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African Grey Parrot Free Adoption in London

Find African Grey Parrots for free adoption in London with clear details on age, legal paperwork, closed ring or microchip, health history, diet, feather condition, noise level, handling, cage routine and reason for rehoming. Compare African Grey rescue and rehoming listings across London before choosing an intelligent, long-lived bird that needs daily interaction, safe housing, enrichment, specialist care and serious lifelong commitment.

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Frequently Asked Questions

What should I check before adopting a free African Grey Parrot in London?

Check the bird’s age, legal paperwork, closed ring or microchip, health history, diet, feather condition, cage setup, daily routine, handling, noise level and reason for rehoming.

For an African Grey, also ask about plucking, screaming, biting, calcium issues, avian vet history, out-of-cage time, sleep routine and whether the bird has changed homes before.

Is an African Grey Parrot a good adoption bird?

An African Grey can be a good adoption bird for an experienced, patient home that can provide daily attention, enrichment, safe housing and specialist care.

It is not a good match for someone who only wants a talking pet, a low-maintenance bird or a cage decoration.

Is it legal to adopt an African Grey Parrot in the UK?

Adopting an African Grey in the UK requires careful attention to legal origin and identification documents.

Ask for paperwork, closed ring or microchip details and any certificate required for the specific type of handover. Do not accept vague promises that documents will be provided later.

Does an African Grey Parrot need Article 10 paperwork?

Article 10 paperwork may be required in situations involving commercial use, sale or certain transfers of protected birds.

Ask whether the bird has any Article 10 certificate where required and whether the certificate details match the bird’s ring or microchip.

What paperwork should come with an African Grey Parrot?

Useful paperwork can include proof of legal origin, closed ring or microchip details, keeper history, vet records, hatch information, rescue paperwork and any required certificate.

The details should match the actual bird. Missing or inconsistent paperwork is a serious warning sign.

What is the difference between Congo and Timneh African Greys?

Congo African Greys are usually larger and are commonly associated with a bright red tail, while Timneh Greys are generally smaller with darker tail colouring.

Both are intelligent, demanding parrots, so adoption checks should focus on paperwork, health, diet, handling and behaviour rather than type alone.

Do African Grey Parrots talk?

Many African Greys can mimic speech and household sounds, but not every bird talks clearly or on command.

Adoption should never be based only on talking ability. Behaviour, health, paperwork and welfare needs matter more.

Can an African Grey Parrot live in a London flat?

An African Grey may live in a flat only if noise, space, cage setup, safe flying area, sleep routine and neighbours are realistic.

Ask whether the bird screams, contact calls, copies alarms, reacts to hallway noise or has caused complaints before.

Are African Grey Parrots noisy?

African Greys can be noisy through talking, whistling, contact calls, copied household sounds or screaming when stressed.

Ask when the bird is loud, how long it lasts and whether noise has been part of the rehoming reason.

Why do African Grey Parrots scream?

Screaming can come from boredom, fear, attention-seeking, poor sleep, lack of routine, hormonal behaviour, illness or stress.

Ask what triggers the screaming, whether an avian vet has checked the bird and what the current keeper does when it happens.

Can African Grey Parrots be left alone?

African Greys should not be left without enough daily interaction, enrichment and routine.

Ask how the bird behaves when alone, whether it screams, plucks, refuses food, becomes aggressive or relies on one person too heavily.

How long do African Grey Parrots live?

African Greys can live for decades, so adoption should be treated as a long-term commitment.

Ask the bird’s age, previous homes, health history and what plan exists if the adopter’s circumstances change in future.

What cage does an African Grey Parrot need?

An African Grey needs a large, safe cage with varied perches, space to move, enrichment, chewable materials, clean bowls and a calm sleeping area.

Ask what cage the bird currently uses, how long it spends inside and whether it comes out daily in a safe room.

How much out-of-cage time does an African Grey need?

An African Grey needs regular supervised time outside the cage for movement, interaction and mental stimulation.

Ask whether the bird is flighted or clipped, whether it flies safely indoors and whether it has a bird-safe room for daily activity.

What should an African Grey Parrot eat?

An African Grey should have a balanced diet with suitable pellets, vegetables, safe fruit in moderation, foraging options and careful mineral support.

Ask what the bird eats now, whether it accepts fresh food and whether an avian vet has advised any diet changes.

Is a seed-only diet bad for African Greys?

A seed-only diet is a weak sign because it can contribute to nutritional problems and poor long-term health.

Ask whether the bird eats vegetables, pellets and varied safe foods, and whether diet conversion has been attempted carefully.

Are African Greys prone to calcium deficiency?

African Greys are known for calcium-related concerns, especially when diet, light exposure and husbandry are poor.

Ask about blood tests, seizures, weakness, tremors, diet history, vitamin support and avian vet treatment.

Why do African Grey Parrots pluck feathers?

Feather plucking can involve stress, boredom, poor diet, skin disease, pain, hormones, sleep problems or environmental issues.

Ask when plucking started, whether an avian vet has checked the bird and what enrichment, diet and sleep routine the bird currently has.

Can feather plucking stop after adoption?

Some birds improve with better care, but feather plucking can be complex and may not disappear quickly.

The adopter should be ready for avian vet checks, patient routine changes, enrichment and long-term management.

Do African Grey Parrots bite?

An African Grey may bite if scared, hormonal, overbonded, in pain, guarding territory or handled badly.

Ask when the bird bites, who it bites, what warning signs it gives and whether handling has ever been forced.

Are African Grey Parrots good with children?

African Greys are not suitable as hands-on pets for children without strict adult supervision.

Ask whether the bird has lived with children, whether it reacts to shouting or fast movement and whether it has ever bitten in those situations.

Can African Grey Parrots live with cats or dogs?

African Greys should be protected from cats and dogs because injury can happen quickly.

Ask whether the bird has lived around pets and whether the home can provide a secure bird room and controlled out-of-cage time.

Can African Greys live with other parrots?

Some African Greys can live in a home with other parrots, but introductions should be slow and carefully managed.

Ask whether the bird has lived with other birds, whether quarantine was used and whether there has ever been aggression or fear.

Does an African Grey need an avian vet?

Yes, an African Grey should be seen by a vet experienced with birds, especially after adoption.

Ask for previous avian vet records, blood tests, beak and nail checks, feather investigations and any medication history.

What are warning signs in an African Grey adoption listing?

Warning signs include missing paperwork, no ring or microchip detail, delivery-only offers, rushed handover, vague age, no vet history, hidden feather loss and unclear ownership.

Be especially careful if the person focuses only on talking ability and avoids questions about legal origin, diet, health and behaviour.

How do I avoid African Grey Parrot adoption scams in London?

Ask for current videos, proof of legal origin, ring or microchip details, paperwork, health records, a clear rehoming reason and a safe viewing or collection plan.

Avoid any listing that uses stolen-looking photos, pushes urgency, refuses paperwork checks or asks for money before proof is provided.

What should I prepare before bringing an African Grey home?

Prepare a large safe cage, varied perches, bird-safe toys, foraging options, fresh food routine, safe water bowls, sleep area, bird-safe room and avian vet registration.

Remove fumes, unsafe cookware, sprays, candles, toxic plants, open windows and loose wires before the bird arrives.

Last updated: 05/11/2026 02:52