Eastern Blue-Tongue Skink
Tiliqua scincoides scincoides

Natural History & Origin
Tips for First-Time Owners
- 1 Provide a deep burrowing substrate of at least 10–15 cm — Eastern Blue-Tongues are natural burrowers and a shallow substrate causes chronic, low-grade stress that is easy to prevent.
- 2 Vary the diet substantially at every meal — a blue-tongue fed a narrow diet, even a seemingly healthy one, will develop nutritional deficiencies over time; variety of vegetables, proteins and occasional fruit is the most important dietary principle.
- 3 A T5 HO 10% UVB lamp is strongly recommended and supports natural vitamin D₃ synthesis, activity levels and long-term health — it is an investment that pays dividends throughout the animal's life.
- 4 Never allow your blue-tongue unsupervised access to other household pets — dogs and cats can injure a skink very quickly, even without hostile intent.
- 5 Obtain a valid fauna keeper licence before purchasing and source your animal only from a licensed, reputable captive breeder.
Enclosure & Husbandry
Dietary Management
Handling & Socialisation
Our Available Reptiles
Fun Facts
The blue tongue serves as a genuine aposematic display — the vivid, unexpected colour contrasting sharply with the pink mouth interior is designed to startle or alarm a predator in the brief moment required to escape. It is completely harmless.
Eastern Blue-Tongues are viviparous — they give birth to fully formed, independent live young rather than laying eggs. Litters of six to sixteen young are born after a gestation period of approximately three to five months, with each youngster fully capable of fending for itself from birth.
Unlike many lizard species, Eastern Blue-Tongue tails do not regenerate — a tail lost to a predator, a door or an overzealous pet is lost permanently, leaving a permanently blunted end. This makes careful handling and household safety particularly important.
Enrichment
Common Health Issues
Essentials Shopping List
Setup checklist
- Timber or glass enclosure — minimum 120 × 60 × 45 cm; 150 × 60 × 45 cm strongly preferred
- Escape-proof, secure ventilated lid
- Halogen or incandescent basking globe (50–75W)
- Quality thermostat
- T5 HO 10% UVB tube and deep reflector fitting
- Lighting timer
- Digital dual-probe thermometer and infrared temperature gun
- Flat basking rock or slate tile
- Two hides (warm and cool end)
- Deep burrowing substrate — 10–15 cm depth (cypress mulch, coconut fibre or soil/sand mix)
- Shallow water dish
- Food dish (ceramic or glass)
- Calcium supplement powder (without D₃ — regular use)
- Multivitamin supplement (weekly use)
- Varied fresh vegetables (ongoing supply)
- Lean protein source (grain-free tinned dog/cat food, lean mince)
- Live feeder insects (for dietary variety)
- Reptile-safe disinfectant
- Fauna keeper licence (state-specific)
Commonly Asked Questions
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Can I keep two Eastern Blue-Tongue Skinks together?
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My blue-tongue is hissing, flattening its body and showing its tongue — is it sick?
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How do I tell a male from a female Eastern Blue-Tongue?
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Can blue-tongues eat fruit?
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Is a licence required to keep an Eastern Blue-Tongue in Australia?

















