Blueberries and bilberries are close cousins, but bilberries are usually a different wild species with darker flesh and a tarter bite.
Blueberries and bilberries sit close on the same family tree, so the mix-up is easy. Both are small blue fruits in the Vaccinium genus. Both land in jam jars, cakes, and breakfast bowls. From a distance, they can look like the same berry with two different names.
They are not. If you are sorting fruit by plant name, taste, or recipe fit, bilberries and blueberries are separate berries. A bilberry is usually a wild species linked with Europe and cooler northern ground. A blueberry sold in shops is usually a cultivated bush fruit, often larger, firmer, and sweeter.
That distinction matters more than it may seem. It helps when you are buying plants, reading a seed catalog, swapping berries in baking, or trying to work out whether a label is precise or just casual marketing.
Are Blueberries And Bilberries The Same In Botany?
No. They belong to the same genus, but they are usually not the same species. Bilberry is commonly tied to Vaccinium myrtillus. Many cultivated blueberries are tied to highbush blueberry, Vaccinium corymbosum, plus other related blueberry types sold for home gardens and commercial fruit.
That is the clean botanical answer. The messy part comes from common names. In everyday speech, people often stretch the word “blueberry” to cover several small blue Vaccinium fruits. That is how a bilberry can get called a blueberry in one place and a bilberry in another, even when the plants are not the same.
Where The Mix-Up Starts
Common names travel faster than scientific names. Bilberry can also show up as whortleberry, blaeberry, or European blueberry. Once those local names enter food labels, recipes, or travel writing, the line gets blurry.
Shops add to the confusion. Supermarket blueberries are bred for size, firmness, and shelf life. Wild bilberries are softer and harder to ship, so most people never see fresh bilberries beside fresh blueberries in the same produce case. That makes comparison harder, and the names start drifting.
Blueberry And Bilberry Differences You Can Spot Fast
If you put both berries on a plate, the gap gets easier to see. They are related, yet they do not behave the same once you touch, taste, or cook them.
- Bilberries are often smaller and softer.
- Blueberries sold in shops are usually rounder and more even in size.
- Bilberries tend to taste sharper and more wine-like.
- Blueberries are often sweeter and milder.
- Bilberries can stain fingers, batter, and napkins more quickly.
- Blueberries usually hold their shape better in a bowl, muffin, or lunch box.
The plants differ, too. Bilberry usually grows on a low, spreading shrub in wild ground. Highbush blueberry grows on a taller bush that suits garden rows and commercial picking. So the fruit is not just a flavor variation. It comes from a different growth habit and a different growing pattern.
How That Shows Up At The Table
Blueberries are the easy, tidy berry. They are mild enough for pancakes, cereal, and snacking by the handful. Bilberries are less polite. They bring a darker color, a deeper berry note, and more punch in sauces, jams, and rustic bakes.
If a recipe wants a bright purple streak through the crumb or a jam with a richer woodland note, bilberries usually get you there faster. If you want neat berries that stay plump and pleasant in a lunchbox muffin, blueberries tend to be the safer pick.
| Feature | Blueberry | Bilberry |
|---|---|---|
| Usual identity | Cultivated blueberry, often highbush types | Usually wild bilberry |
| Common species name | Vaccinium corymbosum is a common one | Vaccinium myrtillus |
| Plant habit | Taller bush | Low, spreading shrub |
| Fruit size | Often larger and more uniform | Often smaller and less uniform |
| Texture | Firmer | Softer |
| Taste | Mild, sweet, clean | Sharper, darker, fuller |
| Kitchen behavior | Holds shape well | Bleeds color more readily |
| Fresh-market fit | Easy to pack and ship | Less common in regular produce aisles |
| Where many people meet it | Supermarkets and garden centers | Wild picking, specialty shops, frozen packs |
Why The Names Get Mixed Up
Part of the answer is that both berries live under the same genus. Kew lists bilberry as Vaccinium myrtillus, which pins the name to a specific species. That helps clear the fog when a casual label does not.
Plant habit helps, too. The RHS bilberry entry describes bilberry as a low, suckering shrub, with a plant range from Europe to Asia. By contrast, the RHS blueberry entry for Vaccinium corymbosum describes a bushy shrub that can reach about 1.5 metres. So even before you pick the fruit, the plants tell two different stories.
Another reason for the mix-up is food language. Recipe writers often reach for the more familiar word. “Blueberry” feels familiar in English, while “bilberry” feels regional. That can flatten a real botanical gap into what sounds like a simple spelling choice.
What The Difference Means In The Kitchen
If you are cooking, the berry name changes the result more than the ingredient list may suggest. Blueberries bring a mellow sweetness and a firmer bite. Bilberries bring more color and a denser berry taste. That shift changes batter, jam, compote, and pie filling.
In muffins, blueberries usually stay plumper and more separate. Bilberries soften faster and tint the crumb. In jam, bilberries can give you a darker set with a stronger berry note. In pancakes, blueberries stay more distinct, while bilberries tend to burst sooner.
That does not mean one is better. It means the finish line is different. If you want neat pockets of fruit, pick blueberries. If you want deeper color and a wilder berry taste, bilberries are often the one you hoped you bought.
| Recipe Use | Blueberries | Bilberries |
|---|---|---|
| Muffins | Neater pockets of fruit | More color through the crumb |
| Pancakes | Round berries that stay distinct longer | Softer berries that burst sooner |
| Jam | Milder, lighter berry note | Darker, fuller berry flavor |
| Pie Filling | More structure | Richer color and a looser feel |
| Fresh Snacking | Easy, sweet, tidy | Less common, softer, more tart |
Which Berry To Buy, Pick, Or Plant
Your choice comes down to what you want from the fruit.
- If you want a reliable snack berry, blueberry is usually the easier buy.
- If you want richer color in jam or cake, bilberry often gives more drama in the bowl.
- If you are buying a plant for a home garden, check the Latin name on the label, not just the common name.
- If you are reading a recipe from a different country, pause on the berry name before you shop.
That last point saves a lot of disappointment. A recipe written around bilberries may still work with blueberries, but the taste, color, and feel can land in a different place. If the writer wanted a dark, woodsy berry note, a carton of sweet cultivated blueberries may not quite hit it.
The Plain Answer
Blueberries and bilberries are relatives, not twins. They share a genus, yet they part ways in species, plant form, taste, texture, and kitchen behavior. So when someone asks whether they are the same, the clean reply is no. Close cousins, yes. The same berry, no.
References & Sources
- Kew Science.“Vaccinium myrtillus.”Identifies bilberry by its accepted scientific name and helps separate it from cultivated blueberry species.
- Royal Horticultural Society.“Vaccinium myrtillus | common bilberry.”Shows bilberry’s low, suckering growth habit and its plant range from Europe to Asia.
- Royal Horticultural Society.“Vaccinium corymbosum (F) | blueberry.”Shows highbush blueberry as a taller, bushy shrub and helps mark the difference from bilberry.
Mo Maruf
I created WellFizz to bridge the gap between vague wellness advice and actionable solutions. My mission is simple: to decode the research and give you practical tools you can actually use.
Beyond the data, I am a passionate traveler. I believe that stepping away from the screen to explore new environments is essential for mental clarity and physical vitality.