Get a realistic picture of what it actually costs to start and run a backyard chicken flock — total startup investment, monthly operating cost, break-even timeline, and the real cost per dozen eggs you produce.
Most people are surprised to learn that backyard eggs cost $8–$15 per dozen to produce once you factor in coop, chicks, feed, bedding, and occasional vet care. That doesn't mean chickens aren't worth it — but knowing the real numbers helps you plan honestly and decide whether you're raising chickens for food security, hobby, or actual cost savings.
The honest answer: more than most people expect, at least in year one. The biggest variable is the coop. A basic pre-built coop for 6 chickens runs $200–$600. A DIY build from lumber can cost $150–$400 in materials. A quality, well-insulated coop that will last 15+ years can run $800–$2,000. That startup cost has to be amortized over the flock's productive years to get your true cost per egg.
After the coop, feed is the dominant ongoing cost. A standard-size hen eats about 1/4 lb of feed per day — roughly 7.5 lbs per month. A bag of quality layer pellets runs $18–$30 for 50 lbs, so a 6-hen flock costs $15–$25/month in feed alone, plus $5–$10 in bedding.
If your goal is financial return, selling hatching eggs from rare breeds, selling started pullets, or breeding specialty breeds for sale generates more income per bird than selling table eggs. Table egg production alone rarely shows a profit for backyard flocks once all costs are included.
A realistic budget for 6 chickens in year one: $30 in chicks, $400 coop, $60 equipment, $50 brooder setup = ~$540 startup. Plus 12 months of feed/bedding at $35/month = $420. Total year one: approximately $960. Eggs produced (at 5/hen/week starting month 5): roughly 65 dozen. First-year cost per dozen: ~$15. Year two drops to $4–$5/dozen.
In year one, almost always cheaper to buy. In years 2–4, the math gets closer, especially if you buy hay, feed in bulk, or free range. If you value food security, knowing your source, and the experience of raising your own food — which most chicken keepers do — the cost difference is worth it. But pure financial savings is rarely the right reason to start a flock.
A standard laying hen eats approximately 0.25 lbs of feed per day, or 7.5 lbs per month. Six hens need about 45 lbs per month — roughly one 50-lb bag. On pasture or free range, that drops by 20–30%. Chicks eat less; heavy breeds eat slightly more.
Most pullets start laying at 18–22 weeks of age. Production breeds (ISA Brown, Leghorn, Sex-Links) often start at 16–18 weeks. Heritage and dual-purpose breeds can take 24–28 weeks. Plan for a 5–6 month period of feeding chicks before any egg income or home production begins.
Most hens live 5–10 years but peak egg production occurs in years 1–3. By year 4, production may drop 20–30% annually. Many homesteaders cull non-productive hens at 2–3 years and replace with new pullets to maintain production levels. Processing older hens for stew meat is common and reduces the cost of flock replacement.