No, bald eagles and golden eagles are not on the U.S. endangered species list, though both stay protected under federal law.
Eagles still carry an “endangered” reputation, and that makes sense. Bald eagles once crashed to the brink across much of the United States. Their rebound became one of the clearest wildlife recovery stories in the country. That history stuck in people’s minds, so the old label still gets repeated long after the law changed.
The clean answer is this: if you mean the two eagle species most people in the United States are asking about, bald eagles and golden eagles, the answer is no. Neither is currently listed as endangered or threatened under the Endangered Species Act. But that does not mean people can disturb nests, collect feathers, or harm eagles. Federal protections still apply, and those rules have real teeth.
Why this question keeps coming up
People usually ask this after seeing an eagle near a lake, hearing about a nest near a work site, or reading that eagles “used to be endangered.” That last part is the source of most mix-ups.
- Bald eagles were once listed. Their legal status changed after recovery.
- Golden eagles are protected too. People often read “protected” and hear “endangered.”
- The word “eagle” covers many species. A global answer is not the same as a U.S. legal answer.
- Wildlife law uses precise labels. “Protected,” “threatened,” and “endangered” are not interchangeable.
That last point matters most. A species can be fully protected by federal law without being listed as endangered. Eagles are the classic case.
Are Eagles Endangered Species? In the United States, no
For U.S. readers, the plain answer is no. The U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service bald eagle profile says bald eagles were delisted from the Endangered Species Act in 2007 after populations recovered. Golden eagles are not on the federal endangered or threatened list either.
That still leaves a legal guardrail in place. The Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act bars taking, possessing, selling, purchasing, bartering, transporting, or disturbing bald or golden eagles, along with their nests and eggs, unless a permit applies. So the species are not ESA-listed, yet they are still tightly protected.
If you want the historical turning point, the Federal Register delisting rule is the formal record. It states that the bald eagle had recovered enough in the lower 48 states to be removed from the federal list.
What “not endangered” does not mean
It does not mean eagle numbers are limitless. It does not mean every local nest is safe from disturbance. It does not mean you can keep a feather you found on the trail. Federal law still treats eagles with unusual care.
That distinction trips people up because common speech is loose, while wildlife law is not. Someone may say, “Eagles are endangered,” when they really mean, “Eagles are protected and should be left alone.” The second statement is the accurate one in the U.S.
How the legal labels differ
Here’s the short version. “Endangered” under the Endangered Species Act is a listing status. “Protected” is a wider legal idea. Bald and golden eagles fall into the second bucket right now at the federal level.
If you are reading signs near a nest, planning work on private land, or trying to sort out whether a found feather can be kept, that wording gap is not academic. It changes what the law allows.
| Point | Bald eagle | Golden eagle |
|---|---|---|
| Federal ESA status in the U.S. | Not listed today | Not listed today |
| Past ESA listing | Yes, before 2007 delisting in the lower 48 | No federal ESA listing |
| Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act | Yes | Yes |
| Migratory Bird Treaty Act | Yes | Yes |
| Nests protected | Yes | Yes |
| Eggs protected | Yes | Yes |
| Feathers protected | Yes | Yes |
| Can disturbance still break federal law? | Yes | Yes |
Why bald eagles were once in trouble
The bald eagle’s old status did not come from nowhere. Populations were hammered by habitat loss, shooting, and pesticides, especially DDT, which thinned eggshells and hurt nesting success. By the time legal protection, pesticide action, and nest-site care started to work together, the species had already become a national warning sign.
That backstory still matters because it explains the current legal mix. The species recovered enough to leave the endangered list, yet lawmakers did not throw open the gates. Eagle-specific protections stayed in place.
Why people still speak as if bald eagles are endangered
- The recovery story is famous, so the older label lingers.
- School materials and casual articles are often outdated.
- “Protected” sounds close enough to “endangered” in everyday speech.
- Some local eagle pairs still face nest loss, poisoning, and collisions.
So, if someone says eagles are endangered, there is usually a true concern sitting behind a sloppy label. The concern is fair. The legal word is not.
What matters if you see a nest, feather, or injured bird
This is where the distinction turns practical. If an eagle pair nests near your home, dock, trail project, or work site, the safe move is not to assume “not endangered” means “no issue.” Disturbing breeding birds, damaging a nest, or handling remains can still trigger federal trouble.
For ordinary readers, these are the rules that matter most:
- Leave active nests alone, even if they are inconvenient.
- Do not collect feathers, eggs, or parts.
- Do not approach injured eagles unless a licensed responder tells you to.
- Call a wildlife agency or licensed rehabilitator if a bird looks hurt.
- Check state rules too, since state wildlife law may add another layer.
That last point is easy to miss. Federal law is the floor, not always the whole rulebook. States can add their own nesting buffers, permit steps, or handling bans.
| If you find this | What it usually means | Best next step |
|---|---|---|
| Active eagle nest | Protected area with disturbance limits | Back away and call state or federal wildlife staff if work is planned |
| Loose feather on the ground | Still covered by eagle protection law | Leave it where it is |
| Injured eagle | Protected bird needing licensed care | Contact a wildlife rehabilitator or agency |
| Dead eagle near a road or power line | Protected remains that may need reporting | Notify wildlife officials |
| Nest near a build site | Work may need buffers, timing changes, or permits | Check agency guidance before work starts |
The answer changes outside the United States
If your question is global, the answer gets wider. “Eagle” is not one species. Different eagles live under different legal systems, face different threats, and carry different conservation labels. That is why one blanket statement about all eagles falls apart fast.
Still, the U.S. answer is the one most searchers want, and on that point the record is plain: bald eagles are no longer listed as endangered under the ESA, and golden eagles are not federally listed as endangered either. Both remain protected birds under other federal laws.
What to say instead of “eagles are endangered”
If you want a line that is accurate and easy to use, try one of these:
- Bald eagles are not on the U.S. endangered species list anymore.
- Golden eagles are not federally listed as endangered in the U.S.
- Both species are still protected under federal law.
- Eagle nests, eggs, and feathers are not free to handle or collect.
That wording tells the truth without flattening the legal details. It also spares readers from a common mistake: mixing up recovery status with loss of protection.
References & Sources
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.“Bald Eagle.”Shows the current U.S. legal status of bald eagles and notes their 2007 delisting under the Endangered Species Act.
- U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service.“Bald and Golden Eagle Protection Act.”Shows the federal rules that still protect bald and golden eagles, including nests, eggs, and feathers.
- Federal Register.“Endangered and Threatened Wildlife and Plants; Removing the Bald Eagle in the Lower 48 States From the List of Endangered and Threatened Wildlife.”Shows the formal federal rule that removed the bald eagle from the ESA list in the lower 48 states.