Eastern Blue-tongue
The Eastern Blue-tongue (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides) — Sydney's Classic Backyard Reptile
If there is one native reptile that defines suburban Sydney, it is the Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides). Generations of Sydney kids have grown up turning over a piece of corrugated iron in the back shed and finding one curled up underneath, or watching one trundle across the lawn on a warm afternoon, blue tongue flicking in and out. They are familiar, charismatic, completely harmless and one of the best garden residents a Sydney homeowner can have.
At Urban Reptile Removal we get more calls about Eastern Blue-tongues than just about any other lizard species. They turn up in garages, under hedges, in compost heaps and basking on driveways across every suburb in the city. The good news is almost always the same: leave them alone, they will not hurt you, and your garden is genuinely better for having them around.
What is the Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard?
The Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides) is the most familiar and widely distributed of Australia's six blue-tongue species. They are large skinks — among the largest in the world — and one of the most successful urban adapters in the Australian reptile fauna.
Snout-vent length: Up to 320mm
Total length: Up to 600mm
Conservation status: IUCN Least Concern
Urban Adaptation Rating: ★★★★★
Activity: Diurnal, most active in spring and summer
Distribution in Sydney: All five zones — Sydney Basin, Illawarra, Southern Highlands, Blue Mountains and Central Coast
How to identify an Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard
The Eastern Blue-tongue is one of the easiest reptiles to identify in the Sydney region:
Large, robust skink with a heavily built, sausage-shaped body
Broad, blunt head
Smooth, glossy scales
Bright blue tongue — the species' signature feature
Dorsal colour varies from yellow, brown or pale grey through to nearly black
Six to nine dark-edged pale crossbands across the back
Broad dark stripe extending from the eye to the ear
Ventral surface from white to grey or yellow
Short, robust limbs disproportionate to body size
Relatively short, thick tail
The combination of banded back pattern, dark eye-stripe and bright blue tongue makes identification straightforward. Once you have seen one, you will recognise the next one immediately.
How to tell an Eastern Blue-tongue from other blue-tongues
The Eastern Blue-tongue can be confused with a couple of related species:
Blotched Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua nigrolutea): Has irregular blotches rather than banded pattern. Restricted to cooler, higher-elevation habitats in the Sydney region. Generally darker overall.
Pink-tongued Skink (Cyclodomorphus gerrardii): Smaller and more slender, with a long tail. Has a pink tongue rather than blue. Found in damper, more vegetated habitats.
Within the suburban Sydney area at low to moderate elevation, almost every blue-tongue you encounter will be an Eastern Blue-tongue. The Blotched Blue-tongue is restricted to highland areas, and the Pink-tongued Skink is uncommon and habitat-specific.
Where do Eastern Blue-tongued Lizards live?
The Eastern Blue-tongue is one of Sydney's great urban success stories. Their habitat preferences map almost perfectly onto the kinds of features found in older suburban gardens:
Natural habitats:
Open woodlands and dry sclerophyll forest
Coastal heath
Grasslands and grassy understorey
Rocky outcrops with leaf litter
Riparian zones
Urban habitats:
Suburban gardens of all kinds
Under sheets of corrugated iron, fibro and timber
In compost heaps and mulch beds
Under garden sheds and decks
In garages and carports
Among stacked firewood and timber piles
Under shrubs and dense ground cover
In rockeries and stone walls
Along sunny garden paths
The species' adaptability is what makes it so successful. An Eastern Blue-tongue needs cover for shelter, sun for basking, and food in the form of insects, snails, slugs and soft plant material. A typical established Sydney garden provides all three.
Behaviour and the famous defensive display
Eastern Blue-tongues are slow-moving and generally placid. They rely on bluff rather than flight or fight when threatened. The defensive display is one of the most distinctive in the Australian reptile fauna:
Open the mouth wide in a sudden, dramatic gape
Extend the bright blue tongue and hold it forward
Hiss loudly
Flatten the body to look larger
Sometimes lunge forward as a bluff
Hold the position until the threat moves away
The blue tongue itself is the key to the display. Recent research has shown that the underside of a blue-tongue's tongue reflects strongly in the ultraviolet spectrum — invisible to most mammalian predators but highly visible to birds and reptiles. The display is essentially an aposematic warning: "I am unusual, I am unexpected, and you should think twice before continuing."
The display is almost always pure bluff. An Eastern Blue-tongue will not chase you, will not pursue your dog, and only bites if physically picked up. Even then, the bite is more of a powerful pinch than a true bite — there are no fangs and no venom.
Diet and lifestyle
Eastern Blue-tongues are slow-moving, methodical omnivores. Their diet is broad and beneficial from a gardener's perspective:
Snails and slugs (a particular favourite)
Insects of all kinds
Spiders and other invertebrates
Soft plant material, flowers and fruits
Berries and fallen soft fruit
Carrion when encountered
Dog and cat food left outdoors (a problem habit)
Occasional small lizards or other vertebrates
The taste for snails and slugs is one of the main reasons blue-tongues are such welcome garden residents. A resident blue-tongue can quietly remove thousands of garden pests over a season. They also clean up fallen soft fruit and other organic debris.
The downside of their adaptability is that they will readily eat unsuitable foods. Pet food left outside, dropped scraps and even some commercial baits can be harmful. Keep pet food bowls inside and avoid leaving food waste accessible.
Are Eastern Blue-tongues dangerous?
No. Completely harmless to humans and pets. Eastern Blue-tongues have no venom, and while their jaws are strong enough to deliver a painful pinch if they are picked up, they cannot do any real damage. The dramatic display is bluff. In thousands of call-outs we have never had a serious incident from an Eastern Blue-tongue defending itself.
The genuine risks all run the other way. Eastern Blue-tongues face significant threats:
Dogs: Dogs kill a huge number of blue-tongues in suburban Sydney. The lizards cannot outrun a dog and the display fails as a deterrent. Many dogs that encounter a blue-tongue end up shaking it to death even if they do not intend to eat it.
Cats: Cats kill juveniles in significant numbers.
Cars: Blue-tongues crossing roads on warm afternoons account for thousands of deaths a year across Sydney.
Lawn mowers and whipper snippers: A blue-tongue concealed in long grass can be killed when the grass is cut.
Snail bait poisoning: Metaldehyde-based snail baits are highly toxic to blue-tongues. Lizards that eat poisoned snails are themselves poisoned.
Habitat loss: As gardens become more manicured and minimal, blue-tongue habitat shrinks.
The snail bait issue is the most fixable. If you have blue-tongues in your garden, switch to iron-phosphate based snail baits, which are safe for reptiles. The slight reduction in slug control is a small price to pay for keeping your blue-tongues alive.
Breeding and reproduction
Eastern Blue-tongues have a reproductive strategy that contributes to their longevity:
Live-bearing: Females give birth to live young rather than laying eggs
Litter size: 10 to 15 live young
Timing: Late summer to autumn
Independence: Young are fully independent at birth
Sexual maturity: Around three years
Lifespan: Can live 20 years or more in the wild, even longer in captivity
The long lifespan is worth emphasising. A blue-tongue you see in your garden today may have been resident for a decade or more, and may continue to live there for another decade. They are not transient visitors — they are long-term residents with established home ranges of roughly a quarter of a hectare.
This is part of why relocation is such a bad idea. A blue-tongue moved even a few suburbs away has lost its entire territorial knowledge — where to find food, water, basking sites, shelter, mates. Most relocated blue-tongues die within a few months.
What to do if you find an Eastern Blue-tongue at your home
Leave it alone. The Eastern Blue-tongue is the best lizard a Sydney garden can have — beautiful, beneficial, completely harmless and a sign of a healthy garden ecosystem.
Practical steps:
Identify it carefully. Confirm it is a blue-tongue and not something else.
Keep dogs and cats away. This is the single most important thing.
Switch to iron-phosphate snail baits if you currently use metaldehyde products.
If your blue-tongue takes up residence under a shed, in a wood pile, in the compost or in a garden corner, simply work around it.
If one is in immediate danger (in a road, in a pool, cornered by a pet), you can gently encourage it toward cover with a broom or piece of cardboard.
If one is genuinely trapped (inside a garage, in a pool, in a building) and you cannot resolve the situation, call Urban Reptile Removal.
What you should not do:
Do not kill it. Eastern Blue-tongues are protected native wildlife.
Do not relocate it. They are territorial and have established home ranges. A relocated blue-tongue usually does not survive.
Do not pick it up unnecessarily. They can bite, the bite is painful, and the experience is highly stressful for the animal.
Do not feed it. They do not need supplementary food, and feeding alters natural behaviour.
Do not use metaldehyde snail baits if you have blue-tongues on your property.
How to encourage Eastern Blue-tongued Lizards
If you want to encourage blue-tongues in your Sydney garden:
Maintain good ground cover — leaf litter, low shrubs, mulch
Provide shelter such as flat rocks, log piles, sheets of corrugated iron in quiet corners
Avoid pesticides, particularly metaldehyde snail baits
Keep a part of the garden untidy. A perfectly manicured garden offers nothing
Protect any blue-tongues you find from pets
Maintain a compost heap or mulched beds, which support invertebrate prey
Plant species that produce soft fruit, berries and flowers
A resident Eastern Blue-tongue is one of the best things a Sydney garden can have. They are quiet, beneficial, charismatic and a living reminder that even densely settled suburbs can support meaningful native wildlife when given a bit of habitat structure.
The driveway problem
One particular issue worth flagging is the driveway problem. Eastern Blue-tongues often bask on warm concrete driveways, particularly on cool mornings in spring and autumn. They are slow, they are dark against the concrete, and they are easily killed by reversing cars.
If you have blue-tongues in your garden, take a moment to check your driveway before backing out — particularly on cool mornings between 7am and 10am, and in late afternoon. A two-second pause to look down can save a 15-year-old reptile.
Summary
The Eastern Blue-tongued Lizard (Tiliqua scincoides scincoides) is Sydney's quintessential backyard reptile — large, charismatic, completely harmless and one of the most beneficial wildlife species a suburban garden can host. They are present across all five distribution zones of the Greater Sydney region, thriving in environments from coastal heath to highland forest to dense suburban housing. If you have one in your garden, you are doing something right ecologically. Protect them from dogs, switch your snail bait if you use it, watch out for them on the driveway, and otherwise let them get on with the long, slow, useful business of being a blue-tongue.
Found a blue-tongue or another reptile at your home? Urban Reptile Removal operates 24/7 across the Greater Sydney region. We are fully licensed and insured, and we can identify and safely manage any reptile you encounter. Call 0418 633 474.

