Eastern Kingsnake
🔤 Taxonomy
Lampropeltis getula is the eastern kingsnake; this guide treats it separately from California kingsnakes and other Lampropeltis forms.
Common names used in the hobby:
- Eastern kingsnake
- Common kingsnake
The most useful husbandry facts come from its natural history: eastern and southeastern North American forests, wetlands, field edges, pine woods, coastal plain habitat, and disturbed cover; it is a generalist predator with a notable habit of eating other snakes, lizards, rodents, eggs, and occasionally venomous snakes. Taxonomy should also be checked against sales labels because common names, former subspecies names, and locality names are often used loosely in the trade. When a seller cannot give a scientific name, origin history, and feeding record, assume the care plan needs extra verification before purchase.
📌 Description
A hardy North American kingsnake for keepers who can provide secure housing, moderate heat, and careful solitary management.
Adults typically reach 90-150 cm and may live 15-25 years with stable long-term care.
Eastern kingsnake should be assessed by body shape, behavior, and long-term maintenance needs, not only by adult length. A healthy animal should have firm muscle, a smooth spine line without sharp ridges, clear eyes after shed, clean nostrils, a closed mouth, and normal tongue-flicking when disturbed. New animals should be weighed at arrival, after the first accepted meals, and then monthly until a stable pattern is clear. Sudden weight change, repeated soaking, noisy breathing, refusal after previously steady feeding, or restless glass pushing are not personality traits; they are reasons to review temperature, security, hydration, parasites, and stress.
🌍 Distribution
eastern and southeastern North America in pine woods, wetlands edges, fields, farms, and disturbed habitats.
Captive care should emphasize secure solitary housing, moderate temperatures, dry-to-moderate humidity, and enough cover for an active forager that may also eat other snakes.
The useful range lesson is flexibility inside secure limits: warm and cool retreats, clutter, a humidity option, clean water, and no shared housing. A kingsnake that feels secure can use space well; a bare enclosure mainly increases pacing, escape attempts, and feeding mistakes.

⚖️ Legal status
Lampropeltis getula is not listed in CITES, and no species-specific EU wildlife-trade annex listing is used here. Local collection, native-wildlife, and invasive-species rules can still apply. Keep proof of captive origin, breeder details, photographs, and legal-check dates, especially where native kingsnakes are regulated. The Bern Convention is not relevant here because the species is not native to Europe.
🤌 Husbandry
Plan the adult enclosure around at least 120 x 60 x 60 cm of usable floor space. Kingsnakes need secure doors, tight hides, cover, clean water, and solitary housing from hatchling to adult.
Plan the setup by life stage. Hatchlings and nervous new arrivals can be kept in a simpler, tightly secured enclosure for monitoring, but they still need a real warm side, cool side, hides, water, and visual cover. Upgrade before movement becomes restricted; waiting until rubbing, pacing, food strikes at the glass, or chronic hiding appears means the environment is already causing stress.
💡 Lighting
Use bright visible light and UVB according to Ferguson Zone 1, with a 10-12 hour photoperiod and enough shade for the animal to move out of exposure.
🌡 Heating and temperature
- ambient air: 24-28°C
- basking surface: 30-32°C
- cool retreat: 22-24°C
- night: 20-23°C
Use thermostats and independent thermometers. A good setup lets the snake choose between warm and cool areas instead of trapping it at one average temperature.
💧 Humidity and water
Humidity target is 40-60%, with temporary shed support around 60-70%. Keep water clean, avoid persistently wet substrate unless the species is semi-aquatic, and correct retained shed by fixing environment rather than repeated forced soaking.
Humidity should be useful, not constant wetness. Species from dry or seasonal habitats still need clean water and a shed option, while humid-forest species still need fresh air and dry resting surfaces. For this profile, moisture management should match eastern and southeastern North American forests, wetlands, field edges, pine woods, coastal plain habitat, and disturbed cover without creating stagnant air. Use a humid hide, deeper substrate pocket, live or artificial foliage, larger water surface, or brief misting as tools, then let the rest of the system breathe. Retained shed usually means the microclimate or hydration routine needs correction; repeated forced soaking should not become the main husbandry plan.
🌿 Enclosure and decoration
Use at least two snug hides, deep enough substrate for light burrowing, cork bark, branches, leaf litter, and visual barriers. Every lid, sliding door, cable hole, and vent must be checked from the perspective of a persistent escape animal.
Because kingsnakes may eat other snakes, cohabitation is not appropriate. Feeding and cleaning should be organized so the snake does not associate every door opening with food.
🥗 Feeding
Base feeding on appropriately sized rodents, usually every 7-14 days. Feed for steady body condition rather than maximum appetite, remove uneaten food, and adjust frequency for age, season, reproductive condition, and activity.
Feeding should follow natural ecology but stay practical and hygienic. In nature, it is a generalist predator with a notable habit of eating other snakes, lizards, rodents, eggs, and occasionally venomous snakes. In captivity the core plan is frozen-thawed rodents sized conservatively, because heavy-bodied kingsnakes can become obese if fed every time they show interest. Keep a log of prey type, prey mass, date, shed stage, defecation, body weight, and refusal. That record prevents overreacting to one missed meal and exposes slow obesity before it becomes normal. Avoid live prey as routine care because bites and stress are preventable. If a reliable feeder suddenly refuses, review temperature, privacy, seasonal timing, recent handling, prey size, and illness signs before trying repeated meals.
🥚 Breeding notes
Reproduction is oviparous. Typical clutches are usually 5-24 eggs. Breeding is moderate and should wait until legal status, unrelated stock, body condition, and offspring placement are all clear.
🧍 Handling and safety
Handling should reflect the species and the individual: non-venomous, but cannibalism, musking, escape pressure, and feeding response require deliberate routines. Keep sessions short, support the body, work close to a surface, and stop before the snake escalates. During shed, quarantine, feeding recovery, or repeated hiding attempts, skip handling and use shift boxes or tools where appropriate.
🩺 Common problems
Quarantine new animals, record weight, and watch for appetite loss, abnormal posture, retained shed, mouth inflammation, mites, respiratory signs, swelling, diarrhea, and repeated escape attempts. Husbandry correction is often as important as medication.
Common mistakes to avoid include buying before the adult setup is planned, relying on one thermometer, using loose lids, feeding too often, handling during acclimation, and keeping the enclosure too open. Most snakes settle better when the keeper changes one variable at a time and gives the animal time to respond.
✅ Conclusion
Eastern Kingsnake care is realistic only when adult enclosure size, legal status, feeding plan, and escape prevention are in place before acquisition.
📚 Sources and further reading
- ReptiFiles, Kingsnake Care Sheet: https://reptifiles.com/kingsnake-care-sheet/
- The Reptile Database, Lampropeltis getula: https://reptile-database.reptarium.cz/Lampropeltis/getula
- Animal Diversity Web, Lampropeltis getula: https://animaldiversity.org/accounts/Lampropeltis_getula/
- GBIF Backbone Taxonomy, Lampropeltis getula: https://www.gbif.org/species/9799308
- CITES Appendices: https://cites.org/eng/app/appendices.php
- European Commission wildlife trade overview: https://environment.ec.europa.eu/topics/nature-and-biodiversity/wildlife-trade_en
- Council of Europe, Bern Convention appendices: https://www.coe.int/en/web/bern-convention/appendices