The Hooded Grosbeak (Coccothraustes abeillei) is endemic to evergreen montane forests from northern Mexico to northern Central America (Carter 2014). Like its two congeners the Hawfinch (C. coccothraustes) of Europe, Asia, and north Africa, and the Evening Grosbeak (C. vespertinus) of North America—the Hooded Grosbeak is generally quiet and inconspicuous when nesting (Komar 2002). Nearly 75 years passed between the formal naming of the Evening Grosbeak and the first descriptions of its nesting habits (Speirs 1968). Clement (2010) and Carter (2014) summarized what very little has been published concerning nesting of the Hooded Grosbeak, primarily on the basis of the work of Thurber et al. (1987; phenology), Howell and Webb (1995; brief description of nest site), and Komar (2002; phenology, nest description, and behavior). Carter (2014) noted further that “data on clutch size, egg color, and incubation have not been recorded.” Additional references to the timing and locations for “breeding” and juveniles collected were listed by Miller et al. (1957). We prepared this note in response to this paucity of information.