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Hot Pepper Bird Food

One of the most common questions we hear in the store is, “Won’t hot pepper bird seed burn the birds’ mouths?” The short answer is: No. Birds can’t taste the heat from hot peppers at all. And that’s exactly why hot pepper–treated bird seed and suet work so well.

The Science: Birds vs. Mammals

The “heat” we feel when we eat hot peppers comes from a compound called capsaicin. In mammals (like people, squirrels, raccoons, and rodents), capsaicin binds to pain receptors and causes that familiar burning sensation. To a bird, hot pepper bird seed tastes… normal because birds don’t have those receptors.

Because birds lack the specific pain receptors that respond to capsaicin:

  • Hot peppers do not taste spicy to birds

  • Capsaicin does not cause discomfort or harm

  • Birds eat pepper-treated food just like regular seed

Why Birds Eat Peppers in the Wild (The Science Behind It)

This relationship isn’t accidental, it’s the result of co-evolution between birds and pepper plants. The heat in peppers comes from capsaicin, a chemical compound that activates pain receptors in mammals. Birds, however, lack the specific nerve receptors (TRPV1 receptors) that respond to capsaicin, so they don’t experience the burning sensation at all.

From the plant’s perspective, this is an advantage. Birds can safely eat pepper fruits, and the seeds pass through their digestive systems undamaged. The birds then fly elsewhere and the seeds are deposited far from the parent plant, often with a natural fertilizer boost. Mammals, which tend to crush seeds when chewing and then feel the heat of capsaicin, are discouraged from eating the fruit and destroying the seeds.

Over time, many wild peppers evolved to:

  • Attract birds as primary seed dispersers

  • Protect seeds from mammals that would damage them

  • Spread efficiently across large landscapes

Hot pepper–treated bird seed simply takes advantage of this same natural biology, allowing birds to feed normally while mammals like squirrels are discouraged.

Why Squirrels Hate It

Squirrels, unlike birds, are mammals — and capsaicin is very unpleasant for them. After one or two attempts, most squirrels learn to stay away, leaving more seed and suet for the birds.

Hot pepper products:

  • Don’t harm squirrels

  • Don’t trap or injure them

  • Simply make the food unappealing

Will Birds Still Come to My Feeder?

Yes, and often enthusiastically. Many people are surprised to see birds feeding normally within minutes of switching to hot pepper–treated seed or suet.

Birds that readily eat hot pepper seed and suet include:

  • Chickadees

  • Finches

  • Woodpeckers

  • Jays

  • Towhees

  • Sparrows

Hot Pepper Seed & Suet: A Win-Win

It’s one of the most effective and bird-safe squirrel deterrents available. Using hot pepper products allows you to:

  • Feed birds without feeding squirrels

  • Reduce wasted seed

  • Avoid cages, baffles, or complicated feeder setups

  • Keep feeding stations calmer and less competitive

Curious to Try It?

We carry hot pepper sauce (for mixing with your bird seed), hot pepper suet, and pepper-treated seed cakes designed to keep squirrels at bay while keeping birds well-fed. If you’re unsure which option is best for your feeder or yard, we’re always happy to help you choose. Stop by the store to see what’s available and learn more about how birds experience the world a little differently than we do.