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Stop Bird Droppings From Killing Your Paint

Most car owners make this harder than it needs to be. Here's the straightforward approach that actually works—no fluff, no upselling.

Bird and bat droppings are basically acid on your clear coat, especially in the Aussie sun. Here is how to clean them off safely without leaving a permanent scar on your bonnet.

B"W
Barry "Bazza" Williams Product Reviewer
| Updated: 2 March 2026
Stop Bird Droppings From Killing Your Paint

Aussie Conditions

Australian conditions are tougher than most—intense UV, red dust, coastal salt, and 40°C summers. European car care advice often doesn't cut it here.
Quick Summary

Look, we've all been there, you park under a nice shady gum tree for ten minutes and come back to find your car looking like a target range. In our heat, that stuff bakes on and eats into your paint faster than you'd reckon. This is a quick guide on how to deal with it before it costs you a fortune in paint correction.

01

The Acid Test

Right, so here is the deal. Bird droppings (and bats are even worse) are highly acidic. When you combine that with a 35-degree day in March, your car's clear coat expands, lets the acid in, and then shrinks back down as it cools, trapping the damage. I once saw a brand new black Commodore get permanent etching in just three hours at the beach. If you don't get it off fast, you're looking at a professional polish or worse. Don't stress though, it's easy to fix if you're quick about it.

Lubrication is King

Never, ever just grab a dry tissue and start scrubbing. Bird muck is full of sand and seeds (basically sandpaper). You need to soak it first. My go-to is a proper quick detailer like Bowden’s Own Strike Back or even just some warm soapy water. Spray it on, let it sit for a minute to soften the blow, then gently lift it off. If it doesn't budge, spray more. Patience saves your paintwork, mate.

The Wet Paper Towel Trick

If you're out and about and don't have your detailing kit, grab a paper towel from the servo, soak it in water, and just lay it over the dropping. Leave it there for two minutes while you fill up. It rehydrates the mess so it wipes away without needing to scrub. I learned this the hard way after scratching the missus' SUV trying to pick a dry one off with my fingernail. Never again.

Watch Out for Bat Droppings

Truth be told, bat poop is the real villain in Australia. It’s significantly more corrosive than bird waste. If you see a large, dark, fruit-filled splat, get it off immediately. Like, stop the car and do it now. I've seen bat droppings eat through ceramic coatings in less than 24 hours during a heatwave. It's nasty stuff.

Sealant is Your Shield

Applying a decent wax or sealant makes a massive difference. It won't stop the 'bombs' from landing, but it buys you time. A good sacrificial layer like Meguiar's Hybrid Ceramic Wax means the acid has to eat through the sealant before it hits your paint. It makes the cleanup five times easier because the poop can't grab onto the surface as tightly.
02

The Emergency 'Bird Bomb' Kit

What You'll Need

0/4
Small spray bottle of Quick Detailer — Keep it in the glovebox or boot.
2-3 clean Microfibre towels — Chuck them in a zip-lock bag so they stay dust-free.
Bottle of water — For when you're stuck in the middle of nowhere.
Nitrile gloves — Trust me, you don't want bat germs on your hands before lunch.

Watch Out

Don't use a kitchen scourer or a stiff brush. I had a customer try to use a green Scotch-Brite pad to get bird lime off his bonnet, he got the poop off, but he also took the paint off with it. Also, avoid using vinegar or harsh household cleaners; they'll strip any wax you have left and can dry out your plastic trim.
03

Common Questions

What if it has already left a blurry mark?
That is called etching. If it's light, you can sometimes fix it with a hand polish like Autoglym Super Resin Polish. If it's deep, it might need a machine buff. If it looks like 'cracked' paint, sorry mate, that's a respray job.
Does the colour of my car matter?
Black and dark blue cars are in the most danger. They get much hotter in the sun (sometimes over 70 degrees!), which speeds up the chemical reaction of the acid. If you drive a dark car, you've gotta be extra vigilant.
Is a ceramic coating worth it for birds?
100%. While not bulletproof, a ceramic coating is much more resistant to chemicals and acids than a standard wax. It's the best insurance policy for your paint in Aussie conditions.
04

Final Word

Anyway, don't let it stress you out too much. Just keep a bottle of detailer in the boot and give it a squirt whenever you see a fresh one. It takes thirty seconds and saves you a massive headache down the road. Catch ya later!

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