Everything you need to raise a happy backyard flock
Keeping chickens is one of the most rewarding things you can do in a backyard. Whether you are picking up your first chicks this spring or you have collected eggs for years, we are here with warm, plain-language guidance on coops, feed, health, and the daily joy of a flock that comes running to meet you.
Friendly, practical guidance. For illness, always call a poultry vet or your local extension office.
New: The Backyard Chicken Keeper's Planner
10 printable worksheets: flock health log, egg-laying tracker, feed & supply log, coop cleaning schedule, budget tracker, and more
The questions new chicken keepers ask us most
These four topics come up again and again, and getting them right makes flock keeping so much smoother. Each one has a friendly, detailed guide to walk you through it.
Starting From Scratch
Chicks, pullets, or point-of-lay hens? Get the simple first steps, a supply checklist, and how to bring birds home the right way.
A Safe, Roomy Coop
Plan for about 4 square feet per bird inside plus 8 to 10 in the run, with good ventilation and predator-proofing.
Why Aren't They Laying?
Hens start around 18 to 22 weeks and slow down in molt and short winter days. Here is what is normal and what is not.
Keeping Predators Out
Raccoons, hawks, and foxes are the biggest threat to a backyard flock. Lock the run down before you ever lose a bird.
What this site is
- Warm, plain-language guides to everyday chicken keeping
- Product picks based on research, specs, and verified keeper reviews
- Honest cost estimates so you can plan your flock
- Practical, encouraging, never preachy
What this site is not
- A replacement for a poultry vet or your local extension office
- A diagnostic tool for sick birds
- Fear-based or alarmist content
- A source of treatment plans or medication dosing
Start here
The foundations of a healthy, productive backyard flock, explained simply.
How to Start Raising Backyard Chickens
From checking local laws to choosing chicks or pullets, setting up a coop, and bringing your first flock home with confidence.
How to Choose and Set Up a Chicken Coop
Coop size, ventilation, nesting boxes, roosting bars, and run space, plus how to keep predators out for good.
When Do Chickens Start Laying Eggs?
Point of lay, how many eggs to expect, egg colors by breed, and the simple reasons a healthy hen stops laying.
What to Feed Chickens at Every Age
Starter, grower, and layer feed, plus grit, oyster shell, treats, and what chickens should never eat.
Best Chicken Breeds for Your Backyard
Friendly, cold-hardy, and heavy-laying breeds, from Buff Orpingtons to Australorps and Easter Eggers.
Keeping a Healthy Flock
Common diseases, parasites, biosecurity, a chicken first-aid kit, and the early signs of a sick bird.
The Backyard Chicken Keeper's Planner
10 printable worksheets to track your flock's health, egg laying, feed and supplies, coop cleaning, budget, and individual bird records, so nothing about your flock lives only in your head.
Flock Health Log
Egg-Laying Tracker
Feed & Supply Log
Coop Cleaning Schedule
Flock Budget Tracker
Monthly Flock Checklist
Browse by topic
Everything from setting up your first coop to winter flock care.
Backyard Flock Essentials Keepers Love on Amazon
- Layer Feed: Complete 16% protein feed with calcium for hens in lay
- Automatic Coop Doors: Close the flock in at dusk and out at dawn, even when you are away
- No-Waste Feeders: Keep feed clean, dry, and out of reach of rodents
- Heated Waterers: Keep water from freezing through cold winter mornings
- Brooder Heat Plates: A safer, lower-fire-risk way to keep baby chicks warm
How many eggs will your flock lay?
Tell us how many hens you keep and their breed's laying rate, and our free calculator estimates your eggs per week and year, daily feed, coop size, and water needs. Then see what a backyard flock really costs to start and keep.