When people ask about “types of bearded dragons,” they usually mean one of two things: the different biological species within the genus Pogona, or the different colour and pattern morphs that breeders have developed in captivity. These are entirely different things, and mixing them up leads to a lot of confusion.
This article covers species and subspecies — the biological taxonomy of Pogona. For morph types (hypo, leatherback, zero, witblit, and so on), see the bearded dragon morphs guide.
Quick Answer: How Many Types of Bearded Dragons Are There?
There are 6 recognised Pogona species, with Pogona minor comprising 3 subspecies — making 9 commonly referenced types, plus the captive-bred Vittikins hybrid. Nearly all pet bearded dragons are Pogona vitticeps (central bearded dragon). Pogona henrylawsoni (Lawson’s dragon) is the second most commonly kept. All remaining species are rarely or never available in captivity.
The Pogona Genus — A Taxonomy Overview
Bearded dragons belong to the genus Pogona within the family Agamidae. All Pogona species are native to Australia, occupying a range of habitats from semi-arid scrubland to coastal woodland. They share a characteristic set of features: broad triangular heads, flattened bodies, and rows of spiny scales along their flanks and throat, forming the “beard” that gives the genus its common name.
The currently recognised taxonomy:
| # | Species | Common Name | Subspecies? |
|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | Pogona vitticeps | Central / Inland bearded dragon | No |
| 2 | Pogona barbata | Eastern bearded dragon | No |
| 3 | Pogona henrylawsoni | Lawson’s / Rankin’s dragon | No |
| 4 | Pogona microlepidota | Kimberley / Drysdale River bearded dragon | No |
| 5 | Pogona minor minor | Dwarf bearded dragon | Yes (of P. minor) |
| 6 | Pogona minor minima | Western / Abrolhos dwarf bearded dragon | Yes (of P. minor) |
| 7 | Pogona minor mitchelli | Mitchell’s bearded dragon | Yes (of P. minor) |
| 8 | Pogona nullarbor | Nullarbor / Banded bearded dragon | No |
| + | Pogona vittikins | Vittikins dragon | Not a wild species — captive hybrid |
1. Pogona vitticeps — The Central Bearded Dragon ★★★★★
Pogona vitticeps is the bearded dragon. When you see a bearded dragon in a pet store, at a reptile expo, in a care guide, or in virtually any online context, this is almost certainly the species being discussed. Every care resource, husbandry standard, and captive breeding operation in the global hobby is built around this species.
Native range: The semi-arid inland regions of eastern and central Australia — primarily New South Wales, Queensland, South Australia, and the Northern Territory.
Size: Adult length up to 24 inches / 60cm (including tail); weight 300–600g at full adult size.
Distinguishing features:
– Broad, wide triangular head — one of the most visually obvious differences from P. barbata
– Back-of-head scales point straight backward or slightly backward (not arcing)
– Prominent single-to-double row of lateral spines running from shoulder to tail
– Tail scales relatively smooth and uniform (no raised rings)
– Beard when fully flared: rounded (not squared or bi-lobed)
– Mouth colour: pink or yellow depending on locality — not a reliable species indicator
Temperament: The most docile and handler-tolerant Pogona species. P. vitticeps tolerates regular handling well and adapts readily to captivity with appropriate care.
Pet suitability: ★★★★★ — The species that all care guides address; the most thoroughly understood in captivity. First-time owners should always start here.
2. Pogona barbata — The Eastern Bearded Dragon ★★★☆☆
Pogona barbata is the second-largest Pogona species and the one most often confused with P. vitticeps. They overlap in range and are superficially similar, but there are reliable visual differences that allow confident identification.
Native range: Coastal eastern and southeastern Australia — from Queensland through New South Wales, Victoria, and into South Australia.
Size: Up to ~24 inches / 60cm — similar to P. vitticeps.
Distinguishing features (compared to vitticeps):
– Narrower head — the cross-section of the skull at the level of the jaw joint is noticeably more narrow
– Back-of-head scales arc backward and curve downward to join the beard (not straight)
– Lateral spines: multiple rows but shorter and less defined than vitticeps
– Rings of raised, razor-sharp scales on the tail — distinctive and reliably diagnostic
– Beard when flared: squared or bi-lobed appearance (not the rounded beard of vitticeps)
– Mouth: always yellow internally (vitticeps can be pink or yellow)
Temperament: Generally more defensive and territorial than P. vitticeps. Better suited to experienced keepers.
Pet suitability: ★★★☆☆ — Less commonly available in captivity; less extensively documented for husbandry than vitticeps. Not ideal as a first species.
3. Pogona henrylawsoni — Lawson’s / Rankin’s Dragon ★★★★☆
Lawson’s dragon is the second-most popular Pogona species in the pet trade — noticeably smaller, slightly faster, and with a proportionally stubbier head than P. vitticeps.
Native range: The rocky, arid lowlands of Queensland, particularly the black-soil plains and Channel Country.
Size: Maximum ~12 inches / 30cm — significantly smaller than P. vitticeps.
Distinguishing features:
– Noticeably smaller overall — roughly half the length of a full-sized vitticeps
– Shorter, blockier head; less prominent beard
– Less pronounced lateral spines than vitticeps
– Generally darker natural colouration
Temperament: Active and curious; slightly more energetic than vitticeps. Generally docile but can be quicker to stress.
Husbandry note: Can be housed in a smaller enclosure than vitticeps (minimum 3’ x 1.5’ is commonly cited), but still requires full UVB exposure, proper thermal gradient, and calcium supplementation.
Common naming confusion: Sometimes called “dwarf bearded dragon” in the hobby — do not confuse with Pogona minor minor, which is a different and much rarer species.
Pet suitability: ★★★★☆ — Good choice for experienced beginners wanting a smaller species; care is well-documented.
4. Pogona nullarbor — The Nullarbor Bearded Dragon ★★☆☆☆
Named for its habitat — the Nullarbor Plain, the vast, flat semi-arid expanse straddling South Australia and Western Australia.
Native range: The Nullarbor Plain.
Size: Up to ~14 inches / 35cm.
Distinguishing features:
– The most distinctive of all Pogona species visually: broad, pale horizontal bands crossing the back and tail
– These bands are consistent and reliable — the only Pogona species with this pattern
– Shorter limbs and flatter body profile relative to overall length
Pet suitability: ★★☆☆☆ — Rarely available in captivity outside Australia; limited husbandry documentation.
5. Pogona minor Group — Three Subspecies
The Pogona minor group comprises three recognised subspecies, all smaller than P. vitticeps and all rarely available as pets.
Pogona minor minor — Dwarf Bearded Dragon ★★☆☆☆
Native range: Rocky areas and woodlands of Western Australia (inland regions).
Size: 14–18 inches / 35–45cm.
Notes: Moderate-sized by Pogona standards; intermediate between vitticeps and henrylawsoni in many characteristics. Rarely available in captivity.
Pet suitability: ★★☆☆☆
Pogona minor minima — Abrolhos Dwarf Bearded Dragon ★☆☆☆☆
Native range: The Abrolhos Islands off the coast of Western Australia, plus a small adjacent coastal mainland area. One of the most geographically restricted Pogona ranges.
Size: Up to ~12 inches / 30cm.
Notes: Extremely rare in captivity. The very limited natural range makes wild population vulnerability a conservation concern.
Pet suitability: ★☆☆☆☆ — Essentially unavailable commercially.
Pogona minor mitchelli — Mitchell’s Bearded Dragon ★☆☆☆☆
Native range: Semi-tropical woodlands and deserts of northwestern Australia.
Size: Up to ~18 inches / 45cm.
Notes: Rare in captivity; habitat loss from land development in its range area. Named after the herpetologist Francis John Mitchell.
Pet suitability: ★☆☆☆☆
6. Pogona microlepidota — The Kimberley Bearded Dragon ★☆☆☆☆
The smallest Pogona species, and one of the least studied.
Native range: An extremely limited area — the Drysdale River region of the Kimberley, northwestern Australia.
Size: Maximum ~6 inches / 15cm — significantly smaller than all other species.
Distinguishing features: Small-scaled relative to body size (microlepidota = “small-scaled”); very limited beard relative to body
Notes: Essentially never seen in the pet trade; almost no captive husbandry data exists.
Pet suitability: ★☆☆☆☆
7. Pogona vittikins — The Captive Hybrid
Pogona vittikins is not a wild species. It is a captive-bred hybrid between Pogona vitticeps and Pogona henrylawsoni, developed within the hobby.
Size: Typically around 12 inches / 30cm — generally smaller than vitticeps but variable.
Temperament: Generally considered agreeable — inheriting some docility from vitticeps and compactness from henrylawsoni.
Availability: Occasionally available from specialist breeders; not commonly encountered.
What buyers should know: Vittikins are sometimes sold without clear disclosure of their hybrid status. If you’re buying a Vittikins, confirm the parentage with the breeder.
Species vs Morphs: The Essential Distinction
“Types of bearded dragons” often leads people into morph territory, and it’s worth being explicit here: morphs are not species.
A morph is a selectively bred colour or pattern variant within a species. The vast majority of bearded dragon morphs — Hypo, Leatherback, Zero, Witblit, Paradox, Dunner, Citrus, Silkback, and dozens more — are all Pogona vitticeps. The genetics are different, but the species is the same.
Species are biologically distinct populations with separate evolutionary histories, ranges, and physical characteristics.
If you’re researching colour morphs, their genetics, and what a “zero morph” actually means, see the full bearded dragon morphs guide.
Full Species Comparison Table
| Species | Common Name | Max Length | Range | Pet Trade Availability | Key ID Feature |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| P. vitticeps | Central bearded dragon | 24” / 60cm | Central/eastern Australia | ★★★★★ Very common | Broad head; round beard; prominent single-double lateral spines |
| P. barbata | Eastern bearded dragon | 24” / 60cm | Coastal eastern Australia | ★★★☆☆ Uncommon | Narrow head; bi-lobed beard; ringed tail scales; always yellow mouth |
| P. henrylawsoni | Lawson’s / Rankin’s dragon | 12” / 30cm | Queensland arid lowlands | ★★★★☆ Common | Compact size; stubby head; less prominent beard |
| P. nullarbor | Nullarbor bearded dragon | 14” / 35cm | Nullarbor Plain | ★★☆☆☆ Rare | Horizontal dark banding across back and tail |
| P. minor minor | Dwarf bearded dragon | 14–18” / 35–45cm | Western Australia inland | ★★☆☆☆ Rare | Intermediate size; Western range |
| P. minor minima | Abrolhos dwarf bearded dragon | 12” / 30cm | Abrolhos Islands, W. Australia | ★☆☆☆☆ Very rare | Island-restricted range; very small |
| P. minor mitchelli | Mitchell’s bearded dragon | 18” / 45cm | NW Australia | ★☆☆☆☆ Rare | Northwest range; semi-tropical habitat |
| P. microlepidota | Kimberley bearded dragon | 6” / 15cm | Kimberley, NW Australia | ★☆☆☆☆ Essentially unavailable | Smallest species; micro-scaled |
| P. vittikins | Vittikins dragon | ~12” / 30cm | Captive-bred hybrid only | ★★★☆☆ Specialist breeders | Hybrid P. vitticeps × P. henrylawsoni |
Which Bearded Dragon Should You Get?
For the vast majority of people, the answer is Pogona vitticeps. This is the species with:
– The most comprehensive care documentation
– The widest availability of captive-bred individuals
– The most predictable temperament across individuals
– The widest range of selectively bred morphs if colour variety is desired
If you want a smaller species with similar temperament and established care knowledge, Pogona henrylawsoni is the next best choice.
All other species are either unavailable, underdocumented for captive care, or not suitable for most keepers.
For detailed care guidance — enclosure, temperature, lighting, feeding — the full bearded dragon care guide covers the standard practices for Pogona vitticeps.
Frequently Asked Questions
Are “types of bearded dragons” the same as morphs?
No — species and morphs are different concepts. This guide covers the nine Pogona species (distinct wild species with different distributions and physical characteristics). Morphs refer to selectively bred colour and pattern variations within a single species — almost exclusively Pogona vitticeps. Morphs like leatherback, hypo, and translucent are not separate species; they are genetic variants within the common bearded dragon. The full morph breakdown is covered in the bearded dragon morphs guide.
Does this guide cover rankins dragons as a type of bearded dragon?
Yes — Pogona henrylawsoni, commonly called the rankins dragon or Lawson’s dragon, is one of the nine Pogona species covered here. It’s the most commonly kept species after P. vitticeps and is sometimes marketed separately. This guide compares rankins dragons against the common bearded dragon on size, temperament, and care requirements.
Do all nine Pogona species have the same care requirements as the common bearded dragon?
No. While all Pogona species share general requirements (UVB, warm basking zone, insectivore-herbivore diet), specific parameters — enclosure size, optimal temperature ranges, humidity tolerance — vary between species. The care guides across this pillar are calibrated for Pogona vitticeps specifically. If you keep a different Pogona species, adjust parameters with species-specific sources rather than applying vitticeps standards directly.
Are the non-vitticeps Pogona species legally available as pets in all countries?
Availability and legality vary by country, state, and local regulation. Pogona vitticeps is widely captive-bred internationally. Some other Pogona species have limited captive-bred populations and may be subject to wildlife export/import restrictions depending on jurisdiction. Always verify legal availability in your location before acquiring any reptile. This guide focuses on species identification and care context, not import regulations.
Is this guide relevant for identifying a bearded dragon’s species from a photo?
Partially. This guide provides the distinguishing physical characteristics for each Pogona species — scale patterns, size at maturity, geographical origin — which can support visual identification. However, accurate species identification (especially for distinguishing subspecies or captive hybrids) may require expert consultation. The morphs guide addresses identifying P. vitticeps colour variants specifically.