SafariDex
Roseate Spoonbill
Best Time to See

Roseate Spoonbill

+ Best Locations by Month

The best place to see Roseate Spoonbill is Pantanal (brazil), scoring 97/100 on the Wildlife Encounter Index.

Peak month globally: August (up to 97/100). 1 destinations ranked below.

When is the best time to see Roseate Spoonbill?

August is the peak month for Roseate Spoonbill sightings globally, with scores reaching 97/100 at the best destinations.

Jan
Feb
Mar
Apr
May
Jun
Jul
Aug
Sep
Oct
Nov
Dec
Monthly peak sighting scores for Roseate Spoonbill
MonthPeak sighting score
January34/100
February32/100
March36/100
April52/100
May72/100
June88/100
July94/100
August97/100
September92/100
October78/100
November58/100
December38/100

Data: WEI v6 — published ecology research, official park reports, multi-year trip records · Updated June 2026 · How we score

Where can you see Roseate Spoonbill in the wild?

Deep-dive into the raw sighting scores across all roseate spoonbill destinations. Find the perfect match for your travel month.

Open Comparison Matrix

What are the best safari parks for Roseate Spoonbill?

Pantanal (brazil) ranks #1 with a peak WEI score of 97/100.

View Full Database arrow_forward
Top safari parks for Roseate Spoonbill
#ParkScore
1Pantanalbrazil97/100

Data: WEI v6 — published ecology research, official park reports, multi-year trip records · Updated June 2026 · How we score

Where is the best place to see Roseate Spoonbill?

Pantanal (brazil) ranks #1 with a peak WEI score of 97/100.

Data: WEI v6 — published ecology research, official park reports, multi-year trip records · Updated June 2026 · How we score

What is the best time of year to see Roseate Spoonbill?

August is the peak month for Roseate Spoonbill sightings, with scores reaching 97/100 at the best destinations. Use the monthly table above to compare all 12 months.

Data: WEI v6 — published ecology research, official park reports, multi-year trip records · Updated June 2026 · How we score

How does SafariDEX rank wildlife destinations?

Each score combines encounter probability, sighting reliability, and data precision — weighted using published research, official park reports and multi-year trip records. Scores above 75 indicate reliable sightings; above 85 means outstanding conditions. How we score →