The aim of this study was to examine the effects of livestock grazing on Afromontane grassland bird assemblages in the Bale Mountains, Ethiopia. Birds were counted along 28 (14 in ungrazed site and 14 in grazed site) 1 2014) and dry season (November 2014). In addition, height and cover of shrubs, grasses and herbs were recorded within 10m ×10m quadrats established along each transect at a distance of 250m. These data were used to abundances of overall assemblages and guilds (habitat, feeding and/or conservation priority guilds) between the ungrazed site and grazed site, and to examine how these patterns are related to grazing-induced veg showed relatively greater species evenness compared to the grazed site, both observed and rarefied species richness estimators showed non assemblage richness between the two sites. Bird assemblage abundance was significantly greater in the grazed site than the ungrazed site, especially during wet season and when seasons were pooled. At guild level however, species richness and/or abundances of grassland habitat specialist, insectivore dietary, and high conservation priority guilds were significantly greater in the ungrazed site compared to the grazed site. Bird assemblages significantly differed between sites and showed significant positive relationships with shrub and grass height. These findings suggest that the effect of grazing on birds of the area is changing assemblage composition rather than resulting into declined assemblage species richness. Thus allowing livestock grazing in the ungrazed site in the future will lead to los of several grassland specialist and high conservation priority species.