AviList is a global avian checklist created to produce a consensus taxonomy for the birds of the world. It is available online and can be freely downloaded.
Prior to the introduction of AviList in June 2025 there were three widely used and regularly updated global checklists. These separate lists were maintained on behalf of the International Ornithologists' Union, BirdLife International and the Cornell Lab of Ornithology. The lists differed in the number of species recognised and the division of the species into genera and families. At a meeting held in 2018, a group of ornithologists agreed to work together to produce a single consensus taxonomy for the birds of the world. The three former lists have now ceased to make any independent taxonomic updates.
In a discussion at the International Ornithologist's Congress held in Vancouver in 2018, a group of ornithologists agreed to form a committee, the Working Group on Avian Nomenclature (WGAC), to consider consolidating the three independent avian checklists.
The three checklists that have now adopted the AviList taxonomy are:
In addition to the above lists, the Howard and Moore Complete Checklist of the Birds of the World has been influential in bird taxonomy. The fourth edition was published as two volumes in 2013 and 2014 but has not been updated since.
Although the three organizations have agreed to adopt the same taxonomy, there is no agreement to adopt identical English names. With a few exceptions, AviList has adopted the English names previously used by the IOC World Bird List which were based on the rules and principles proposed by Frank Gill and Minturn Wright in their 2006 book '. The AviList spreadsheet also lists the English names used by Clements and by Birdlife.
The first version of the unified checklist was published online on 11 June 2025. The aim is to issue annual updates. In addition to the three organizations mentioned above, the unified list has been adopted by the British Ornithologists' Union.