Western Willet

(Tringa semipalmata inornata) (WEWI)

Photographic Identification Guide

Western Willet (Tringa semipalmata inornata) (WEWI), a subspecies of willet, is in many ways so distinct from Eastern Willet T. s. semipalmata that it needs a separate “species” account.
Drab gray on land, Western Willet explodes into flight with highly contrasting black-and-white wing pattern nearly identical to that of the Eastern Willet. That plumage and the shrill, repeated pill-will-willet calls make a willet unmistakable.
Western Willet is paler and larger than Eastern Willet in nearly all plumages. Another difference is that Easter Willet’s nesting areas are tightly confined to the Atlantic, Gulf of Mexico and Caribbean coasts of the Americas, and Western Willet nests almost exclusively in inland wetlands or along lake margins in midwestern and western North America. Both subspecies winter along the coasts of the Americas, mostly from Oregon and New York south to Central and South America.
In this guide we provide as much detail as possible to help identify this subspecies. When discussing plumages, we use the terms winter, spring, and summer to refer to northern hemisphere seasons. Because some of these birds spend parts of the year in the northern and southern hemispheres, the correct technical terms for the plumage stages—basic and alternate—help avoid the confusion of seasonal terminology.
  • western.willet.goose.island.sp.tx.2021.12.20.P2960996.jpg
    0
    Fig. 1. Western Willet. Winter (basic) plumage. Note very pale plumage contrasting with nearly all-dark bill. Goose Island State Park, TX. 20 December 2021.
  • western.willet.wilmington.nc.2017.03.15.P1370460.jpg
    0
    Fig. 2. Western Willet in late winter (basic) plumage. Note worn and frayed back (mantle) and wing covert feathers. Wilmington, NC. 15 March 2017.
  • western.willets.flamingo.fl.2017.03.28.P1420991.jpg
    0
    Fig. 3. Western Willets flying. Note pale tails with smudged tips, overall gray cast. Everglades National Park, FL. 28 March 2017.
  • western.willets.blue-winged.teal.hornsby.bend.2024.04.21.P1400383.jpg
    0
    Fig. 4. Western Willets. Spring (alternate) plumage; most individuals are still molting. Hornsby Bend, Austin, TX. 21 April 2024.
  • western.willet.bolivar.2021.04.24.alan.kniedel.ML332151601.jpg
    0
    Fig. 5. Western Willet. Spring (alternate) plumage. In early spring, brown-barred feathers replace gray winter (basic) feathers. Bolivar Peninsula, TX. 24 April 2021.
  • western.willet.hannah.alberta.canada.2024.05.30.cameron.hunter.ML620155635.jpg
    0
    Fig. 6. Western Willet. Spring (alternate) plumage. Note barred tertials, overall pale gray cast to plumage. Hannah, Alberta, Canada. 30 May 2024.
  • western.willet.sarasota.fl.2024.06.12.jim.yeskett.ML620348045.jpg
    0
    Fig. 7. Western Willet. First year bird with very worn plumage. Sarasota, FL. 12 June 2024.
  • western.willet.orange.ca.2013.07.04.larry.manfredi.ML624729940.jpg
    0
    Fig. 8. Western Willet. Summer (alternate) plumage. Pale feather margins wear off in summer, producing the dark plumage seen here. Orange, CA. 4 July 2013.
  • western.willet.albany.wy.2024.06.22.paul.fenwick.ML622702722.jpg
    0
    Fig. 9. Western Willet. Recently hatched chick. Note long, tapered, bicolored bill. Albany, WY. 22 June 2024.
  • western.willet.napatree.pt.ri.2024.08.18.tim.metcalf.ML622665737.jpg
    0
    Fig. 10. Western Willet. Juvenile in fresh plumage. Napatree Point, RI. 18 August 2024.
  • western.willet.montmagny.quebec.2024.09.25.nelson.roy.ML624169318.jpg
    0
    Fig. 11. Western Willet. Juvenile plumage with very frayed margins. Note single, freshly grown winter (basic) feather. Montagny, Quebec. 25 September 2024.
  • western.willet.charlestown.breachway.2018.08.26.jpg
    0
    Fig. 12. Western Willet. Juvenile in flight. Note boldly marked black-and-white wings. Charlestown Breachway, RI. 26 August 2018.
  • western.willet.broward.fl.2017.08.20.david.hall.ML66666241.jpg
    0
    Fig. 13. Western Willet. Juvenile. Female with extremely long bill. Broward, FL. 20 August 2017.
  • western.willet.eastern.willet.monomoy.nwr.2023.08.12.jeffrey.offermann.ML603031281.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 14. Comparison of Western Willet with Eastern Willet, both juveniles. Note differences in size, bill length and color contrast on back (mantle) feathers. Monomoy National Wildlife Refuge, Chatham, MA. 12 August 2023.
  • western.willet.greater.yellowlegs.nauset.marsh.2021.10.03.nick.tepper.ML375170291.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 15. Comparison of Western Willet with Greater Yellowlegs. Willet is in winter (basic) plumage, yellowlegs is juvenile. Note differences in body and bill sizes and shapes. Nauset Marsh, Eastham, MA. 3 October 2021.
  • western.willet.lesser.yellowlegs.hornsby.bend.2024.04.21.P1400317.jpg
    0
    Fig. 16. Comparison of Western Willet and Lesser Yellowlegs in alternate plumage. Note grayer tones and bright yellow legs of yellowlegs. Hornsby Bend, Austin, TX. 21 April 2024.
  • western.willet.whimbrel.hendersoni.dowitcher.northampton.va.2023.08.01.mario.balitbit.ML599817441.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 17. Comparison of Western Willet and Whimbrel. Note similarity in size. Note also presence of Short-billed Dowitcher, presumably of midwestern subspecies ("hendersoni"). Northampton, VA. 1 August 2023.
  • willet.marbled.godwits.grays.harbor.wa.2024.09.01.andrew.thomas.ML623396635.jpg
    0
    Fig. 18. Western Willet surrounded by Marbled Godwits. In addition to plumage differences, note differences in bill length and shape. Gray's Harbor, WA. 1 September 2024.
  • western.willets.marbled.godwit.malibou.lagoon.2021.11.26.peter bedrossian.ML397987781.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 19. Western Willets and Marbled Godwit in flight. Note differences in wing pattern, bill shape and color. Malibu Lagoon, CA. 26 November 2021.
  • western.willet.black-bellied.plovers.kings.ns.2022.09.16.lyall.bouchard.ML484807811.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 20. Comparison of Western Willet and Black-bellied Plovers. Willet is juvenile. Plover to left of willet is also juvenile. Kings, Nova Scotia. 16 September 2022.
  • western.willet.red.knot.chicago.il.2018.08.28.simon.tolzmann.ML115838981.wewi.jpg
    0
    Fig. 21. Comparison of Western Willet with Red Knot. Juveniles. Note back (mantle) feathers with submarginal dark lines and broad pale margins. Chicago, IL. 28 August 2018.
The plumage and molt sequence for Western Willet is summarized below. Willets show wide variation in plumage and molt sequence in all seasons.
Basic: winter plumage, roughly October to mid-March.
Alternate: first spring and summer after hatch year or adult breeding plumage, March to July.
See Fig. 5, Fig. 6Beginning in early spring, winter (basic) feathers on Western Willet are gradually replaced by spring and summer (alternate) feathers. Most alternate feathers last until fall.
Chick: newly hatched baby is downy with a long, tapered bill.
See Fig. 9.
Juvenile: young birds, recently fledged, June to September.
See Fig. 10These feathers are acquired immediately after the natal down is shed and before the young begin their southbound migration.

Size and weight

Females are larger and have longer bills; see Fig. 13.
Body length:
13.5–16.5 in. (34–41 cm)
Wingspan:
23.5–28.5 in. (59¬–71 cm)
Bill length:
2.3–2.6 in. (58–67 mm)
Weight:
7–12 oz. (203–339 g)

Calls

Willet’s characteristic repeated territorial song, pill-will-willet, from which it derives its name, is supplemented by many additional calls on the ground or in the air and made in exchanges with the young, its mate or other adults, and in alarm situations.
Below is a small sampling of Western Willet calls. Vocalizations from geographically separated populations are similar but vary widely in detail.
Song in Quill Lakes, Saskatchewan, 5/16/2013:
Alarm calls, Teton County, MT, 6/10/2017:
Alarm or flight calls, San Diego, CA, 7/3/2019:

Plumage and other characteristics

Western Willet is a chunky, tall, long-legged, long-necked shorebird that is gray brown in any season; see Fig. 5.

The drab appearance of Western Willet vanishes as soon as the bird opens its wings to display the brightly contrasting black-and-white wings. The tail is white with gray barring toward the tip; see Fig. 3, Fig. 12, Fig. 19.

The long legs are gray or blue gray; see Fig. 2, Fig. 5.

The dark, nearly all-black bill is tapered, straight, and long. The bill base is often tinted bluish. Sometimes the bill is slightly up curved; see Fig 1, Fig. 5, Fig. 7. The female’s bill may be surprisingly long; see Fig. 13.

In most plumages, the dark bill contrasts sharply with the pale plumage.

Winter (basic) plumage is a pale gray buff. Each back (mantle) feather has a crisp, dark center line (feather shaft). The neck and upper breast are lightly speckled with gray; see Fig 1, Fig. 2.

In spring, Western Willet’s back (mantle) plumage begins to acquire the brown barring of spring (alternate) plumage. Some birds retain a smattering of worn and bleached winter (basic) feathers well into April; see Fig. 4.

As spring progresses, Western Willet acquires darker plumage; see Fig. 5, Fig. 6.

Many individuals do not molt into full alternate plumage in their first summer after hatch-year. By retaining a mix of worn winter (basic) and summer (alternate) feathers, they end up looking tattered and unkempt; see Fig. 7.

Spring (alternate) and summer (alternate) are the same plumage for Western Willet, but as the seasons progress, alternate plumage for older individuals begins to look darker because the feather margins become worn; see Fig. 8.

The newly hatched downy chick is precocial; it can run about and feed itself soon after emerging from the egg; see Fig. 9.

Both parents spend a short time tending to chicks by brooding and guarding against predators, females for about two weeks after hatching, males for an additional two weeks.

Western Willet chicks replace natal down with juvenile plumage. Juvenile wing covert feathers show pale broad margins, usually with a submarginal dark line, which parallels the feather margin; see Fig 10.

As summer progresses into fall, juvenile back (mantle) feather margins become worn and frayed. Fresh winter (basic) feather begin to grow in; see Fig. 11, Fig. 13.

Breeding range, migration, wintering range, habitat

Willets breed across most of the United States and southern Canada. In contrast to the strictly coastal-breeding Eastern Willet, Western Willet breeds inland in North America’s western and midwestern wetlands or close to pond and lake margins.
Willets migrate primarily at night. Western Willets are among the earliest migrants after the breeding season, adults often departing from nesting areas shortly after mid-June.
Both willet subspecies winter primarily along the coasts. Western Willets winter on the mid-Atlantic and southern Atlantic coasts of North America, the Gulf coast, California coast, and coastal Central and South America as far south as central Chile and southern Brazil.
In coastal areas, Western Willet feeds on mudflats and shallow beach edges at low tide.
At high tide, Western Willet roosts and sometimes feeds in shallow saltmarsh pans with other shorebirds.
In winter, Western Willet roosts and forages on rocky shores, mudflats, sandy beaches or mangrove coasts.
Western Willet feeds by day and at night. At inland nesting areas, it eats aquatic insects, such as water beetles, spiders and fish. In coastal wintering areas, its primary food is crabs and a variety of marine organisms.

Similar species

Similar subspecies: Western Willet compared to Eastern Willet

Western Willet (WEWI) and Eastern Willet (EAWI) are considered subspecies of willet. They differ sufficiently from each other in plumage, size and migration patterns to justify being treated in separate “species” accounts in this guide. For comparison, see Fig. 14.

Note the following:

  • In nearly all plumages, Western is paler and grayer and Eastern is darker and browner.
  • Western Willet is, on average, larger than Eastern.
  • In both subspecies, females are larger. The variation in size among different populations of Western Willets is much greater.
  • There is a size overlap between the subspecies; a large female Eastern may be larger than a small male Western.
  • Western Willet is, on average, longer-billed than Eastern. Western Willet’s bill often shows bluish at the base; Eastern Willet’s bill is often pinkish at the base.
  • Western Willet has a longer, more tapered, pointy bill, sometimes with a slight upcurve. Eastern Willet’s bill is thick throughout and blunt.
  • Western Willet’s pale head and body contrast with its nearly all-dark bill, especially in winter.
  • Western Willet is longer-legged than Eastern.
  • Western Willets breed along the shores of inland lakes or ponds or in freshwater wetlands. Eastern Willets are rarely found far from marine coasts.
  • Western Willets winter along the coasts of southern North America, Central and South America and the Caribbean region. Eastern Willets winter south of the United States border.

Similar species: Western Willet compared to Greater Yellowlegs

Western Willet (WEWI) and Greater Yellowlegs (GRYE) are long-legged, tall shorebirds that roost and feed in similar habitats, often together. For comparison, see Fig. 15.

Note the following:

  • Western Willet is larger, chunkier and less elegant than Greater Yellowlegs.
  • The Willet’s bill is long, thick, tubular and blunt. Greater Yellowlegs has a tapered, pointy bill. Either species may have a slightly upturned bill.
  • In flight, Western Willet has flashing black-and-white wings from above and below. Yellowlegs’ wings are medium grey above and pale grey with barring from below.
  • Willet’s legs are dull gray or blue gray. Yellowlegs have bright yellow legs.
  • In spring and summer (alternate) plumage, Western Willet has a barred back (mantle) and barred tertials (long feathers lying over the primaries). Greater Yellowlegs in breeding plumage has a spotted and checkered back (mantle) and tertials with pale zigzag margins.
  • Greater Yellowlegs emits tyou-tyou-tyou calls when alarmed, occasionally multiple times. It also yodels. Willet’s song and territorial call is pill-will-willet, sometimes repeated over and over.

Similar species: Western Willet compared to Lesser Yellowlegs

Western Willet (WEWI) and Lesser Yellowlegs (LEYE) are long-legged, tall shorebirds that roost and feed in similar habitats, often together. For comparison, see Fig. 16.

Note the following:

  • Western Willet is much larger than Lesser Yellowlegs.
  • The Willet’s bill is long, thick, tubular and blunt. Lesser Yellowlegs has a tapered, pointy bill.
  • In flight, Eastern Willet has flashing black-and-white wings from above and below. Yellowlegs’ wings are medium grey above and pale grey with barring from below.
  • Willet legs are dull gray or blue-gray. Yellowlegs have bright yellow legs.
  • In spring and summer (alternate) plumage, Western Willet has a barred back (mantle) and barred tertials (long feathers lying over the primaries). Lesser Yellowlegs in breeding plumage has a spotted and checkered back (mantle) and tertials with pale zigzag margins.
  • Lesser Yellowlegs emits tu-tu calls when alarmed, occasionally multiple times. It also yodels. Willet’s song and territorial call, pill-will-willet, is often repeated over and over.

Similar species: Western Willet compared to Whimbrel

Western Willet (WEWI) and Whimbrel (WHIM) are similar in size and have similar gray-brown plumage. For comparison, see Fig. 17.

Note the following:

  • Whimbrel may be slightly larger with a longer, downturned bill.
  • In flight, Western Willet has flashing black-and-white wings from above and below. Whimbrel is brown above and pale below with no notable wing markings.
  • Western Willet’s head has an indistinct brown cap and a pale line from the bill to above the eye (supercilium). Whimbrel’s head is distinctly marked with multiple brown and pale lines through the eyes and over the crown.

Similar species: Western Willet compared to Marbled Godwit

Western Willet (WEWI) is smaller than Marbled Godwit (MAGO). The birds are easily separated due to the shape of the bill and overall coloration; see Fig. 18, Fig. 19.

Note the following:

  • Western Willet’s bill is long, tubular and somewhat blunt, with a mostly dark outer portion and bluish-tinged base. Marbled Godwit’s bill is very long, tapered and upturned. The outer half of the bill is dark, and the inner half is pinkish.
  • On the ground, Western Willet is plain gray-brown or barred brown. Marbled Godwit coloration ranges from pale to rich orange-rufous with brown bars and spots.
  • Western Willet in flight has boldly marked black-and-white wings. Marbled Godwit in flight is an even-toned orange-rufous bird.
  • Western Willet’s wings are rounded compared to the wings of Marbled Godwit.

Similar Species: Western Willet compared to Black-bellied Plover

Western Willet (WEWI) and Black-belied Plover (BBPL) are chunky shorebirds that appear gray in most (not all) seasons. For comparison, see Fig. 20.

Note the following:

  • Western Willet is a much larger bird than Black-bellied Plover.
  • Western Willet has a characteristic long, slim sandpiper pill. Black-bellied Plover’s bill is relatively short and stubby, typical of plovers.
  • The Western Willet juvenile’s back (mantle) plumage is pale gray brown with wide whitish margins and submarginal dark lines (dark lines paralleling the margins). The Black-bellied Plover juvenile is checkered dark gray and pale on the back (mantle).
  • Western Willet in winter (basic) plumage is plain pale gray brown on the back (mantle) with very narrow whitish margins on the mantle feathers. Black-bellied Plover’s winter (basic) mantle feathers are gray with pale zigzag margins.
  • In flight, Western Willet’s wings are brightly contrasting black-and-white from above and below. Black-bellied Plover’s wings from above are grayish with a bold white stripe; from below, the wings are white with black axillars (wingpits).

Similar Species: Western Willet compared to Red Knot

Juvenile Red Knot (REKN) can look like a miniature version of juvenile Western Willet (WEWI); see Fig. 21.

Note the following:

  • Western Willet is about twice the size of Red Knot.
  • Western Willet’s bill is much longer than Red Knot’s bill.
  • Western Willet and Red Knot juvenile back (mantle) feathers have pale margins and submarginal dark lines (dark lines paralleling the margins).
  • Western Willet juvenile has a spattering of pale gray on the upper breast and neck. Red Knot juvenile has fine grey vermiculation or spotting on the breast, which often extend to the flanks.
  • In flight, Western Willet’s wings are brightly contrasting black-and-white. Red Knot’s wings are grayish from above with a very narrow whitish wing stripe. Red Knot’s tail is all gray, whereas Western Willet’s tail is whitish with a finely gray-barred tip.

© Copyright 2025 Bird Observer, Inc. and Eric Swanzey.
Website code/design/development by Swanzey Internet Group LLC.
Supporting photography by Just Your Nature.
Privacy Policy | Terms of Use