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Open-Front Nester Open

House Finch

Haemorhous mexicanus

Floor
6" × 6"
Interior height
5"
Mount height
5–10 ft
Breeds
Mar–Aug
Broods / yr
2–3
Cool Facts

Things you didn't know about the House Finch

01

House Finches were originally a southwestern bird; the eastern population descends from a few caged birds released in New York in 1940.

02

Male House Finches' red comes from their diet — males that eat carotenoid-rich foods turn brilliant red, while poorly-fed males stay drab orange or yellow.

03

Females reportedly prefer redder males, making bright color a real signal of fitness.

Attract Them

How to bring the House Finch to your yard

House Finches are some of the easiest feeder birds to attract — sunflower seeds and water are usually all it takes.

Food

Black-oil sunflower, safflower, and especially sunflower hearts. Nyjer (thistle) in a sock feeder also draws them.

Box placement

They love nesting in hanging baskets, building ledges, and dense shrubs. The open shelf works under a covered porch or pergola.

Cover & landscaping

Conifers (any kind), dense ornamental shrubs, ivy on walls — they'll nest in almost any sheltered structure.

Water

A simple bird bath. They drink and bathe daily.

Competitors

Watch for House Finch Eye Disease (mycoplasmal conjunctivitis) — clean feeders weekly with a dilute bleach solution.

Avoid

Don't disturb hanging plants once a House Finch has started a nest — they're devoted, and the nest is usually surprisingly out of view.

Range & Habitat

Where you'll find them

Originally a southwestern desert bird; now one of the most abundant urban species in North America, with separate Western and Eastern populations.

By region
  • Western US (native range)

    Year-round throughout California, the Southwest, the Mountain West, and into the southern Great Plains.

  • Eastern US (introduced)

    Now resident throughout the eastern half of the continent after spreading from a 1940 release in New York.

  • Mexico

    Resident throughout, where they originated.

Habitat preferences

Urban and suburban landscapes — they thrive in human-built environments. Building ledges, hanging plants, conifers, and shrubs all serve as nest sites.

urban areas suburban gardens porches hanging baskets ivy-covered walls
Approximate range centroids — see the regional breakdown above for the specifics
Fledge Kit

The right house for the House Finch

Open-Front Series

Open Shelf — Small

No entrance hole, no front wall — just a sheltered ledge. Includes drainage and the integrated mounting tab.

See the full lineup
Seasonal Care

When to install. When to clean.

Install by
By February
Cleaning
Empty between broods; final clean September
Winter use
Yes — overnight roosts
Southern US / Southwest
Resident year-round; breeding can begin as early as January.
Northern range
Largely resident; some short-distance movement in winter.

Originally a western species — the eastern population is descended from a 1940s release of caged birds in New York. Now one of the most common feeder birds in North America.