Whether you’re an avid birdwatcher or hoping to get involved in this calm and quiet activity that can help you spend less on travel, there’s a prime spot for birdwatching in every U.S. state.
Read on for our list of the best birdwatching locales in each state, from sea to shining sea — any one of them could easily become your new favorite.
If you’re over 50, take advantage of massive travel discounts and trip-planning resources
Over 50 and love traveling? Join AARP today — because if you’re not a member, you could be missing out on huge travel perks. When you start your membership today, you can get discounts on hotels and resorts, airfare, cruises, car rentals, and more.
How to become a member today:
- Go here, select your free gift, and click “Join Today”
- Create your account (important!) by answering a few simple questions
- Start enjoying your discounts and perks!
An AARP membership not only unlocks discounts that could save you hundreds on your next trip, but you’ll also have access to deals on vacation packages, guided tours, and exclusive content to help plan your next getaway.
Important: Start your membership by creating an account here and filling in all of the information (do not skip this step!). Doing so will allow you to take up to 25% off your AARP membership, making it just $12 per year with auto-renewal.
Alabama: Lakepoint State Park (Eufaula)
Lakepoint State Park, which surrounds Lake Eufaula, is a hotspot for bass anglers.
The lake and its fish are also a draw for shorebirds, waterfowl, and waders (not to mention the occasional American alligator).
Alaska: Kenai Fjords National Park (Seward)
Kenai Fjords is a top destination for whale watching, but birds also pass through the massive park on the Kenai Peninsula each year.
Arctic terns, boreal chickadees, red-tailed hawks, and multiple types of ptarmigans have been seen in the park.
Arizona: Huachuca Mountains (Coronado National Forest)
The Huachuca mountain range in southeastern Arizona doesn’t host many bird species between October and April.
But from May to September, the mountains — especially their canyons — come alive with Eared Quetzal, Aztec thrush, and Montezuma quail.
Earn a $250 travel bonus with this incredible card
There's a credit card that's making waves with its amazing bonus and benefits. The Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card has no annual fee and you can earn 25,000 bonus points after spending $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening.
You can earn additional points just by using this card for your everyday purchases — unlimited 1.5 points per $1 spent on all purchases. The 25,000 bonus points can be redeemed for a $250 statement credit toward travel or dining purchases.
If you want to travel and dine out more, the Travel Rewards card can help you get where you want to go.
The best part? There's no annual fee.
Arkansas: Petit Jean State Park (Morrilton)
The state’s first state park is located at the top of a low mountain with beautiful gorge views. Spring is the prime season to see songbirds migrate in large numbers through the area.
California: Point Reyes National Seashore (Marin County)
This 70,000-acre protected area is home to almost 500 bird species, from waterfowl to songbirds.
See great-horned and long-eared owls on the Estero Trail or visit the lighthouse region for pelicans and (occasionally) tufted puffins.
Trending Stories
Colorado: Barr Lake State Park (Brighton)
Barr Lake is just 20 miles outside of Denver. More than 350 species of birds call the state park home.
Of all the bald eagles that winter in the park, one pair stays through spring year after year to raise their young.
Connecticut: East Rock Park (New Haven)
This city park is an Audubon Society-designated Important Bird Area (IBA).
Upwards of 200 species of migratory songbirds rest here during the year, and 20 different types of warblers have been noted in the area in the spring.
Delaware: Bombay Hook National Wildlife Refuge (Smyrna)
The tidal salt marshes at Bombay Hook are a haven for waders and shorebirds.
Dozens of species nest here, including bald eagles, which build nests in January, lay eggs in February, and encourage eaglets out of the nest in June.
Florida: Everglades National Park (Homestead)
This World Heritage Site is the biggest subtropical forest in the US.
The park’s website helpfully lists which birds you’re likeliest to see on each trail. For instance, the Anhinga Trail is ideal for seeing cormorants, wading birds, and Anhingas.
Unlock exclusive entertainment deals and VIP perks (without a credit card)
Ready to take your entertainment and travels to the next level? Experience the finer things in life with the SELECT card.
No, it's not a credit card, it’s an exclusive membership — and your passport to a world of elite benefits and unforgettable moments.
Imagine sipping complimentary cocktails in downtown Manhattan at KYU NYC or saving 20% on the best sushi in Hollywood Hills at Yamashiro.
Like to shop? Members receive VIP discounts like 15% off at Brooks Brothers, and up to 60% off at Tumi.
Enjoy special offers at luxury hotels like the Four Seasons and Omni Select. For example, you get 15% off at Hyatt Hotels worldwide.
But it’s not just about the hundreds (or thousands) you could save. There are so many features that make you feel like a VIP every day. Like SELECT’s white-glove concierge that assists with bookings, recommendations, or anything you need. And priority access to reservations to some of the year’s hottest events (many not open to the public).
Georgia: Tybee Island North Beach (Tybee Island)
Tybee Island is a popular beach vacation spot, but humans aren’t the only ones who enjoy its unique coastal environment.
Tybee is also the best place in the state to see purple sandpipers, northern gannets, and piping plovers.
Hawaii, Kōkeʻe State Park (Kauai)
Hawaii’s beautiful volcanic mountains are home to unique bird species.
Drive up the jaw-dropping Waimea Canyon for sweeping island views and glimpses of native birds like the Hawaiian goose, akekee, Kauai Elepaio, and Hawaiian duck.
Idaho: City of Rocks National Reserve (Almo)
City of Rocks is a granite formation rising out of sagebrush plains and pinyon-juniper woodlands.
It’s home to the state bird, the mountain bluebird, and native species like the juniper titmouse, pinyon jay, and greater sage grouse.
Illinois: Illinois Beach State Park (Zion)
Located along Lake Michigan, Illinois Beach State Park shelters 40 endangered local species.
Each winter, stroll down to the North Point Marina to take part in Gull Fest, where you’ll see multiple rare species of gull.
Indiana: Muscatatuck National Wildlife Refuge (Seymour)
These wetlands shelter some of Indiana’s rarest native species, including four-toed salamanders and Kirtland’s snake.
In the winter, the site transforms into a haven for tens of thousands of sandhill cranes.
Iowa: Waubonsie State Park (Hamburg)
This unique state park has eight miles’ worth of hiking trails, a seven-acre lake for boating and fishing, and opportunities to spot 135 bird species.
As you hike through the hardwood forest, look out for wild turkeys, barred owls, and a few varieties of tanagers.
Kansas: Cheyenne Bottoms Wildlife Area (Great Bend)
The Cheyenne Bottoms are ideal for glimpsing migrating shorebirds moving south in the fall and north in the spring.
Sandhill cranes, herons, and egrets reach the area in April and May while whooping cranes visit around November.
Kentucky: Berea College Forest (Berea)
Berea College manages all 9,000 acres of this Appalachian forest.
Depending on the time of year, you’ll see nesting birds as big as wild turkey and as small as the yellow-green Kentucky warbler.
Louisiana: Catahoula National Wildlife Refuge (Jonesville)
As a lowland area with a frequently flooded forest, the Catahoula Refuge is a prime place to see waterfowl and woodland species like woodpeckers and flycatchers.
In the wintertime, you could see up to 75,000 birds at a time on and around Catahoula Lake itself.
Maine: Monhegan Island
If you sail 11 miles off the coast of Maine, you’ll end up on this 1.5-mile-long island and stopover point for migratory birds.
Per the Audubon Society, nearly every species of migrating bird in the eastern US stops at the island at some point in their journey.
Maryland: Assateague Island National Seashore (Assateague Island)
This Atlantic island off the coast of Maryland is home to herds of wild horses, but it’s also a bird-stopping point on the Atlantic flyway.
Threatened birds like plovers flock to the island in the spring, while wading birds like great blue herons stalk through the marshes in the summer.
Massachusetts: Fort Hill (Cape Cod)
There are plenty of birdwatching sites along the 40-mile Cape Cod National Seashore, but the one-mile Fort Hill trail is particularly good.
The trail overlooks Nauset Marsh, and opportunities to view bobwhites, night herons, egrets, and warblers abound.
Michigan: Pointe Mouillee State Game Area (Rockwood)
Pointe Mouillee’s 4,000-acre preserve draws hunters and birders alike thanks to its diverse and plentiful waterfowl.
Swing by the visitor’s center in September to enjoy the yearly waterfowl festival and look out for year-long residents like bald eagles and glossy ibises.
Minnesota: Hawk Ridge Bird Observatory (Duluth)
Duluth’s Hawk Ridge hosts an observatory that becomes a raptor-counting hotspot in the fall. In mid-September, viewers have seen thousands of broad-winged hawks per day.
Mississippi: Ansley Preserve (Ansley)
The Ansley Preserve is just one small section of the larger Hancock County Marsh Coastal Preserve.
The Ansley Trail takes you through marshes, forests, and ponds, and the diverse ecosystem supports more than 230 bird species.
Missouri: Roaring River State Park (Cassville)
Roaring River is nestled in the beautiful Ozark Mountains. It’s easily one of the state’s most popular parks, but birders willing to brave the crowds can find species from bald eagles to gray catbirds.
Montana: Medicine Lake National Wildlife Refuge (Medicine Lake)
Less than 50 miles from the Canadian border, the Medicine Lake refuge is a crucial stopover spot for birds and other wildlife.
The lake’s pelican population is one of the biggest in the US, with between 3,000 and 5,000 nesting pelicans each year.
Nebraska: Indian Cave State Park (Shubert)
Between Indian Cave’s river and the surrounding hardwood forest, visitors will be treated to woodpeckers, scarlet tanagers, warblers, and other migratory songbirds.
The park’s boat ramp gives boaters a unique, water-based way to see the region’s waterfowl.
Nevada: Stillwater National Wildlife Refuge (Fallon)
The Stillwater Refuge is just one section of the wider Lahontan Valley Wetlands, a region that can host as many as 250,000 birds.
White pelicans and white-faced ibis (plus 200 other bird species) enjoy this oasis amid the surrounding high desert.
New Hampshire: Odiorne Point State Park (Rye)
As the biggest stretch of undeveloped land on New Hampshire’s Atlantic Coast, Odiorne Point State Park is the ideal place to enjoy a quieter coastline and hundreds of bird species.
The park spans seven ecosystems and is home to shorebirds and migratory raptors.
New Jersey: Great Swamp National Wildlife Refuge (Harding Township)
Interested in urban birding? The Great Swamp Refuge is only 25 miles away from Manhattan. Look forward to multiple types of orioles and warblers, flycatchers, wrens, and barred owls.
New Mexico: Bosque del Apache National Wildlife Refuge (San Antonio)
Since 1939, the Bosque del Apache refuge has been a haven for cranes — so much so that the refuge has hosted an annual Festival of the Cranes for 35 years.
The refuge sees shorebirds in the spring, hummingbirds in the summer, and blackbirds and ducks in the fall.
New York: Jones Beach State Park (Wantagh, Long Island)
Jones Beach might be best known for its summer swimming, but it becomes an excellent birding location between fall and spring.
Keep an eye out for plovers, gulls, oystercatchers, terns, and other sea birds. In the winter, you could see snowy and short-eared owls too.
North Carolina: Alligator River National Wildlife Refuge (Manteo)
The Alligator River Refuge was created in the 80s to preserve the region’s threatened wetlands, essential habitats for black bears, alligators, endangered red wolves, and birds.
Along with waterfowl, you might spot prairie warblers, common yellowthroats, and eastern screech owls.
North Dakota: Sheyenne National Grassland (Lisbon)
North Dakota’s tallgrass prairie is a crucial habitat for greater prairie chickens, a type of grouse.
The males’ bright-orange air sacs, which expand with a loud booming sound during mating season, earned this threatened bird the nickname “boomers.”
Ohio: Howard Marsh (Curtice)
This 1,000-acre park is a fairly recent creation that required intensive restoration of Lake Erie’s coastal wetlands.
Over 230 species of birds rely on the marshland for refuge during periods of migration.
Oklahoma: Salt Plains National Wildlife Refuge (Jet)
The Salt Plains refuge is named for the unique salt flats near the shallow lake that supports thousands of birds at a time.
Endangered whooping cranes are a special draw for bird enthusiasts, though ducks, sandhill cranes, and snowy plovers also make frequent appearances.
Oregon: Malheur National Wildlife Refuge (Princeton)
Eastern Oregon’s high desert habitat is a far cry from the Pacific beaches on its west side, but the refuge’s lake and wetlands are important stopping points for migrating birds on their way to the coast.
Ibis, stilts, geese, golden eagles, and tanagers are among the migratory visitors.
Pennsylvania: Bald Eagle State Park (Howard)
While bald eagles are year-round residents at Bald Eagle State Park, they’re far from the only bird species you’ll spot here.
Volunteers have worked to make the park a safe nesting spot for bluebirds, and you’ll also see cormorants in the fall and swallows in the spring.
Rhode Island: Ninigret National Wildlife Refuge (Charlestown)
Ninigret is located at the former site of the Charlestown Naval Auxiliary Landing Field.
Where you might have spotted airplane hangers in the 1940s, you can now see red-winged hawks, plovers, wood ducks, and 250 other bird species.
South Carolina: Audubon Beidler Forest (Harleyville)
The Audubon Center in South Carolina’s Beidler Forest helps protect one of the state’s remaining untouched forests.
A raised boardwalk winds through ancient trees that harbor barred owls, colorful painted bunting, and the melodic Swainson’s warbler.
South Dakota: Lacreek National Wildlife Refuge (Martin)
The Lacreek Refuge is part of the Nebraska Sandhills, a region of grasslands and marshes that provide shelter for trumpeter swans, pelicans, night herons, grebe, and other water-loving birds.
Tennessee: Cove Lake State Park (Caryville)
As a site of both wetlands and woodlands, Cove Lake State Park is the perfect place to see dozens of species.
The park is home to marsh-loving waterfowl and waterbirds as well as warblers, which nest in the park’s mature hardwood forest.
Texas: Smith Oaks Bird Sanctuary (High Island)
Smith Oaks is home to a rookery that sits in the middle of a pond and hosts egrets, herons, spoonbills, and other waterbirds.
Utah: Bear River Migratory Bird Refuge (Brigham City)
This bird refuge in Northern Utah is a spectacular spot to see birds of all shapes and sizes, including majestic trumpeter swans in the winter and baby ducks, grebes, and goslings in the summer.
If you prefer to rest your legs, you can skip the 1.5 miles of walkable trails in favor of the leisurely 12-mile drive through the refuge.
Vermont: Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge (Swanton)
Since 1943, the Missisquoi National Wildlife Refuge has served as a resting place for Vermont’s migratory birds.
You can watch birds by boat or on one of the refuge’s walking trails. Keep an eye out for the endangered black terns that flock from across the state to nest in the wetlands.
Virginia: Kiptopeke State Park (Cape Charles)
Virginia’s gateway to the Chesapeake Bay is the ideal spot to fish, swim, and watch for the flocks of migratory birds (and butterflies) that pass through the region in the spring and fall.
Swing by the park’s Hawkwatch Platform to look for and learn about the 14 hawk species in the area.
Washington: Billy Frank Jr. Nisqually National Wildlife Refuge (Olympia)
Located just a few miles outside of the state’s capital city, the Nisqually Refuge is a diverse ecosystem and beloved local habitat for birds.
Easy-access boardwalks make for a pleasant stroll over the marsh. In the spring and fall, you’ll see migrating shorebirds, while winter brings loud choirs of geese to the park.
West Virginia: Smoke Hole Canyon (Petersburg)
Smoke Hole Canyon is part of the wider Monongahela National Forest area. The misty gorge can only be reached via remote roads, which makes it a relatively secluded spot.
Lucky observers will spot birds of prey circling overhead, including bald eagles and osprey (also known as sea hawks).
Wisconsin: Horicon Marsh Wildlife Area (Horicon)
Horicon Marsh’s 33,000-acre wetlands are a crucial habitat for dozens of varieties of waterbirds. In spring and fall, hundreds of thousands of migrating cranes, ducks, and geese flock to the area.
The marsh is also an incredible wildlife recovery story: After being dammed and largely destroyed, the habitat was restored by the 1990s.
Wyoming: Seedskadee National Wildlife Refuge (Green River)
Wyoming’s Green River brings a beautiful splash of green to this otherwise dry area. 300 species use the river as a crucial source of food, water, and safety.
Depending on the time of the year, you might see trumpeter swans, bitterns, warblers, and more.
Bottom line
When you grab your favorite travel credit card to plan your next birdwatching trip, consider factors like the time of year.
Some of these spots truly shine in the winter, while others are at their glorious best in the spring and fall.
And don’t forget your trusty bird identification guide and binoculars, essential to enjoying the country's best birdwatching.
Easy-to-Earn Unlimited Rewards
Benefits
Card Details
- $0 annual fee
- Simple, flat-rate rewards
- Flexible redemption options
- Up to 75% preferred Rewards bonus potential
- Apply Now
- Earn unlimited 1.5 points per $1 spent on all purchases, with no annual fee and no foreign transaction fees and your points don't expire as long as your account remains open.
- 25,000 online bonus points after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening - that can be a $250 statement credit toward travel purchases.
- Use your card to book your trip how and where you want - you're not limited to specific websites with blackout dates or restrictions.
- Redeem points for a statement credit to pay for travel or dining purchases, such as flights, hotel stays, car and vacation rentals, baggage fees, and also at restaurants including takeout.
- 0% Intro APR for 15 billing cycles for purchases, and for any balance transfers made in the first 60 days. After the Intro APR offer ends, a Variable APR that’s currently 18.49% - 28.49% will apply. A 3% Intro balance transfer fee will apply for the first 60 days your account is open. After the Intro balance transfer fee offer ends, the fee for future balance transfers is 4%.
- If you're a Bank of America Preferred Rewards® member, you can earn 25%-75% more points on every purchase. That means instead of earning an unlimited 1.5 points for every $1, you could earn 1.87-2.62 points for every $1 you spend on purchases.
- Contactless Cards - The security of a chip card, with the convenience of a tap.
- This online only offer may not be available if you leave this page or if you visit a Bank of America financial center. You can take advantage of this offer when you apply now.
FinanceBuzz writers and editors score cards based on a number of objective features as well as our expert editorial assessment. Our partners do not influence how we rate products.
on Bank of America’s secure website
Read Card ReviewIntro Offer
Earn 25,000 online bonus points after you make at least $1,000 in purchases in the first 90 days of account opening - that can be a $250 statement credit toward travel purchases
Annual Fee
$0
Why we like it
The Bank of America® Travel Rewards credit card is great for individuals who enjoy earning rewards and traveling.
Cardholders will enjoy the flexibility to redeem points with no blackout dates and receive a statement credit to pay for travel and dining purchases.
Earn 1.5X points on all purchases everywhere, every time.
- Apply Now
Subscribe Today
Want extra-cash moves to come right to you?
Stop browsing endlessly. Get proven ways to earn pocket money, help cover rent, and crush your debt — sent to your inbox daily.