Snake Identifier by Picture · Australia

Snake Identifier by Picture — Australia's Most Dangerous Species

Identify Australian snakes from a picture in seconds. Know if it's an eastern brown, tiger, or taipan before you move. Free on iOS and Android.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play
  • Identify any snake by picture in seconds
  • Instantly see if the species may be venomous
  • Safety guidance built in for safer outdoor decisions

Educational aid only. Not medical advice. In emergencies, contact wildlife professionals or local emergency services.

SerpentID identification result showing species name with venomous badge
SerpentID iOS camera screen for identifying a snake by picture
SerpentID Android collection screen with venomous and non-venomous snakes

Australia

Common venomous snakes in your region

Australia is home to many of the world's most venomous snakes. SerpentID is trained on the species you're most likely to encounter from Queensland to Tasmania — including the country's deadliest.

SerpentID species reference image: Eastern Brown Snake

Eastern Brown Snake

Second most venomous land snake in the world. Found across eastern Australia and responsible for most snakebite deaths in Australia.

SerpentID species reference image: Tiger Snake

Tiger Snake

Highly venomous, banded snake found in southern Australia and Tasmania. Aggressive when cornered.

SerpentID species reference image: Inland Taipan

Inland Taipan

The most venomous land snake on Earth, found in central east Australia. Rarely encountered but extremely dangerous.

SerpentID species reference image: Coastal Taipan

Coastal Taipan

Large, fast, and highly venomous. Found in coastal regions of northern and eastern Australia.

SerpentID species reference image: Red-bellied Black Snake

Red-bellied Black Snake

Venomous but less aggressive than browns. Recognisable by its glossy black back and red-orange belly.

SerpentID species reference image: Death Adder

Death Adder

Short, stocky ambush predator. Often well-camouflaged in leaf litter. Highly venomous.

How It Works

Take a picture, identify the species, and act safely

01

Snap or Upload a Picture

Capture a clear snake picture in the field or upload from your gallery for instant analysis.

02

Review Likely Matches

SerpentID returns confidence-based species options with visual traits so you can interpret the result with context.

03

Follow Safety Guidance

Use the in-app guidance to reduce risk, keep distance, and decide when to contact a local professional.

Safety First

Venomous vs Non-Venomous Snake Identification With Context

SerpentID is designed to support safer behavior, not risky interaction. You get confidence signals, clear reminders, and practical context before taking the next step.

  • Confidence-based output with key trait references
  • Practical next-step guidance for uncertain situations
  • Clear escalation reminders when professional help is needed

Snake Guide

Go Beyond a One-Time Scan With Practical Species Learning

Keep using SerpentID to build a stronger understanding of species commonly seen in trails, yards, and work sites.

Species Profiles

Explore snake species pages with practical context so you can better understand markings, habitats, and behavior patterns.

Field-Ready Results

Use the app while hiking, camping, or working outdoors to review likely matches and make safer distance decisions.

Keyword-Focused Learning

Built around real questions like identify snake by picture and is this snake venomous, while keeping guidance easy to follow.

Platforms

Download SerpentID on the App Store or Google Play

Same snake identifier by picture experience on iOS and Android, with safety-first guidance built in.

Download on the App StoreGet it on Google Play

Apple App Store

Install SerpentID for iPhone and identify snakes from any picture.

Google Play

Get SerpentID on Android to identify snakes by picture and review safety recommendations.

Field Notes

Read practical articles for safer snake encounters

Browse short practical guides about species markers, safer photo capture, and what to do when confidence is high, low, or unresolved.

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FAQ

Answers to Common Snake Identifier Questions

Can I identify a snake from a picture?

Yes. Open SerpentID, take or upload a picture of the snake, and the app returns the most likely species in seconds. It is free to download on iOS and Android and works with both new photos and ones already in your gallery.

Is there a free snake identifier app?

Yes. SerpentID is a free snake identifier app available on the App Store and Google Play. You can identify snakes by picture and review species safety information without paying upfront.

How can I tell if a snake is venomous?

Visual cues such as head shape, pupil shape, color pattern, tail markings, and body proportions can hint at venomous species, but no single trait is reliable across regions. SerpentID does this comparison automatically and flags potentially venomous results so you can keep a safe distance.

What should I do if I'm bitten by a snake?

Move away from the snake, stay as calm and still as possible, remove tight clothing or jewelry near the bite, and call your local emergency number immediately. Do not cut the wound, apply ice, or attempt to suck out venom. SerpentID is an educational aid and is not a substitute for emergency medical care.

How accurate is the snake identifier?

SerpentID returns confidence-based top matches rather than a single guess, because real-world photos vary in angle, lighting, and visible markings. Treat low-confidence results conservatively, keep a safe distance from any unknown snake, and contact local wildlife professionals when in doubt.

Does SerpentID work with photos already in my gallery?

Yes. You can upload an existing picture or take a new one in the moment, which is useful when you want to review a sighting without moving closer to the snake.

What makes a good snake picture for identification?

A clear, well-lit picture that shows the body pattern, head, and as much of the snake as possible — taken from a safe distance — usually gives the best result. Avoid blurry zooms or risky close-ups.

SerpentID is an educational aid and does not replace professional wildlife handling, emergency response, or medical evaluation.