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    Best cage for budgie with broken leg

    This is a specific conversation about Bird cages — size matters more than anything — ask about yours and get one honest answer for your exact situation.

    inparticular.ai
    A budgie recovering from a broken leg needs a very specific setup — standard cages with horizontal bars encourage climbing, which is the last thing you want right now. The priority is a cage where your bird can stay low, reach food and water without any climbing or jumping, and where perches sit close to the floor so a stumble doesn't mean a fall from height. Cage size is still the foundation — most commercial budgie cages are too small for a bird to extend its wings fully, which matters even during recovery — and bar spacing should be no wider than 12mm to prevent head entrapment. Can you tell me: how old is your budgie, are you housing them alone during recovery, and roughly how much space do you have available?
    She's about 2 years old, yes just her on her own for now while she heals. I've got a reasonable amount of space on a table, maybe 60cm wide or so.
    inparticular.ai
    Good — solo housing during recovery makes this much simpler. At 60cm wide you've got enough room for a proper-sized cage rather than a cramped recovery box, which matters because she still needs space to move laterally without having to climb. What I'd recommend is the Savic Ibiza cage — it's around 55cm wide, has predominantly vertical bar spacing which discourages climbing compared to a fully barred design, and crucially it has a deep base tray you can fill with a thin layer of paper or soft bedding so the floor itself becomes a safe resting area. You'll want to remove any high perches and reposition one or two at floor level, around 5–8cm up. Has your vet advised any specific restrictions on movement, or is it mainly just avoiding climbing and jumping?
    The vet said to keep her calm and limit climbing, no ladders or toys that would make her reach up. She's on pain relief for another week.
    inparticular.ai
    That aligns exactly with the Savic Ibiza setup. Strip it right back — no ladders, no swings, no rope toys — and place a single low perch and both food and water dishes at the same low height so she never has to reach or hop up to eat or drink. Line the base tray with several layers of paper towel rather than loose substrate, which gives grip without depth that could catch a healing leg. Once she's off pain relief and the vet confirms the leg is healing well, you can gradually reintroduce perches at increasing heights over a few weeks. The Ibiza is also easy to clean thoroughly with one hand while managing a fragile bird, which is worth something during daily checks.
    That sounds really sensible. Is there anything I should watch for that would mean I need to go back to the vet sooner?
    inparticular.ai
    Yes — go back promptly if you see her favouring the leg more than before, any swelling or discolouration around the injury site, if she stops eating or drinking, or if she's sitting fluffed up on the cage floor for extended periods, which signals she's in more pain or stress than expected. Budgies mask illness well so any noticeable change in behaviour is worth taking seriously rather than waiting to see. The low-perch setup reduces the risk of reinjury significantly, but she'll still need monitoring daily during that first week especially.
    Thank you, this is really helpful. I'll order the Savic Ibiza today.
    inparticular.ai
    Good choice. Set it up bare and low before she goes in — it takes ten minutes and makes a real difference to how safely she can move around. Hope she heals quickly.

    Your situation is probably different. Get a specific answer for yours.

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