This species has a wide breeding range from Europe and northwestern Africa to Central Asia and the northern parts of the Middle East. It breeds in almost every country of Europe but is absent from mountainous regions and
subarctic Scandinavia. It is rare but increasing in
Great Britain where it has spread as far as eastern Scotland. In the Middle East there are populations in
Turkey,
Iraq, and
Iran, while in Central Asia the range extends eastwards as far as north-west
China,
Mongolia, and the
Lake Baikal region of
Siberia. Most populations of the western marsh harrier are migratory or dispersive. Some birds winter in milder regions of southern and western Europe, while others migrate to the
Sahel,
Nile basin and
Great Lakes region in
Africa, or to
Arabia, the
Indian subcontinent, and
Myanmar. The all-year resident
subspecies harterti inhabits
Morocco,
Algeria, and
Tunisia.
Vagrants have reached
Iceland, the
Azores,
Malaysia, and
Sumatra. The first documented (but unconfirmed) record for the Americas was one bird reportedly photographed on 4 December 1994 at
Chincoteague National Wildlife Refuge in
Accomack County, Virginia. Subsequently, there were confirmed records from
Guadeloupe (winter of 2002/2003), from
Laguna Cartagena National Wildlife Refuge in
Puerto Rico (early 2004 and January/February 2006) and in
Bermuda (December 2015). Like the other marsh harriers, it is strongly associated with
wetland areas, especially those rich in
common reed (
Phragmites australis). It can also be met with in a variety of other open habitats, such as
farmland and
grassland, particularly where these border marshland. It is a
territorial bird in the breeding season, and even in winter it seems less social than other harriers, which often gather in large flocks. But this is probably simply due to
habitat preferences, as the marsh harriers are completely
allopatric while several of
C. aeruginosus grassland and
steppe relatives winter in the same regions and assemble at food sources such as
locust outbreaks. Still, in
Keoladeo National Park of
Rajasthan (
India) around 100 Eurasian marsh harriers are observed to roost together each November/December; they assemble in tall grassland dominated by
Desmostachya bipinnata and
vetiver (
Chrysopogon zizanioides), but where this is too disturbed by human activity they will use floating carpets of
common water hyacinth (
Eichhornia crassipes) instead – the choice of such roost sites may be to give early warning of predators, which will conspicuously rustle through the plants if they try to sneak upon the resting birds ==Behaviour and ecology==