ABSTRACT A home range determines the resources animals can access, and the size of a home range often reflects resource availability and energetic requirements of individuals. The Flammulated Owl (Psiloscops flammeolus) is a cryptic small forest owl that breeds in mixed conifer forests in western North America. The home ranges of individuals generally comprise open forests with large trees, but we have yet to fully understand temporal variation in this species’ use of space and the habitat structures that drive space use at a fine scale. During the 2017 summer breeding season (May–July), we tracked the movement of six territorial males with GPS tags to estimate temporal variation in space use and examined resource selection for fine-scale habitat characteristics within home ranges. Results suggest that individual movement was more constrained around nests early at night, but the area of space used was consistent between the incubation and nestling stages. The owls’ activity centers near their nests had denser ground cover than available habitat, indicating that the forest understory may be valuable for this species’ breeding ecology. As forested landcover rapidly changes in western North America, understanding the spatial behavior and fine scale habitat associations of this species and others is increasingly important.