of the car windows, wrapping the side view mirrors in tin foil, a fake hooting owl, the spider arm things people use on boat docks, hawk-eye appearing moving reflectors hung from the cars, house, and nearby trees…that bird just does not care! Apparently he loves our yard just as much as we do!
Hi! I’m wondering if Robins will use last years’ nest or if they always build a new one…?
Flock of Robin’s arrived this am!!!
Males, feeding on near by apple tree and northern ash.
I rake my leaves over time during the fall and winter, where I do not have grass. Right now, I see a flock of them going through my leaf litter.