Blue-Tongued Skink Care: The Complete Guide for UK Keepers
Blue-tongued skinks (Tiliqua species) are increasingly popular in the UK reptile hobby, and it is easy to understand why. They are large, robust, visually striking lizards with inquisitive personalities and a tolerance for handling that sets them apart from many other reptile species. With the right environment and diet, a blue-tongued skink can live for 15 to 20 years, making them a long-term companion for committed keepers.
Enclosure Requirements
Adult blue-tongued skinks require a minimum enclosure size of 120x60x60cm. These are active, ground-dwelling lizards that cover significant ground in the wild, and a cramped enclosure leads to stress, inactivity and associated health problems over time. Larger enclosures are always preferable.
The enclosure should include:
- A basking area with a focal basking spot of 40–42°C
- A cool end maintained at 24–26°C
- At least two hides — one on the warm side and one on the cool side
- A sturdy water bowl large enough to drink from comfortably
- Secure ventilation to maintain airflow without creating draughts
Suitable substrates include cypress mulch, topsoil and coco fibre blends. These hold humidity well without becoming waterlogged. Avoid substrates that retain excess moisture, as permanently damp conditions promote bacterial growth, mite infestations and respiratory infections.
UV Lighting: Still Required for a Crepuscular Species
Blue-tongued skinks are crepuscular — most active at dawn and dusk — and spend more time in low-light environments than fully diurnal species. Despite this, UV lighting remains an important component of their care.
Current guidance recommends providing a UVB lamp that delivers a UV Index (UVI) of approximately 2–4 in the basking area. A T5 HO 6% or 5.0 tube positioned at the correct distance achieves this effectively. The UV lamp should run on a timer for 10 to 12 hours per day, and like all UVB tubes, it must be replaced every 6 to 12 months regardless of whether the visible light output has diminished, as UV emission declines before the bulb appears to fail.
Provide plenty of hides and shaded areas so your skink can choose how much UV exposure it receives at any given time.
Diet: The Omnivore's Plate
Blue-tongued skinks are true omnivores, and their captive diet should reflect this balance. A commonly used and widely accepted ratio is approximately 50% plant matter and 50% protein.
Plant matter should include:
- Dark leafy greens — collard greens, dandelion leaves, rocket, watercress
- Vegetables — butternut squash, courgette, green beans, bell peppers
- Occasional fruit in small quantities — berries, mango, papaya
For the protein component, high-quality grain-free cat food is widely used and accepted by experienced keepers and many reptile veterinarians as a practical and nutritionally appropriate option for blue-tongued skinks. It offers a good protein-to-fat ratio and is easy to source. Look for products where named meat sources form the first ingredient, and avoid products high in cereals, preservatives or artificial additives.
Other suitable protein sources include:
- Cooked lean chicken or turkey
- Hard-boiled egg
- Occasional feeder insects such as dubia roaches or crickets
- Snails — a favourite food in the wild and an excellent calcium source
Dust food with calcium powder three to four times per week and use a vitamin supplement once per week. Avoid feeding high-fat proteins regularly, as blue-tongued skinks are prone to obesity in captivity.
Humidity: Finding the Right Balance
Maintaining appropriate humidity is one of the most important and most commonly mismanaged aspects of blue-tongued skink care. The correct range for most species is 40–60% relative humidity.
Too low humidity — below 30–35% — causes chronic dehydration, poor shedding, dull skin and long-term kidney problems. Too high humidity — above 70–80% consistently — creates the warm, damp conditions in which bacteria and mites thrive, and significantly increases the risk of respiratory infections.
Monitor humidity with a digital hygrometer positioned in the middle of the enclosure. Adjust levels by misting one side of the enclosure lightly every few days, ensuring the other side has time to dry out. Good ventilation is essential for maintaining the balance — a stagnant, sealed enclosure will become too humid even without misting.
Common Health Problems
Mites (Ophionyssus natricis)
Snake mites (Ophionyssus natricis) are the most common ectoparasite affecting captive reptiles in the UK, and despite the name they infest lizards including blue-tongued skinks as readily as snakes. They are tiny — barely visible to the naked eye — and appear as small dark dots moving on the skin, around the eyes or gathered in skin folds.
A heavy mite burden causes irritation, anaemia, stress and — in severe infestations — death. Mites are most commonly introduced via new animals or second-hand equipment, which is why strict quarantine of new arrivals is essential.
Treatment requires a combination of treating the animal with a reptile-safe mite product (as directed by your vet) and thoroughly decontaminating the enclosure — replacing all substrate, cleaning all surfaces, and treating hides, water bowls and decor. A single missed treatment cycle allows mites to reinfest from eggs left in the environment.
Respiratory Infection
Respiratory infections in blue-tongued skinks are usually caused by bacterial pathogens that take advantage of a compromised immune system, most commonly triggered by incorrect temperatures or excessively high humidity.
Signs include:
- Wheezing, clicking or rattling breathing sounds
- Mucus discharge from the nostrils or mouth
- Open-mouthed breathing
- Lethargy and reduced appetite
Open-mouthed breathing is an emergency sign and requires urgent veterinary attention. Early respiratory infections are treated with antibiotic injections or oral antibiotics prescribed by a vet, alongside correction of any environmental issues contributing to the problem.
Stomatitis (Mouth Rot)
Stomatitis is a bacterial infection of the gum tissue and oral cavity. It is often triggered by physical injury to the mouth — such as rubbing the snout against the enclosure — or by immune suppression from incorrect husbandry. Signs include reddened or inflamed gums, swelling of the jaw, a cheesy or caseous discharge within the mouth, reluctance to eat and excessive salivation.
Stomatitis requires veterinary treatment. Mild cases may respond to topical antiseptics, but moderate to severe cases require systemic antibiotics. Left untreated, stomatitis spreads rapidly, causing bone infection of the jaw and becoming life-threatening.
The Blue Tongue Display: Normal Behaviour
When threatened, blue-tongued skinks flatten their body, open their mouth wide and extend their vivid blue tongue. This is a normal and highly effective defensive display — the bright blue colour startles predators in the wild. In captivity, a skink that displays to you is communicating discomfort or stress, not true aggression.
Regular, calm handling from a young age significantly reduces defensive behaviour. Allow the skink to approach your hand rather than reaching in suddenly, and keep initial handling sessions brief until the animal is comfortable with you.