How to Hatch Eggs

Hatching eggs can be a very rewarding experience and many beginners are buying incubators since they have become far more affordable over the last few years. The main manufacturers for the small scale hobby market are R-COM and Brinsea Incubators. Both produce an excellent range that can accommodate 20 to 25 chicken eggs, perfect for the beginner to hatch their own eggs!

Before you start

Before you incubate and hatch chicks, you should remember that you will end up with a ratio of half male and half female chicks. Unless you are hatching an autosexing breed (where markings or colour of the chicks are different colours) or have crossed two birds that give a sex-linked chick (again, different down colour or markings) then you will need to think ahead  to when the young growers can be sexed around 8 weeks of age and consider what you will do with the excess of male birds. Sadly, they are very hard to re-home, everyone has the same problem: too many boys.

Choice of incubator

incubator

The R-Com Suro is a forced air incubator that controls both temperature and humidity.

There are essentially two types of incubator –still air and forced air. The big difference between the two is the forced air uses a fan which circulates the air inside. When you measure the temperature, it should be the same throughout. The still air incubator has a temperature gradient inside so the hotter air rises to the top and there can be several degrees difference between top and bottom. For the average beginner wanting to increase the size of their flock, a forced air incubator is in my opinion the best choice. If you can afford a model that has automatic humidity control then you should have far more success than setting and maintaining the humidity control on a manual unit.

Incubating Chickens Eggs

Chickens eggs have a 21 day incubation period (isn’t that amazing? Egg to chick in just 3 weeks!) and require a constant temperature of 37.5°C. Eggs will start to produce their own heat in the latter stages of development but the incubator thermostat takes care of this, keeping the temperature the same throughout the incubation period. Humidity should ideally be between 45 and 50%. Eggs need turning regularly by 180 degrees and you will need to do this yourself if the incubator doesn’t have an automatic turning mechanism. Expect 50% to 75% of your eggs to hatch, not all eggs will be fertile.

Hatching Eggs

Eggs need to be fertile so a cockerel needs to be running with the hens for a few weeks before eggs are taken for hatching. If you have a cockerel, you can collect your own hatching eggs from your chickens. Try to pick good looking ‘egg shaped’ eggs, this will help the chicks form and hatch correctly as mother nature intended. Keep nest boxes clean and don’t set any soiled eggs. If you don’t have a cockerel or would like a different breed, there are many hatching eggs for sale online on sites such as eBay but keep in mind that just about anyone and everyone sells eggs so birds vary in quality between sellers. Hatching eggs travelling through the postal system can be damaged internally and either not develop or die before they hatch. These are often called dead in shell.

Incubation tips:

  • Before you put your eggs into any incubator, make sure it has been sterilised with an incubation disinfectant (or as a minimum warm soap and water if you don’t have this). This will kill bacteria that multiply rapidly in the warm temperature of the incubator.
  • Plug in your incubator and make sure the temperature is steady at 37.5°C. Always leave it to run overnight to settle before putting eggs in.
  • Keep water reservoirs topped up so that adequate humidity can be maintained at all times.
  • Candle eggs before putting them into the incubator. Cracked or damaged eggs do not hatch and should be removed after candling (see below for more information on candling).

Candling Eggs

candling

Candling an egg in the dark using a special candling torch. Blood vessels and the embryo can be clearly seen after a week.

Fertility of eggs cannot be determined before incubating them. It is easiest to see development of the embryo after a week. The most critical period of incubation is the first week so if you do decide to candle your eggs before a week then be very careful with them and do not overheat them. Eggs with blood rings, cloudy eggs or clear eggs (infertile) should be removed when detected. The photo to the right shows an egg that was candled after 8 days. If you can’t see much, do this in the dark. It may also help to tip the egg gently from side to side so you can see the inside of the egg moving and see what are patches on the egg shell and what is inside. The developing spider like veins and a small dark embryo can be seen. If you look carefully and have a bit of luck with the positioning of the embryo, you can often see a small heart beating away. I usually candle after 7 days and again at around 14 days. There is more information on a separate page about candling eggs.

The Air Sack

An Air Sack is formed at the broad end of the egg shortly after an egg is laid. There is a membrane between this and where the chick is developing. When candling periodically through the incubation period, this is the best method of judging normal development and you will see this increase in size up until the point that the chick breaks through into this air sack.

The Hatch

  • A chick will usually ‘pip’ the shell a few hours after breaking into the air sack so she can breathe but a full hatch can take 12 or more hours from this point so be patient.
  • If humidity has been set too high during the incubation period, the chick may pip the shell underneath the shell and drown in the fluids before he can get his beak out of the shell.
  • If the humidity has been too low, the air sack will be too large and the chick will be under-developed  and may become stuck to the shell, too weak to break free.

If a chick has pipped but does not make any progress, wait 12 hours, then consider breaking the top part of the shell away (but no more…) Some say do not help weak chicks as you are breeding weakness into your flock but there are many reasons why eggs don’t hatch. If it is a humidity problem like this or the line is particularly in-bred (often found with exhibition strains) then a little help can usually be given without detrimental effect.


The film above is speeded up and shows the final moments of a Copper Black Marans egg hatching in an RCOM King Suro incubator. As you can see with the King Suro, there is a good viewing window to see what is going on! It is my favourite incubator and is incredibly well priced.

And finally…

  • Do not remove hatched chicks until they are fully dried out. Chicks do not need to eat for 24 hours. This is why they can be shipped around commercially as ‘day old chicks’.

Good luck with your hatch!

Do you have any tips on hatching eggs? Please leave me a comment below.

99 Comments

  1. thank you for your very informative websight , i have just hatched my first chick on 01/01/12 with your help and advice ,happy new year thanks again

  2. I have just ordered a incubator from my local supplier which is the basic Brinsea manual turn. I only intend to hatch about 6 at a time especially to start as this is my first attempt. Would farms that sell chickens take the male birds? or if not have you any suggestions? Great site, very useful info, thank you very much.

    • Normally they won’t (they have to kill them as they have lots themselves). You either have to find someone to show you how to kill the males, or find a home up front for them. You could ask around on the forums to see if there is someone in your area who would be prepared to show you. The biggest problem is everyone has cockerels so it’s very hard to rehome them.

  3. Very informative website, thanks for making it!

    Once the chicks are hatched, how should one care for them? What do they eat etc

    How many weeks is it until they reach laying age?

  4. Hi, thanks for loads of info, have just got chickens for the first time and the myself and the youngsters are enjoying them immensely. What I don’t understand though is why the need for incubators? I can understand their use for commercial purposes and making things efficient, but being a bit of an ‘eco-freak’ I’d really like to do things as naturally as possible… how do we breed chickens using as close to natural methods as possible, I mean, no incubators, just encouraging the girls along? Is this feasible or have chickens been bred now not to be hardy enough to do this for themselves in European climates? I’m a bit confused by no mention of ‘the natural way’. Thanks for any pointers in the right direction. Jules

    • Yes, you can use a broody hen…. some breeds are better broodies than others. Personally I have limited experience and limited success with them but this is because the breeds I keep are utility and have had broodiness bred out of them (broody hens do not lay eggs so a good egg layer won’t go broody as she’s producing eggs!)

      • I’m also trying to hatch chicks the natual way for the first time. I’ve got a broody Bluebell sitting on 10 eggs of various varieties (Rhode Islands, Black Rocks & Light Sussex) all fathered by Rhode Island Cockerel. She’s been there about a week now and seems quite content. Ill let you know how she gets on…

  5. My first incubated egg is starting to hatch (I can now see a beak) and I am so excited that I have become a surrogate mother hen checking on it every few minutes. Once a small crack appeared in it last night I could not sleep and I have been phoning my husband at work regularly today letting him know when there is any progress. Thank you for your advise on hatching chicks, I have found this site very helpful.

Leave a Reply

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.