What is a Galah like?
The Galah, also known as the Rose-breasted Cockatoo, is playful, affectionate and active, with a rose-pink and grey appearance.
This guide focuses on practical UK ownership: appropriate housing, diet, social needs, handling and the insurance wording owners can use to understand policy wording.
Galah temperament
Galahs vary by individual, but owners should expect an intelligent, social bird that needs routine, enrichment and careful handling. Noise, bonding behaviour and sensitivity to household change are factors before purchase.
Galah care needs
- Provide an appropriately sized cage or aviary with safe perches and enrichment.
- Offer daily supervised time outside the cage where suitable for the species.
- Feed a balanced avian diet with fresh vegetables and species-appropriate treats.
- Avoid kitchen fumes, draughts, unsafe metals and toxic foods.
- Build trust through calm, positive-reinforcement handling.
- Identify an avian vet before problems arise.
Galah size and lifespan
40-70 years is a useful planning guide, but diet, exercise, genetics, stress and specialist veterinary care all affect long-term wellbeing.
Housing and environment
Bird housing should allow movement, climbing, wing stretching and natural behaviour. Natural wood perches of varying diameter, safe toys and a stable draught-free location away from kitchen fumes are important for day-to-day welfare.
Diet and nutrition
Most companion birds do best on a species-appropriate base diet with daily fresh vegetables and carefully limited treats. Seed-heavy diets can contribute to nutritional deficiency and obesity in many species. Avocado, chocolate, onion, caffeine and alcohol must be avoided.
Handling and socialisation
Trust is built through calm, consistent routines and by respecting body language. Birds should not be grabbed or forced into contact, and children should be supervised closely because beaks can injure people and birds can be fragile.
Is a Galah right for me?
A Galah can be rewarding for owners prepared for daily care, noise, enrichment, cleaning and avian vet costs. Specialist bird insurance is a policy detail some owners compare because diagnostics and emergency care can become expensive quickly.
For more context before comparing specialist cover, read the jargon buster on vet fee limits and our guide to what pet insurance covers.





