Back To Top

Best bat detectors in 2025 — Hear bats and their echolocation

Connect with nature, even after the sun sets, with one of these best bat detectors and listen to the clicking of their echolocation at twilight

A bat flying between two plants.
(Image credit: Getty Images)

Bats are notoriously hard to spot due to their crepuscular and/or nocturnal behavior. While you may be lucky enough to catch the occasional glimpse as they swoop overhead at twilight, a bat detector can enhance this experience tenfold, pushing detection well through the night. If you've never used a bat detector before, we can attest to how remarkable it is to hear bats for the first time.

Bat Biologist Donald Solick from Vesper Bat Echolocation Services suggests general observers might prefer to use 'active' bat detectors, rather than 'passive' ones, explaining that active bat detectors are "typically handheld and have screens so that you can see and hear bat echolocation in real time." With 'passive' detectors deemed more appropriate for surveys and long-term field work over weeks and months at a time.

Latest Videos From
Swipe to scroll horizontally

Product

Type of bat detector

Technology

Battery life

Pettersson M500-384

Active and passive

Ultrasound microphone

Unlimited - USB powered

Elekon Bat Scanner Stereo

Active

Heterodyne

20-25 hours

Elekon Bat Scanner

Active

Heterodyne

20-25 hours

Haynes Bat Detector Construction Kit

Active

Ultrasonic, heterodyne

Unspecified

Batbox Baton

Active

Frequency division

30 hours

A picture of our bat expert, Donald Solick.
Donald Solick

Donald Solick has been involved with bat research for nearly 30 years and has specialized in acoustic monitoring of bats for 18 years. He owns Vesper Bat Echolocation Specialists, which provides analysis of bat acoustic data and training on how to identify bats by their echolocation calls. Donald is also writing two books on the subject, and he works for the Electric Power Research Institute where he conducts research to minimize the impacts to bats from wind energy turbines. When he isn't thinking about bats, Donald is raising his non-binary teenager, scuba-diving, traveling, and dancing Cuban salsa.

Kat Bayly
Contributing expert

Kat has a Master's degree in Psychology from the University of Glasgow, with her dissertation focusing on the impact of mental health and deprivation on connection with urban nature. She also has over 10 years of yoga teaching experience with further training in supporting injured students. She is qualified to teach Yin Yoga, Hormone Yoga Therapy and more traditional forms of Hatha yoga. Published in T3, Fit and Well, Tech Radar and Ekhart Yoga to name a few, she also has a certificate as a Yoga Therapy Practitioner. Kat previously worked with those impacted by severe mental illness.