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Cavity Nester ⌀ 2.125" Medium

Purple Martin

Progne subis

Floor
6" × 6"
Interior height
6"
Entrance hole
⌀ 2.125"
Mount height
10–20 ft
Breeds
Apr–Jul
Broods / yr
1
Cool Facts

Things you didn't know about the Purple Martin

01

Purple Martins east of the Rockies are almost entirely dependent on human-supplied housing — they'd nearly disappear without nest-box landlords.

02

Western populations still nest in natural cavities and saguaro cactus holes the old way.

03

Their fall migration takes them to the Amazon basin in Brazil, where they roost in flocks of hundreds of thousands.

04

A single Purple Martin pair can deliver hundreds of insects per hour to nestlings — though the 'they eat 2,000 mosquitoes a day' claim is largely a marketing myth.

Attract Them

How to bring the Purple Martin to your yard

Purple Martins are colonial cavity-nesters — they want a multi-compartment house, not a single box. Eastern populations specifically prospect for human-supplied housing.

Box placement

Erect a multi-cavity martin house or gourd rack on a 12–20 ft pole, in the most open part of your yard. At least 30 ft from buildings and 40 ft from tall trees.

Food

Aerial-only — no feeders. Crushed eggshells on a tray help with calcium during nesting.

Water

A nearby pond, lake, or marsh dramatically improves your odds. Open water is essential to their hunting.

Competitors

Aggressively manage House Sparrows and European Starlings — they'll evict martins. Use entrance hole shapes (crescent or oval) that exclude starlings.

Cover & landscaping

Counterintuitively, less is more. Open sky and open ground around the colony are critical.

Avoid

Don't put up a single small box — it'll either be empty or claimed by sparrows. Martins want an apartment building.

Range & Habitat

Where you'll find them

An aerial insectivore that breeds across the eastern and central US, plus scattered western populations, and winters in South America.

By region
  • Eastern US (breeding)

    Common breeder from southern Canada through the Mid-Atlantic, Southeast, Midwest, and Great Plains. Strongly dependent on martin houses.

  • Western US (breeding)

    Scattered populations in the Pacific Northwest, California, and the desert Southwest. Western birds use natural cavities much more than eastern birds.

  • South America (winter)

    Vast wintering flocks throughout Brazil, especially the Amazon basin and Pantanal.

Habitat preferences

Open country near water — fields, golf courses, and the edges of small towns. They need open sky for hunting and a clean approach to the colony house.

open areas near water farmland suburbs
Approximate range centroids — see the regional breakdown above for the specifics
Seasonal Care

When to install. When to clean.

Install by
Open when scouts arrive (varies by latitude)
Cleaning
September after fall departure
Southern US (TX, FL, LA)
Scouts arrive late January; open by mid-January.
Mid-Atlantic / Midwest
Scouts arrive late March; open by mid-March.
Northern US / Canada
Scouts arrive April–early May; open by April.

Plug entrance holes during winter to prevent sparrow/starling occupation; reopen on the local 'Scout Arrival Date'.