Owl Symbolism & Meaning & the Owl Spirit Animal

Owl Symbolism, Meaning, and the Owl Spirit AnimalOwl symbolism and meanings include wisdom, intuition, supernatural power, independent thinking, and observant listening. The mysterious owl has been a subject in the mythologies and folklore of cultures around the world for centuries. After all, owl species exist on every continent except Antarctica. So, people around the world are familiar with these special birds. In addition, the owl spirit animal is an important figure to those who feel a kinship with owls.

In this post, we’ll explore all facets of owl symbolism and meanings, including owl spiritual meanings, as well as owl mythology and more.

Owl Meanings
Barn owl (Tyto alba.) Photo: Vlada Cech.

What do owls symbolize?

Owls exist for their own purposes. They are not here for us. However, they have much to teach us. Here’s a list of commonly shared owl meanings and symbols in both modern and ancient cultures. You can read more details about these qualities and what they might mean in your life below.

  • Independent thinking
  • Courage and protection
  • Wisdom
  • Observant listening
  • Powerful intuition
  • Supernatural powers

If you are especially drawn to owls, and their unique traits resonate with you, you are not alone. Owls are unusual in that they possess mysterious abilities that some might even describe as superpowers that are unique in the animal kingdom. Because of their rare traits, owls represent a number of awe-inspiring qualities. Here are some:

Independent Thinking

Owl Symbol of Independent Thinking
Birds mobbing an owl. Engraving: F. Place. Circa 1690.

The owl is an independent hunter. However, they will roost with other owls not only to mate but to stay warm and learn about good hunting grounds. If the owl spirit animal resonates with you, you are probably a person who enjoys your independence and working on your own. You might even live alone. But you also enjoy the comfort and stimulation of being with others from time to time.

Withstand the mob mentality.

Because owls are such successful birds of prey, other birds feel threatened by them. Thus, birds of other species will group up and attack an owl, which wildlife biologists refer to as mobbing.1

Often the owl will not react to the harassment, however, and they are rarely hurt in these attacks. But sometimes the mobbing will cause the owl to leave an area.

Stay true to yourself and your ideas.

When the owl is your spirit guide, you must remember to stay true to your ideas, even if the crowd is skeptical or downright mean. If the mob makes fun of you, your ideas, or your differences, and treats you like an outcast ā€“ don’t let them ruffle your feathers. As Mark Twain once said, ā€œEveryone with an idea is a crank until the idea succeeds.ā€ Stay true to yourself.

The owl spirit animal represents the free thinker, the oddball, and the quintessential entrepreneur. Owls see what others do not. They have unusual skills that can cause jealousy in others. Yet, they hold true to their ideas and visions, despite the negativity and harassment from naysayers.

A pair of scops owlets in a hold in a tree
A pair of scops owlets (family Strigidae) in a hole in a tree. Photo: Mahabala India.

Seize opportunities.

While owls have been described as having superpowers, they are known to not be the best nest builders.2 Yet, perhaps itā€™s not so much a lack of skill as it is that nest building takes a needless amount of work? After all, why build a nest from scratch when there are so many other existing possibilities?

Owls are known to take the nests that other birds have built. For instance, great horned owls will use vacant nests in trees or on cliffs that were built by hawks, crows, or magpies. Other owls will nest in hollows in trees, which occur naturally or have been drilled out by woodpeckers.

As their name implies, burrowing owls will nest in underground tunnels that have already been dug by ground squirrels, prairie dogs, badgers, or other burrowing animals.

Still other owls nest in human-made structures, such as abandoned buildings or the rafters in barns, hence the name ā€œbarn owl.ā€

Owl Symbolism and Your Home Life

If the owl spirit animal resonates with you, you could be a perpetual Air BnB-er who loves staying in different peopleā€™s homes just for the variety. You might not be the type of person to buy a piece of land so you can build your dream house. Why go to all that work when there are so many other beautiful structures that have already been built? Or perhaps you love hotel life and the ease and convenience it provides.

Too much energy on your home?

For some of us, the owl spirit animal selected us to remind us that we are over-investing in our homes. Perhaps we’re putting too much time, money, and energy into our homes at the expense of the rest of our lives. The owl guide reminds us that a vast, wonderful world of relationships and places to explore exists beyond our home.

Owl Symbolism: Courage and Protection

Owl Symbol of Protection
An owl defending her owlets from an attacking eagle. Engraving: F. Place. Circa 1690.

While owls are opportunists when it comes to finding a nest, once they are there, they will fiercely protect it while they raise their owlets. Male owls will find and advertise a territory that is theirs. But the female owl will select the actual nesting spot.3 Then together, the owl couple will defend their nest for several months, particularly when they have young owlets to look after.

Owls show tremendous courage when protecting their nests. They will attack other birds of prey, and they are not above attacking people. In the film The Owl Documentary4, an owl is seen dive bombing a wolf fearlessly and repeatedly as it infringes on the owlā€™s territory. The wolf lunges at the owl, but the owl is not curtailed and attacks again.

Put those near and dear to you first.

The owl spirit guide reminds you to put your family and other close relationships first, above all else. Your children will only be young for so long, and while they are still vulnerable, you must protect them at all costs and from any potential threat.

In addition to healthy family relationships, a close friend is one of the greatest gifts one can hope for in life. The owl spirit guide reminds you to take good care of your close friends.

Reaffirm your boundaries.

If an owl makes him or herself known to you, it could be a sign that you need to reaffirm boundaries, whether social, psychological, spiritual, or physical. This could be a sign that you need to better protect your important relationships, whether they be your nuclear family (including sacred family time), your significant other, or even very close friends. The owl spirit guide reminds us of what quality time with loved ones truly means.

The owl spirit animal also asks you whether you are prioritizing your important relationships. Are you giving enough quality time to your significant other? Have you ensured that life at home is secure and serene? Are you giving enough of yourself? The human world is full of distractions. The owl spirit animal reminds us to get back to basics.

Owl Symbolism: Wisdom

Owl Meaning: Insight and Intuition
Short-eared owl (Asio flammeus) in flight. Photo: Dominic Sherony.

One of the owlā€™s most extraordinary abilities is their keen eyesight. Their sense of sight is one of the unique qualities that sets them apart from other animals and humans. For instance, a northern hawk owl can see a vole (which is a rodent thatā€™s a relative to lemmings and hamsters) from as far as a half a mile away.5

Like people’s eyes, owls’ eyes face forward in their skulls. This may be one of the reasons we relate to them so much. However, unlike us, in some species of owls, their eyes take up 70 percent of their skulls.6 Our eyes take up just 5 percent of our skulls. This underscores what an important part owls’ eyesight is in terms of how they use their brain power. This uncanny eyesight is one of the reasons that owls are symbols of wisdom.

Nighttime Vision

Owls have something else thatā€™s exceptional about their eyesight: They have nocturnal vision. In the dark, owls see objects 2.5 times more brightly than we do. Owls can successfully hunt at night while avoiding obstacles. Undoubtedly, this is why we so often associate owls with the night in art and literature ā€“ they are truly nocturnal creatures who can thrive in darkness.

Ability to See 270 Degrees

Great horned owl symbol of psychic powers
Great horned owl (Bubo virginianus). Photo: Andy Reago and Chrissy McClarren.

It cannot be forgotten that in addition to their super-powered gift of sight, owls can see in every direction: Their heads can turn 270 degrees.

Owls have adaptations in their necks that enable their blood vessels to stay open vs. getting cut off when they turn their heads. Furthermore, they have a blood reservoir in their heads that provides blood to the brain when they turn their heads.

Thus, the owl’s almost supernatural eyesight is why they are symbols of wisdom and insight. You can imagine that having this kind of vision and being able to see in nearly every direction gives them a view on life that we can only imagine.

Seeing from All Perspectives

The owl power animal reminds you to see a situation from all sides, as there are always multiple points of view on any given topic. A truly evolved and intelligent person is one who has the capacity to view a matter from different perspectives. In addition, having this insight gives a person the ability to understand how history impacts the present and could influence the future.

The owl spirit animal also reminds us to tap into your reserves of intelligence, our insights, and the gift of perspective. This is where true wisdom lies.

Skilled Hunters

Blakiston's fish owl (Bubo blakistoni)
After consuming two fish from a stream, a Blakiston’s fish owl (Bubo blakistoni) flies off with a third fish to give to his mate who is waiting in a tree nearby. Photo: Julie Edgley.

The owl is an exceptionally skilled hunter. No doubt, this is one of the reasons they have survived all over the world. Except for the threat they face from human activity, owls thrive in their natural habitats. Furthermore, they have adapted to live in a variety of environments.

Powerful Memories

Another uncanny ability that owls possess is having very vivid memories. This is undoubtedly one of the other reasons they are symbols of wisdom. The owl is able to create a mental map of their territory, which enables them to fly safely and take advantage of the nighttime world, and then find their way home.

This is yet another way that the owl spirit animal serves as a guide, and how owl people have been chosen to guide others. The owl power animal reminds you to hold on to your memories and to share them, in stories, memoirs, or songs.

Your Unique Aptitudes

If the owl has made themselves known to you, he or she may be asking you to explore whether you are tapping into your unique aptitudes. Owls have evolved to be successful all over the world because they use all of their innate gifts to thrive. Human beings also come into this world with a unique combination of aptitudes that sets them apart from others.

You may have better listening skills than others, you may be more empathetic, or you may have a knack for quantitative analysis. The key is to understand your natural abilities and to use them. They are your gifts to the world. (If youā€™re not sure what your aptitudes are or how they might be used in a professional sense, check out the Johnson Oā€™Connor Research Foundation, a nonprofit where you can go to get professional, in depth aptitude testing.)

Observant Listening

Barn Owl Listening and Looking

As if having powerful eyesight isn’t enough, the owl has also been blessed with acute hearing. They can hear before they hatch from their eggs, and they have sharp hearing into adulthood. In fact, an owl can hear prey even when it’s hidden under snow.

A miracle of nature, the owlā€™s entire head has evolved for listening. In fact, many species of owls have asymmetrical ears.7 Each ear is located at different heights on the owlā€™s head. This enables the owl to pinpoint the location of sounds from multiple directions. At certain frequencies, owls’ hearing is 10 times more acute than our own.

The All-too Rare Skill of Listening

If the owl spirit has called to you, you have the capacity to be an observant listener. You may have an aptitude for music, languages, or accents. You may also be able to decipher the truth from lies when words flow out of another person’s mouth. The owl spirit animal hears and knows things, even when they cannot be seen. The owl teaches us to look past the surface and to listen for what is actually going on.

Owl and Full Moon

Intuition and Supernatural Powers

If the owl is your spirit animal, you may have a mysterious sense of insight that others might describe as psychic. You can see what others do not, and you are aware of that which others are not. You may even have the gift of prophecy. If you have such abilities, it is your purpose and challenge in this lifetime to bring others along with you, to guide them in the darkness so they can see the light.

Seeing Light in the Darkness

With the owl, you also get the gift of hope. The owl can see light where others feel lost in the darkness. After all, this is what a lightworker does here on Earth. Your calling is to ā€œshow people the light,ā€ to gently help them find their way.

Agility

Snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus) in flight
Snowy owl (Bubo scandiacus) in flight. Photo: Bert de Tilly.

Another of the owlā€™s special abilities is their flying skills. They are able to take off vertically from a standstill, a skill they use to defend their nests or to quickly get out of harmā€™s way.

Silent Flight

The other aspect to the owlā€™s unique flying skills is that they’re able to fly silently, generating very little turbulence. The owl has noise-reducing fringes on their wings that enable them to fly with limited air movement.

The owl power animal tells you to move with grace in this world, to avoid causing a commotion, and to protect your privacy. Perhaps youā€™re being too boisterous or dominating the conversation. Or you may be over-sharing. It may be time to utilize more discretion in your activities.

Learning to Fly

Whatā€™s important to keep in mind is that the owl is not born knowing how to fly. They must learn how to fly and they must practice flying. While flying is natural to them, when owlets are learning to fly, they must take a leap of faith from their nest to begin. Then, they get better at flying with practice.

Don’t squander your innate abilities.

With the owl, you are reminded not to squander your gifts. To fully utilize your abilities and reach your maximum potential on the Earthly plane, you must hone our skills. This involves practice. When we look at great artists, musicians, athletes, surgeons, or other successful people, we might think they come upon their success by luck and their natural gifts. Certainly, those qualities play a role. However, dedication to craft, the ritual of practice, and continual improvement is what sets the experts apart from everyone else.

Owl Mythology and Folklore

Owls have had different meanings in various cultures throughout history. There are over 240 species of owl and they exist on every continent on Earth except Antarctica. So, itā€™s not surprising that these wise beings have made their way into the myths, folklore, and artwork of different cultures throughout the ages.

While owls exist for themselves, they have meaning to us as human beings on multiple levels. They are fellow species with whom we share our existence on this planet, and they have held symbolic meaning to humans around the world for centuries.

Owl meanings and symbolism vary by culture, geography, and period in history. The following are some examples.

Greek Owl Meaning

The Greek Goddess Athena, who was the virgin goddess of wisdom, was always accompanied by a small owl. Even Minerva, who was Athena’s later incarnation in Roman mythology, was accompanied by an owl. This small companion was referred to as the Owl of Athena or the Owl of Minerva. This little owl came to be known as an important messenger for Athena, expanding her wisdom and warning her of changes to come.

The Greek goddess Athena with her little owl.
The Greek goddess Athena holding a helmet and spear with her little owl. Circa 490 – 480 BC. Image: Metropolitan Museum of Art, Rogers Fund.

Athena was so impressed by the great eyes and solemn appearance of the owl that she banished the mischievous crow and the owl became her favorite bird.

Owl meaning in ancient Greece has carried over to the modern western world, as the owl still symbolizes knowledge and wisdom today.

The Owl as a Symbol of Protection

Historians have found ancient texts that say that owls protected the Acropolis. Indeed, historical artifacts show there were many owls in ancient Athens. The Greeks believed that a magical inner light gave the owl night vision.

The Greeks also saw owls as the protectors of warriors when they went into battle. Owls were often seen around battlefields, and the Greeks believe they accompanied their armies to war, helping with motivation and even protecting them from death. In fact, it was considered a good omen if an owl flew over Greek soldiers before a battle.

Owl Symbolism in Ancient Rome

By the time of the Roman Empire, owls were viewed in a more negative light. To the ancient Romans, hearing the hoot of an owl meant that death was imminent. And interestingly, this belief was not unique to the Romans. Over 5,000 miles away in what would become North America, many Native American tribes shared the same belief, associating the owl with death. They believed if the owl called your name, it meant you were going to die.

In fact, legend has is that the death of Julius Caesar, as well as the emperors Augustus and Commodus Aurelius were all predicted by owls.8

Here is a quote from Shakespeareā€™s Julius Caesar:

ā€œAnd yesterday the bird of night did sit
Even at noonday upon the marketplace,
Hooting and shrieking. When these prodigies
Do so conjointly meet, let not men say
‘These are their reasons, they are natural,’
For, I believe, they are portentous things
Unto the climate that they point upon.ā€

Owl Meaning in the Bible

Owl meaning in the Bible was not positive either. This view most likely has played a role in why the owl is connected with frightening topics today, including death and scary things on Halloween. But as is the case with so many other things in the Bible, that which was mysterious or misunderstood was often feared.

In the Bible, the owl was seen as unclean and not fit for human consumption. In fact, in the Bible, owl meaning was on par with dragon, bat, and raven symbolism ā€“ all of which had negative connotations.9

Babylonian goddess with owls and lions
A Babylonian goddess, possibly Ishtar or her sisters Ereshkigal or Lilitu, with owls and lions. Circa 1800-1750 BC. Image: Aiwok.

In the Book of Isaiah, Chapter 34, Verse 13, under King Nebuchadnezzar of Babylon, the kingdom of Edom would experience a land filled with dragons, owls, unicorns, vultures, and cormorants ā€“ creatures that symbolized desolation and disobedience in the Bible. An interesting side note is that the Egyptian hieroglyph for Edom contains an owl.

Symbols of Loneliness

The owl was also a symbol of loneliness and loss in the Bible. Here’s quote from Psalm 102:6-7:

ā€œI am like a desert owl,
like an owl among the ruins.
I lie awake; I have become
like a bird alone on a roof.ā€10

African Owl Symbolism

Unfortunately, the owl was not a positive symbol in African folklore either. East Africans believed that owls brought illnesses to children, and thus they associated them with death. Cameroonians also connected the owl to negative emotions, referring to it as ā€œthe bird that makes you afraid.ā€11

Many African cultures associated the owl with sorcery and witchcraft. In the same way that Native Americans saw the eagle and wolf spirit animals, Africans believed that the owl traveled freely between the material and spiritual worlds, bringing messages back and forth.

As with Roman and Native American mythology, in Africa, the hoot of an owl presaged change and something negative to come.

Celtic Owl Meaning

The ancient Celts also applied deep symbolic meanings to the owl. The most positive image of owls in Celtic mythology is their connection to the Goddess in her crone (or old woman) form. The Celts called the barn owl Cauilleach-oidhche gheal, which means ā€œwhite old woman of the night.ā€ The Cauilleach is the goddess of death. Thus, the Celts viewed the screech of an owl as an omen that someone was about to die.12

Blodeuwedd

There is a Welsh myth in the Mabinogion stories about Blodeuwedd, who was the goddess of betrayal. The Welsh associated Blodeuwedd with an owl. In the story, the magician Gwydion created Blodeuwedd from flowers. The intention is that she would be a gift for Prince Llew Llaw Gyffes.

Unfortunately, Blodeuwedd had an affair with a man named Goronwy. And together, the lovers plotted to kill Prince Llew. When Prince Llew died, he was transformed into an eagle. However, the magician Gwydion stepped in and returned Llew to his human form.

Naturally, Prince Llew wanted revenge (as humans so often do.) But instead of killing Blodeuwedd, he ordered Gwydion to turn her into a white owl who would haunt the night in loneliness and sorrow.

Gwydion said:
“I will not slay thee, but I will do unto thee worse than that. For I will turn thee into a bird; and because of the shame thou hast done unto Llew Llaw Gyffes, thou shalt never show thy face in the light of day henceforth; and that through fear of all other birds. For it shall be their nature to attack thee, and to chase thee from wheresoever they may find thee.ā€13

Native American Owl Meaning

A Blackfoot medicine man known as Medicine Owl
A Blackfoot medicine man known as Medicine Owl wearing a ceremonial headdress and blanket, holding a decorated spear. Glacier National Park, Montana, circa 1912 – 1915. Image: University of Washington.

As they revered nature and so many living beings, the Native Americans also revered the owl. As in other cultures, some Native American tribes believed the cry of an owl was the harbinger of death. They also associated the owl with omens as well as nighttime and nighttime spirits.

A number of tribes seemed to be especially fearful of the horned owl because the feathers that stuck up on the sides of their heads reminded them of horns. Some tribes believed the owl was not even a real bird, but instead was a shapeshifter.

Shapeshifters

Many tribes believed that medicine men could shape-shift into animals, and commonly an owl. The medicine man would use owl medicine for both negative consequences or for a personā€™s benefit.14

The Lakota, Cherokee, Blackfoot, and Caddo tribes believed that medicine men gained insight from clear dreams at night, thanks to the sharp sight of the owl. Thus, these medicine men wore owl feathers and vowed to never harm an owl.15

Laughter
The Hopis called the great horned owl “Mongwu.” In Hopi storytelling, Mongwu was the enforcer or lawman ā€“ the straight man playing the foil to the comedic Koshari clowns.

So, it appears that every culture has their buffoons. For many Native Americans, their clowns had the serious power of curing diseases.16 Indeed, Western medicine is finally catching up to realize how bad stress is for people and how healthy it is to laugh.

In other legends, Indigenous People viewed birds that were around during the daytime as ā€œbumbling good-for-nothingsā€ who donā€™t have what it takes to be up at night like the wise owl.

The tribes of the American and Canadian northwest coast have owls carved into their totem poles. And the Creek tribe has dances for both the screech owl and horned owl. Virtually every Native American tribe has owl legends and stories.

Owl Clans

Some tribes have owl clans, just as they have bear, crow, fox, wolf, hummingbird, snake, and other animal clans. Various tribes have a number of clans, and they associate each with an animal. Your clan is the clan of your maternal line.

The Hopi tribe has an owl clan, as do the Tlingit and the Mojave tribes.

The Hopis saw the burrowing owl as their god of the dead, the guardian of their fires, and the keeper of all underground things, including the germination of seeds. The Hopi call the burrowing owl Ko’ko, which means “watcher of the dark.” The Hopi also believed that owls helped their peaches to grow.

Owl Meanings to Different Tribes

The Tlingit tribe believed the owl helped them in battle. When warriors went into battle, they hooted like owls to gain confidence and to put fear into the hearts of their enemies.

Members of the Mojave tribe believed they would become an owl after they died, then shortly thereafter, they would transform into a water beetle, before evolving into pure air.

The Kwakiutl tribe believed that the owl was the soul of a human who had passed, and thus they should never be harmed. In fact, they believed that if a person killed an owl, their soul would die.17

In all, many tribes believed that the owl held ancient knowledge and was therefore a carrier of mystical wisdom. Is it a coincidence that the word ā€œknowledgeā€ contains the word “owl”?

The Lenape tribe revered the owl spirit animal. They believed that if you dreamed of an owl, it meant the owl spirit animal was now your guardian and guide.

Owl Spirit Animal

Owl Spirit Animal

Owls are exceptional beings. They possess skills that other animals, including humans, do not. If you are drawn to owls, you are feeling the power of the owl spirit animal.

Your spirit animal serves as a guide, bringing you messages from the Universe to help guide you in this lifetime and in your soulā€™s journey.

If an owl makes him or herself known to you, whether in real life or through art, the media, or elsewhere ā€“ pay attention. There are no coincidences.

What is the spiritual meaning of the owl?

On a spiritual level, the owl can teach you about your purpose in this lifetime, as well as help you to find answers when you seek them. We are all here to learn, and the owl can guide us in understanding which direction to take in a given situation, as well as what we can learn from a given experience.

What does it mean when you see an owl?

If you see an owl, it can have various meanings, depending on what you’re going through in your life at that particular time and what you’re thinking about right before you see one. Sometimes you have to explore a little, even do some research, to unearth answers.

An Owl Who Crossed My Path

I had an experience with an owl when I was hiking with my dog, Roo, very early in the morning near Phoenix Lake on Mt. Tamalpais in Marin County in California. As I was hiking, I was thinking about UniGuide and the different directions that I could take with the site. For a time, I had been very focused on veganism and was wondering if I should partner with a vegan chef to expand the collection of recipes on the site. However, I also felt that I needed to have more content that focused on biodiversity and the environment, as well as our spiritual connection to the Earth.

As I was walking and thinking, suddenly a spotted owl flew right in front of me on the trail and then perched on a branch right near me. Both Roo and I were startled because the hike so far had been very quiet. Then, all of a sudden this huge bird with a shockingly wide wingspan flew right in front of us. Yet, he wasn’t afraid because he perched right near us, watching us calmly. I grabbed my phone and took his photo, which you can see here:

Northern spotted owl
A northern spotted owl (Strix occidentalis caurina) who flew in front of me near Phoenix Lake on Mt. Tamalpais, Marin County, CA.

I first learned about spotted owls when I moved to California in the late ’80s. I was an environmental studies major in college and was doing a lot of protesting of the logging of old growth redwood forests up in Northern California. These forests are critical habitat for northern spotted owls, who had just been added to the Endangered Species List in 1990.18

Having this rare spotted owl cross my path at that moment told me what I needed to know: Focus on the environmental and biodiversity content. I tell this story to illustrate what seeing an owl at a particular time can mean to you, whether in real life, in a movie, art, or the media. Consider those things you need answers to in your life and look for insights from the owl’s special traits and meanings.

How do you know if the owl is your spirit animal?

While many of us have not had the opportunity to see an owl in the wild, we can still get to know them through the work of wildlife biologists, filmmakers, artists, and owl protection organizations who can help us understand them better. Only you can truly know if the owl is one of your power animals.

According to Native American tradition, your spirit animals choose you in a profound life experience, through a vision quest, or through a special kinship you have with them.

If you are curious about other animals who might be your spirit animal, you can take UniGuide’s spirit animal test in my overview post about spirit animals.

Two owls and a full moon

Owl Power Animal

As the name implies, a power animal can inspire you with their most dynamic traits. So, if you want to transform an area of your life, meditate on the attributes that the power animal represents. Summon the owl power animal when you:

  • Need to have your wits about you in a situation or when you need to make a decision and you don’t want to miss any critical details.
  • Want to sharpen your intuition and have a stronger connection to your spirit guides.
  • Wish to hone your protective instincts and reaffirm boundaries to protect those and that which you love and hold dear.
  • Want to be more insightful and intelligent about how you live your life.

Owl Totem Animal

The owl totem is a symbol that represents the protective attributes of this unique bird. Thus, the owl totem serves as a helpful symbol for manifesting more wisdom, protection, and intuitive insights in your life. In addition, the owl totem will help you exert more independence in your life and help you to gain the types of insights you get from spending time alone.

Owl Dream Meaning

 Athene noctua owlets.
Athene noctua owlets.

If you dream of an owl, consider the emotions you felt in the dream. Fear and anxiety can mean you have to address a situation that you may be avoiding when you are awake. This can also be the meaning of dreaming about an owl screeching: They are trying to wake up your conscious mind. In other words, it’s a wakeup call, meaning that you need to pay closer attention to specific situations in your life and not sweep things under the rug.

Also, feeling emotional in an owl dream can be a sign that you need to use your intellect more to deal with a challenge and find answers instead of reacting emotionally.

Dreaming of a dead owl can mean that change is imminent, as death is a transformation from one state to the next.

Because the owl symbolizes supernatural power, an owl dream can also be a sign that you need to tune into your intuition and instincts more. Give yourself the quiet time for meditation and prayer, so that you can connect your subconscious as well as your super conscious.

Owl Tattoo Meaning

Owl Tattoo

An owl tattoo can be a positive symbol that tells the world that you are a freethinker who relies on your own instincts. It can also demonstrate that you seek to understand the deeper mysteries of life and what the spirit world has to teach you. It can also be a sign that you believe in the power of magic. While tattoos are personal to each individual, understanding the historic animal symbolism applied to the owl, and well as the owl spirit animal, can hopefully imbue your tattoo with greater meaning.

For more details, be sure to check out my dedicated post on owl tattoo meanings.

How You Can Help Owls

Are owls endangered? The answer is, unfortunately, yes. Experts at the UN warn that one million species of owls around the world are on the brink of extinction. While not every owl species is formally endangered, like so many wild animals with whom we share our planet, they still face threats. And unfortunately, we humans are the problem. Habit loss, environmental changes from climate change, and poisons in the environment are all impacting these special birds.

If you care about owls, please do what you can to help them. Here are some organizations that are working to protect owls:

You might enjoy these other articles on UniGuide:

34 Responses

  1. This was very interestingly beautiful to read. I’m from RSA.
    The owl is associated with death & witchcraft here.
    It kept visiting us at home and weeks later, my daughter passed on. So I’m starting to think that it might be my animal spirit guide.

    I saw it today too and I felt strongly drawn to it. And now after reading this piece and seeing how I just fit or rather related with the description or abilities of the owl, I’m strangely happy. It’s like this was a missing piece to the puzzle called my life.

    Thank You. Love & LightšŸ’š

    1. Hi Trixie, I am very sorry to hear of the loss of your daughter. My heart goes out to you. I’m heartened to hear that you got some clarity learning more about owls. Some negative beliefs about animals stem from times when people were challenged by nature and had a lot of fear about it. I can imagine that is the case in South Africa as elsewhere. The Bible has a lot of negative metaphors about animals too, as you may be aware. But the animals have always had messages for us. I truly believe that divine energy can be manifested through them as it can through us. It’s a matter of being receptive to it (and we all have free will.) Your daughter’s spirit is with you, I am certain of it. Take care!

  2. I recently had a dream of a pair of owl and rhe next day when i was picking up my daughters from school we saw 6 seagle flying in the sky and fewdays later as i was reading books to my daughter there was 4 seagle flying picture on it and now i am this article its like dƩjƠ vu kind of things ! I got to know so many things about it really enjoyed it
    Anyway thanks a millinon kristen for posted this .
    Ps: Owl i need is knowledge !

  3. I am very new to all of this (it’s like learning to speak a new language). I recently had my first full Reiki session. At the end, my practitioner (is that even the right word?) told me to pay attention to my dreams that night. I did and it was highly unusual for my normal pattern of dreaming. I dreamt that I was underground in a basement-like place and it was pitch black, no light. I was uncomfortable but not overly frightened. I saw a flash of gold “fly” past me and intuitively knew it was a bird. I thought it was a goldfinch and extended my arm out with a finger offered for it to perch on. Instead a great horned owl flew past my outstretched hand and landed on my shoulder. For a split second I was afraid, but it nuzzled into my neck. I did not feel threatened but was more awestruck than comforted. Then another great horned owl flew toward me and landed at my feet and did the same thing, gently leaning into my leg. Finally, a third flew toward me but stayed in the air, almost as if was protecting me. I woke up at that point and wrote down the dream. I have thought about it a lot and know there is a message for me. How do I begin to understand what I am meant receive? Do you have any insight to offer on the meaning?

    1. That is an absolutely fascinating dream! My first thought is that your Reiki therapist tuned into something, and it sounds like you have what they used to call in the old days “the sight” or psychic abilities. I believe we all have them but some people are more readily sensitive to metaphysical things that are going on than others. It sounds like you are one of those people.

      Owls see in the dark and in your dream it seems they were there to show you (or guide you, as animal spirits do!) that you also “see in the dark” or feel and experience things that other people might miss.

      The gold flash you saw sounds to me like a flash of light – more light in the darkness, like a light worker does here on Earth. Light workers are here to heal and to do the good work of God, or the higher power.

      Three owls is also really interesting! I recently wrote a post about meanings associated with the number 333. An important component to that number of course is the number 3 on its own, which has many sacred meanings. Owls are important in Native American cultures, and the number 3 is a sacred number to some tribes, notably the Hopi. In addition, it’s an important number when one is on a spiritual path ā€“ to put it simply ā€“ the path to enlightenment is having 1) faith, 2) expanding your knowledge, and then 3) taking positive action.

      So, this is my initial hunch! Your owls were reminding you of your special gifts. Continue studying and learning and working on ways to hone those gifts! I hope this helps! Thanks for sharing this wonderful dream with us!

  4. I had the amazing experience of an eastern screech owl red morph. Coming into my home an stayed with me for 3weeks, I put my fingers up to his stomach ,n a wild owl hopped on my fingers n I healed him, I always keep my door open thinking when he got ready he would fly away, an so finally he did just that. but the 3weeks I had with him was amazing, i fell in love with him,, I named him Gismo.

  5. Hi Kristen,
    What a wonderful article, which my sister sent to me.
    In 2003, I began my training in shamanic practices with The Sacred Trust in England. Owl came to me in my first journey and has been with me ever since as my main ally. Based on my journeys, I wrote a book for my young granddaughter, Rosanna and Owl, 7 stories of Owl guiding her through a big problem she has. While I wrote and published it in the usual past tense, I’ve rewritten it and two more wee books for her two sisters in the present tense and will republish it as one book in which all three are continuous. Rosanna and Owl is illustrated by my sister, who sent me your article. If you’re curious, go here: to see the book: https://amzn.to/3GrtBuB
    Again, thank you for your article on Owl in different times and cultures across the world.
    Deep respect.
    Robert Mohr

    1. Hi to both. I have found this article while browsing to get clarification around an owl flying over me, on the left side, while driving after having just left a meeting with two lawyers that did not feel right. The article is absolutely fascinating and I thank Ms Stanton for having found and put together such valuable information. Then your comment, Mr Mohr! My name is Rossana, the number I’d call mine is 7. Definitely food for though, and I’ll check out that link. Thank you both and our Animal Spirits, who come to us in wonderful ways.

      1. Thank you for your message, Rossana. Fascinating about the lawyers! I have been reading more about how divine energy manifests itself and getting even more clarity on this. We humans and animals have free will. At the same time, and even at different times in our lives, we are more receptive to divine energy working through us. You think about spiritual masters – Jesus, Buddha, Gandhi, Mother Teresa, and even people like caregivers, healers, etc. – these are examples of people whom divine energy moved through. I think animals are the same in terms of different times in their lives being receptive to divine energy moving through them to help us. We can’t expect it from them all the time, but when it does, we know it!

  6. I appreciate your work in collecting myriad cultural meanings, but I am saddened that you talk about Native Americans in the past tense. Tribes are very much alive and practicing their traditions and beliefs today. I would hope that their existence would not be relegated to history.

    1. Thank you for your comment. It is absolutely valid and is actually something I mulled over for a long time. I write a lot about ancient cultures and the belief systems held long ago. So sometimes I do make that mistake of writing about cultures in past tense, even though they are thriving today. I will try to make edits accordingly when I update this post. In this article – Reincarnation in Native American Spiritual Beliefs – I actually did work with the writer and edited it to reflect present tense. Please know, I write about Native American cultures because I respect them so much and don’t want humanity to lose the lessons and blessings they bring to us. Thank you for your comment.

  7. Dec. 17,2021, night before the last full moonā€¦great horned owl swoops down over my head in my front yardā€¦not threatening but attention seeking. The very next night, get out of my car for a dinner party downtown and there she is, silently gliding over my headā€¦.white and soundlessā€¦.gliding on the full moon beams. Again, non threatening, just calling my attention to witness her greatness and behold the silent creature of the night. I felt blessed.
    For many years Fox, Hawk, and Toad have been my spirit guidesā€¦then Dragonfly came into my life and now Owl.

      1. Yes mam.. I would like to share a several instances I have encountered in my days..I’m 46 as of today.. turn 47 in 16 days. I was adopted at birth to the best parents the good lord could provide me ..I’m truly blessed.. my childhood was in a sense always a learning experience whether I was being taught right or wrong ..it wasn’t until my later days ,in fact right before my divorce I became aware of my spirituality and kinship with particularly the owl..although there are quite a few instances of others ..the owl and the red tailed hawk stand out the most. The owl encounter started with disagreement or argument between my wife at the Time and me..she had gone out the side door to smoke ..I gave her a minute then was heading out side to calm said situation as I reached the door she suddenly came in and said the owl is out there I said would you like to join me and she said I’ve already smoked no thanks..normaly I would have skipped the cigarette and try to fix us but this time I said ok..I went out and sat down and looked intensity for the owl..after five minutes of looking totally in the dark,.. directly in front of me I saw two greenish glowing eyes dipping and circling then the owls silhouette started flying towards me it came within about three feet of me and flew still at head height sitting down…then it turned its body but never left eye contact with me..now with his head backwards to his body it tried to land on my pop-up camper but didn’t then flew couple of feet more and tried to land on the gate of my utility trailer then flew off across the yard still looking at me..talking to me..as he had left my eyesight I stood up and went back inside where I met my ex trying to come out as I was coming in and I said …that owl was out there and it spoke to me…she said in a sassy voice what did it say? I said you will have to ask the owl…
        The next morning I rushed outside to get my chainsaw and carve what I thought looked like a bully owl..as I carved the 6Ɨ6 ceader post that was about 2and a half feet long ..unknowingly she had crept up behind me as I finished my carving and she said what are you doing and I told this is to keep that owl away..she rolled her eyes at me and went on..it was on the corner post for three weeks when she took the kids and left with no owl in sight…after what seem like a month and a half my father passed away whom I had been taking care of by myself…and my ex put me out of the home her and I had made our own ..the day of her and the kids return to the house I got a text from one of my twins of the owl sitting on the power line with his head backwards staring at the side door ..she snapped a photo and sent it to me…after a long divorce after one of the proceedings I told her what the owl had said…it told me you can’t stay … the carving was to keep it away as it did but upon its return I knew the meaning of my encounter..and I embrace my guide from now on .

        1. Thank you for sharing this. I am sorry to hear about the break up of your relationship, but all relationships are part of our spiritual journey and they have something to teach us. Yes, sometimes we need to be hit up side the head (figuratively speaking, that is) in order to pay attention to what our spiritual guides are trying to help us with. It seems like you had some big insights. I wish you the best and thanks again for sharing your personal story with us!

  8. Wow, thank you for all the information. The owl history, and very relatable human and spiritual insights. This felt like a book, and I loved it. Thank you again for sharing so much.

  9. The Owl..my 85 yr old father is with me now. His room is my former PRAYER and quiet room..One morning, as I was preparing for the day; I saw an owlā€¦.sitting on my gutters, at the meeting point of the wall! Beautiful. He flew away and came back..his perch gave him a direction view of my dad in bed. WHAT DO YOU SENSE OR ADVISE/???? Waitingā€¦..

    1. How cool! I view something like this as positive. You saw the owl, so there is acknowledgement there. Also that you have your dad in a sacred place ā€“ that is lovely. I hope you will take comfort in seeing the owl and validation in caring for your dad.

      My mom has been dealing with a long-term neurological illness. It’s so hard to see our loved ones go through something like this. Sometimes we just need a reminder that caring for them and giving them the best quality of life we can given their situation is the right thing to do and that it is acknowledged. Also that there is more going on in the universe than this physical experience.

      When people are older and closer to the end of their physical life, it can be scary for those of us who still have work to do on Earth. But when people pass, it’s also a relief for them, as getting old, being in pain is so hard.

      Owls are truly special. I hope you view this as a positive validation that it’s an honor to care for your dad in his later years, and that his soul, or spirit, is eternal. Please don’t be afraid. I’m sure it’s very hard. Seeing the owl is a reminder that there is magic in the world and it is positive. I hope this helps!

  10. I am tying to determine what the owl means in my life. I see them all the time in pictures, on my phone, on my computer screen (so random) and they have even flown in front of me while I’m driving. How do you tell if they are your totem animal or an animal spirit guide? What is the difference? And how do you apply their wisdom to our own lives?

    1. Hi Elizabeth,
      A totem is a physical symbol that represents the protective powers, or traits, of the animal. For example, Native Americans carve totem animals on poles as protective symbols for their families or clans.

      When it comes to animal spirits, many people who write about spirit animals or animal meanings will say there are specific meanings, for example, if an owl flies in front of your car it means X, Y, or Z. However, Iā€™m more of the school of thought that itā€™s more personal and subjective than that.

      I believe that everything in the Universe is connected. And we come to the Earth as spirits, or souls, and take Earthly bodies to learn and evolve as souls. (Sort of like an astronaut has to put on a space suit to travel to outer space. :o)

      However, in the material, or physical, world we feel separate from things. But emotional connections with others, and even connections with animals, either our pets or wild animals, remind us that on a spiritual level, we are all interconnected.

      The owl has a spirit too, and they have taken on the form of an owl in the material world. Understanding the owl and your relationship with them, what they are like, what they experience, what they represent (even to ancient cultures in mythology), can give you insights into your own spiritual journey here on Earth. Feeling a special kinship with an animal, having a profound experience with one, seeing them repeatedly, I believe shows you that they are special to you and worth learning more about. (The hawk is one of my spirit animals, and when I see them, I always feel affirmation ā€“ I just feel more spiritually connected and part of something much bigger than my day-to-day dealings.)

      When it comes to an animals or insect sending messages to you, perhaps from someone who has passed, I think thatā€™s very personal and you need to think about what that is. I donā€™t feel that every time I see a hawk that itā€™s a message from a spirit for me. However, hereā€™s an example of something that was very clear to me. After my dog, Roo, died, I was walking along a lake where I used to walk her. I was grieving and so sad. Then suddenly I saw all of these blue dragonflies. As I saw them, I felt her ā€“ I just felt this connection. Then one day, I didnā€™t see any blue dragonflies at the lake. And I was feeling sad about her. But just as I was leaving the park, a single blue dragonfly flew right up to my windshield ā€“ it was so obvious! If you read my post about cardinals (just click the text), youā€™ll see a video with some ladies who knew, without a doubt, that a cardinal was a messenger sent from their mother. Best of luck to you! Evolving spiritually is a learning process!

  11. Can I please contact you via email or any platform? This article has helped me so much. I havenā€™t just seen an owl. I do see them for a reason and most of the time I know what is to come. I have seen or have owls come to me at least 30 times. I donā€™t want to share too much abroad for I have learned this can hinder energy at times. Itā€™s my most recent owl, last night to be exact. They have never came this way before. I will figure out what this means but some insight from you may help.

  12. And for the reply I made earlier you would not believe the different things that had come to this story the little inns and outs that took place with the events like finding the mummified yellow and white owl in an old little building like a storage shed Four months earlier and I took it home and it was such a beautiful owl and thereā€™s so much more but not but not to write a book

  13. Itā€™s probably unheard of but not I was welcome to my house I bought in duck in double adobe Arizona by two big owls that flew right above my head as I was walking in the driveway towards the house my first encounter like 40 years ago my next encounter 42 years later I returned home and there was they sound in my bedroom and when I went in it was a yellow and white big owl that I could not believe got in there because there was nowhere this all could have gotten through Iā€™ve done it was a big owl probably the size of the height of a chicken but not as wide just a straight party and when the wings were in it was yellow and when the wings came out it was all white Iā€™ll wait underneath the wings I then proceeded to open the doors so that he could go down the hallway and the wingspan was too large for it to fly so it went into a small room storage where I had to dig it out because it got behind things against the wall and caught it in the sheet and carried it outside and it was so light in weight that I couldnā€™t believe itFor the size of it and I didnā€™t learn both times what it meant and it meant an awful lot when I gave it thought and itā€™s been two years since then which it changed my life

    1. Wow. That’s a wild story. Do you know what kind he/she was? Possibly look up native owl species in Arizona? I had an experience rescuing a Cooper’s hawk and feel the same way you do – it changed my life and now hawks are very special birds to me. Whenever I saw them, I consider what I was just thinking about and look for guidance and meaning. I love owls too. I learned so much about them writing that post. It’s a shame that so many people know so little about them. They are truly magnificent! I love that you cherish those experiences and view them as something sacred. They are!

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Kristen M. Stanton

Hello. Thanks for visiting UniGuide. My name is Kristen and I started UniGuide as a tribute to nature, animals, and spiritual exploration. I hope you enjoy your experience here!