We examined parental condition, brood sex composition, hatching order and post-hatch-ing testosterone concentration in relation to nestling survival and pre-fledging offspring condition on Tawny Owls Strix aluco in Duna-Ipoly National Park, Hungary in 1996– 2007. In smaller broods, where parents of poor condition suffered nestling mortality, hatchlings showed a male-biased sex ratio, and between-sibling differences in testoster-one concentrations were high in the early nestling period. In broods where all nestlings were raised and parents were in good condition, hatchlings showed a female-biased sex ratio and between-sibling differences in testosterone concentrations were low. First-and second-hatched nestlings, with high post-hatching testosterone concentrations, survived after one or two siblings died and had better body condition before fledging than nestlings which fledged from the broods, where all were chicks raised