Get realistic egg estimates for your flock by breed, age, and season — plus how many hens you need to hit your egg goals.
Your Flock
Breed
Count
Age / Stage
Your Flock's Egg Estimate
Eggs Per Day
—
eggs
Dozens Per Week
—
dozens per week
Eggs Per Month
—
eggs per month
Monthly Revenue
—
if selling extras
Hens to Meet Goal
—
hens for — eggs/day
Lay Rate
—
% of hens laying daily
Flock breakdown:
Egg Production by Breed (Annual Average)
These numbers reflect realistic backyard flock output — not hatchery marketing claims. Production-bred birds in ideal conditions can exceed these; heritage breeds in mixed flocks often come in lower.
ISA Brown / Sex-Links: 300–320 eggs/year — commercial layers, best for pure production
White Leghorn: 280–320 eggs/year — high-strung but prolific, classic white egg
Rhode Island Red: 250–280 eggs/year — reliable, hardy, dual-purpose
Black Australorp: 250–300 eggs/year — record holders, calm temperament
Easter Egger: 200–260 eggs/year — lays blue/green eggs, very popular for farmers markets
Black Copper Marans: 150–200 eggs/year — prized dark chocolate eggs, worth a premium price
Silkie: 80–120 eggs/year — ornamental, goes broody constantly, not a layer
Winter tip: Hens need 14–16 hours of light to maintain peak production. A $10 timer and a single LED bulb in the coop adds 4–6 hours of artificial light and keeps production up through winter.