A Binocular Guide for Growing Birders

A good pair of bins can wow kids, helping them to delight in birding. These five picks make the grade.
A young girl in a striped dress looks through binoculars amid tall grass and wildflowers, with trees overhead.
Photo: Jamie Kelter Davis

There鈥檚 something magical about holding binoculars to your eyes and seeing a faraway object appear within reach鈥攅specially for children. Many bins marketed toward kids, though, are more like toys than tools.

In general, youngsters past preschool age are old enough to use actual binoculars, according to an informal survey of 爆料公社 parents and educators. (For toddlers, tape two toilet paper rolls together鈥攖here鈥檚 zero investment and it鈥檚 good training.) Bins for budding birders should be small and lightweight; provide a large field of view; and have low magnification, which is more forgiving in unsteady hands.

We had a dozen children, ages 3 to 14, put several pairs to the test, including some designed for adults that work well for the smaller set. They reviewed the optics for comfort and feel, ease of focus, and how clearly they could see a bird picture 25 yards away. These kid-approved options offer something for every fledgling birder. 

 

Starter Set

Bold color options, small size, and textured barrels attracted the youngest testers to the ($40). Folding and keeping down the flexible eyecups was a challenge, as was turning the focus wheel. Still, these bins provide an affordable on-ramp to birding, and all testers could see well.

 

A Step Up

The ($65) made an impression on many testers with their wide field of view. They also earned good marks for their pleasing feel鈥攊ncluding comfortable straps and eyecups鈥攁nd easy focus. 鈥淲hen you look up with them, you feel like you could just touch a leaf,鈥 says Miles Kozlowski, 9.

 

Tweens and Beyond

Clear and bright, the ($189) was far and away the most popular pair with all but the youngest kids. They鈥檙e the priciest and heaviest bins we tested, but they fit easily in hand, and the padded strap is silky and soft. Smaller kids may have trouble squeezing the barrels together.

 

Points for Style

Younger kids liked the ridged body and teal color (one of nine hues) of the ($95). They offer the smallest field of view in our test and were a bit hard to focus, but that didn鈥檛 deter Reid Olson, 3: 鈥淚 see the trees really close. I can see with the binoculars and my eyes!鈥

 

Points for Comfort

At just over a pound, the all-ages ($130) are on the heavier side for kids but have the widest field of view of those reviewed. Testers said the easy-to-twist eyecups were the most comfortable, and preferred the thick strap over other pairs鈥 thinner ones.

 

This piece originally ran in the Fall 2023 issue. To receive our print magazine, .