Skip to main content

Virginia Rail Identification

Looking for ID Help?

Our free app offers quick ID help with global coverage.

Try Merlin Bird ID

The Four Keys to ID

  • Size & Shape

    The Virginia Rail is a chickenlike marsh bird with a long, heavy bill and a short, upturned tail. Head on, the Virginia Rail looks thin, but from the side they look rather full-bodied; what biologists call a laterally compressed body.

    Relative Size

    Larger than a Sora, smaller than an American Coot.

    Relative Sizebetween robin and crowbetween robin and crow

    Measurements
    • Both Sexes
      • Length: 7.9-10.6 in (20-27 cm)
      • Weight: 2.3-3.4 oz (65-95 g)
      • Wingspan: 12.6-15.0 in (32-38 cm)

    Shape of the Virginia Rail© Evan Lipton / Macaulay Library
  • Virginia Rails are rusty overall with a gray face, coarse dark streaking down the back, black-and-white barring on the sides, and white undertail feathers. The bill and legs are reddish, although the legs are often covered with mud.

    Color pattern of the Virginia Rail
    © Ian Davies / Macaulay Library
  • Virginia Rails walk with a somewhat jerky motion through wetlands. They tend to forage hurriedly in the open and more slowly under thick cover of cattails and bulrushes. They often twitch their upturned tail to show off the white undertail feathers.

  • Virginia Rails predominately use fresh and brackish wetlands with cattails and bulrushes, and secondarily use coastal saltmarshes.

    © Tim Lenz / Macaulay Library