Broody hens can be viewed as a burden or the greatest asset to your chicken flock, depending on your outlook and goals. A broody hen is a chicken that wants to sit and hatch a clutch of eggs. If you have no plans to grow your flock of chickens, broody hens mean a reduction of eggs available for you, not to mention an unhappy hen. On the other hand, homesteaders who want to raise a self-sufficient flock of chickens should rejoice when they see a hen sitting on her eggs.
My first experience with broody hens was nothing short of inspiring. I dislike raising chicks from the store. I don't like playing the role of a mother hen. It’s frustrating to have chicks indoors, having to check their temperature constantly, and the like. For me, raising chicks isn’t a task I enjoy, so when I discovered my broody hen named Anna sitting on a clutch of eggs, I rejoiced.
She produced a few chicks for us, including one rooster that my kids named Peanut. I had to do nothing with those chicks but watch the hen do her thing.
On the other hand, if your broody hen is sitting on a clutch of eggs that haven't been fertilized and you want her to return to laying, you're going to have to address the problem.

What Does It Mean When a Hen is Broody?
Going broody is the termed use when a hen decides she wants to hatch some eggs, which means she will sit on those eggs for an extended time. Her body temperature increases, and she consumes less food and water than usual. It's a natural phase for many hens, and it doesn't indicate that anything is wrong with your chicken. It's only a problem if you don't want her to work on hatching eggs.
What Causes Broodiness?
Broodiness is caused by a variety of factors, such as your hen getting older and maturing. Most broodiness is a combination of hormones and sunlight. As spring and summer approaches, the length of the days get longer, and that increase in sunlight encourages a hen’s body to release prolactin, a hormone created from the pituitary gland of the hen.
Together, sunlight and prolactin encourage a hen to become broody. As a result, she wants to sit on her most recently laid eggs – fertilized or not.
What are the Signs of Broodiness?
Is your hen acting weird? How can you tell if she is broody? Here are some signs to watch for.
- Reluctance to remove herself from the eggs in the nest
- Sitting in the nest even if there are no eggs
- Pecking your hand when you look for eggs underneath her
- Missing chest and belly feathers
- Pale combs and wattles
- Only leaves the nest once or twice a day, quickly hurrying back.
- Unusually large and smelly poops
- Flattens out in the nest, covering a larger area than usual
- Consumes little food and water
- Clucking to the eggs
The Broodiest Breeds


Any breed can go broody, but some breeds are more notorious for broodiness. If you want to have broody hens to keep a constant flock available for your family, pick a few breeds that are known for their broodiness. Most good broody breeds hatch about anything and are great mothers to their chicks.
If you want your hens to keep laying eggs and not focus on hatching, then stay away from the broodier breeds.
The most broody breeds are:
- Silkies
- Australorps
- Brahmas
- Cochins
- Orpington
- Plymouth Rock
- Sussex
- Wyandottes
How to Take Care of Broody Hens


If you want to let Mother Nature take over and have your broody hen hatch a clutch of eggs, the process is simple. That doesn’t mean you don’t need to know how to take care of a broody hen since there are a few steps you should follow.
You must have a rooster, or at the very least, fertilized eggs. Those aren’t too hard to find. Just call around to local homesteaders or farmers. Most have fertilized eggs you can purchase and put under your broody girl.
Hens can hatch any eggs – chicken, duck, turkey, guinea, and goose eggs. Make sure she doesn't have too many, though. She needs to be able to turn all of the eggs over, and her body needs to be able to cover them. Smaller hens can cover around 7-10 eggs, but larger breeds handle 15-20 chicken eggs just fine.
1. Pick a Safe Spot
Chances are your broody hen is like mine and picked the favorite nesting box to sit. I didn’t realize I had a broody hen until I opened our coop and found a line of hens waiting for their favorite nesting box like they were at a grocery store waiting to check out. You probably have several boxes available, but there always seems to be a favorite.
Some owners let their hens brood in her box, but you can pick to move her to a safe spot if you desire. Each option has pros and cons.
Moving Your Hen to Her Own Nest


The positives of moving your hen include the fact that it allows her to rest away from the other hens. It's also easier to track her eggs, and other hens can’t get into her nest.
The cons are that you must provide her food and water. She also might refuse to sit in the new area, or she might break out of her broodiness.
Leaving Your Hen In the Nest
Leaving your hen in place is less stressful than moving. It also lets her interact with the flock, and you don’t need to provide separate food and water.
On the downside, other hens might add more eggs under her, which causes issues with sporadic hatching. Other chickens could break her eggs if you leave her in the nest. She also might stop other chickens from laying eggs.
How to Move a Broody Hen
If you decide to move your hen to a new spot, make sure you prepare her nest before moving her. It's best to put a new clutch of eggs under her as well, so the area is completely ready.


When you remove her from the nest, she might try to peck and bite you. Hold her with her wings against her body so that she can't flap. Put her in her new area, near her eggs but not on them. She might accept the new nest, or she might refuse to sit.
If you decide to let her sit in the nesting box, make sure it's large enough for her clutch of eggs. She needs to be able to get up, move around, and move her eggs. The nesting box should be at least one-foot square. Place her food and water in front of the nesting box.
2. Mark the Eggs
One tip I find helpful is to mark the eggs using a marker or pen with the date you set them under her. Eggs take 21 days to hatch, give or take, and it's easy to lose track of the days. This is also a good idea if you are leaving her in the coop because you'll know if she inherits any additional eggs.
3. Provide Food and Water
Now that your hen is set up and ready to sit on her eggs for the next 21 days or so, most of your work is done. While she is doing her job, you want to make sure her health is fine. That means providing food and water and making sure she gets off the nest each day to drink and eat. That might mean you need to physically remove her from the nest from time to time because some hens are so committed they'd rather starve than leave the eggs.
4. The Hatching


As the time approaches, your hen will spend less and less time off the nest. She might start to cluck to her eggs. Around day 21, little peeps might be audible. It will take a few days for you to get a good look at the chicks. It takes two to four days for all of the eggs in a clutch to hatch, and chicks stay under mama for one or two days.
After four days, remove any eggs that have yet to hatch. These eggs aren’t viable.
5. After Hatch Care
Once her eggs hatch, it's essential to keep the chicks separate from the flock. The best thing is to keep them in a pen inside of the run where the other chickens can see them, but where they're safe from the elements and other chickens.
A broody hen will stay in the nest until all of her chicks have hatched. Eventually, she will get out of the box and show them how to scratch, drink, and do all kinds of exciting chicken things. She is their guide to chicken life.
Provide chick food for them to eat. Don’t worry about giving your momma layer food until she needs to start laying again. For right now, she is busy teaching her chicks how to live, so she isn’t focused on laying eggs yet.
6. Integrate with the Flock
By six weeks old, the chickens won't need to be kept away from the other flock anymore, and you can introduce them to the rest of the herd. The best time to add these new chickens to the flock is at night, just before dark. It helps to reduce aggression, but you'll still want to keep a close eye on the new chicks over the next few days.
How to “Break” Broody Hens


If you only want chickens and eggs for consumption, a broody hen can be a pain in the butt. Breaking a hen of her broodiness helps to make sure she eats when she’s hungry and drinks when thirsty and will eventually get back to laying.
Sometimes, breaking a broody hen is a necessity. If you don’t have a rooster, the eggs are unfertilized, so they’ll never hatch into chicks. Broody hens sit until something hatches, and if that isn’t going to happen, you have to break her of the broodiness.
Broodiness takes a lot out of your hens. A broody hen won’t eat or drink much, leading to infrequently pooping. It’s not healthy for her long term. Extreme cases of broodiness can cause a hen to starve herself to death.
1. Remove the Eggs
The first thing that you want to do is remove the eggs from under the hen regularly. Pick her up and put her away from the nesting area when you collect the eggs. Hens are notorious for being overprotective of their eggs, so expect a big protest.
2. Keeping Moving Her
Several times throughout the day, remove her from the nest and put her at the far end of the run where you put some treats to distract her. Do this as many times as possible.
At night, remove her from the nest when its dark outside and place her on the roosting bar. Most hens will stay there because chickens can't see well in the dark, so she won't be able to find her way back to the nest.
3. Get Rid of Her Nesting Area
Blackout your broody hen's chosen nesting area to dissuade her from going back to it. Another choice is to take all of the nesting material out of the box she picked. Broodies often choose a specific nest, and if you move that nest, she will give up setting on it.
4. Separate Her
You might need to separate your chicken from the rest of the flock. Use a small, portable coop or crate to keep her away from the nesting boxes and eggs to get her out of the broody mindset. If possible, try keeping her in a cage with a wire bottom and plenty of air circulation. A wire cage can help provide a cool feeling on her underside, which can discourage the broodiness.
How long she needs to be in her solitary confinement will depend on how determined she is in her broodiness. Make sure you don’t add any bedding materials. Check on her daily to see what she is doing and put her back into the coop. If she runs back to a nesting box, she must return to solitary confinement.
5. Frozen Water Bottle and Cold Dips in Water
If you have a particularly difficult broody hen, you can put a cold or frozen water bottle under her while she is sitting. The cold helps to trigger a break in the broodiness.
If you don't have a frozen water bottle, you can dip her bottom into cold water. Remember that she heats her eggs, so a broody hen has quite a warm bottom end. The theory is that the cold can trigger her to abandon her nesting.
When to Embrace the Broodiness


Unless you have a reason why you don't need or want broody hens, having broodiness is an essential trait for a self-sustaining flock. If you don't want to rely on the local farm and fleet store to purchase chicks, having a broody hen is an asset that chicken owners should appreciate.
Either way, be sure to watch to ensure your hen is eating and drinking. Broodiness can cause your hen to lose weight, and having a healthy flock should always be your key goal, aside from an abundance of eggs to eat.
Do you have any tips for handling a broody hen? Let us know in the comments.


Was this article helpful?
What went wrong?
This article contains incorrect information
This article does not have the information I am looking for
How can we improve it?
We appreciate your helpul feedback!
Your answer will be used to improve our content. The more feedback you give us, the better our pages can be.