Before even considering heat options for chicken coops, it’s vital to properly winterize the coop- learn how HERE.

Never use a brooder heat lamp inside a chicken coop. Heat lamps kill.

Fires like this occur every year in coops and barns due to heat lamps installed with the best of intentions. I’ve been tracking heat lamp fires on this Pinterest board for years and these are only some of the heat lamp fire incidents that made it to media outlets- there are countless additional near-misses and close calls when someone intervened before a tragedy occurred.

Regardless of where you ultimately come down on the issue of heating the chicken coop, please understand that a chicken’s physiology is not the same as a person’s. Our perception of how cold we would be in the coop at night is not the same as a chicken’s perception of their own comfort level.

There is simply no way to make heat lamps completely safe regardless of the number of chains/clamps/tethers or guards employed. Chickens have wings and feathers that are highly flammable- any scuffle inside the coop can send a chicken and/or feathers flying into a heat lamp, catching them on fire.
There is simply no way to make heat lamps completely safe regardless of the number of chains/clamps/tethers or guards used. Flying animals that are spooked can fly up into the 500°F bulb surface at any time as can feathers, pine shavings, straw, etc.

Whether to Heat the Chicken Coop in Cold Weather

Chicken Physiology & Anatomy
Chickens are anatomically and physiologically very different from people and have unique attributes that allow them to regulate their body temperatures very well in cold weather. The average body temperature of a chicken ranges between 104°-107°F (daytime rectal temp is even higher at 105-109.4).

Whether to Heat the Chicken Coop in Cold Weather

How a Chicken Regulates Body Temperature
Without interference from well-meaning caretakers, chickens will naturally acclimate to the changes in temperature from warm weather to cold over time. Additionally, chickens can increase their body temperatures by eating more chicken feed in cold weather. Digestion creates internal heat, that heat radiates through the skin, which warms the air next to it, which is then trapped against its body by feathers. Chickens are tiny, food-fueled furnaces wrapped in down jackets!

Doc Brown is keeping herself warm by fluffing out her feathers to trap warm air next to her body

Doc Brown is shown here keeping herself warm by fluffing out her feathers to trap warmed air next to her body.

A chicken is also able to conserve body heat by restricting blood-flow to its comb, wattles and feet, the very parts of the body that give off excess heat in warm weather. Not only do they have mechanisms to keep themselves comfortable in the cold, they huddle together on the roost at night.

Chickens are tiny furnaces wrapped in down jackets |The Chicken Chick®

IF you decide to add heat to the chicken coop in the winter, please put safety first in choosing a heat source. NEVER use a heat lamp with chickens!

Radiant, flat panel heaters are a safe alternative to dangerous 250 watt heat lamps. With a zero clearance requirement, it can be mounted on the ceiling or wall without fire danger.

Oil Filled Heater

Another safer heat option to raise the temperatures inside the coop a few degrees is an oil filled radiator, BUT the inclination may be to heat the coop instead of just raising the temperatures a few degrees. That temptation should be resisted! The coop should not vary in temperature drastically from outside temps. These units would also need to be carefully monitored and vacuumed regularly due to the dust inherent to chicken coops.

Thermocube

Automatically regulate the use of electric heat sources such as a flat panel heater or cookie tin water heater by utilizing a device like the Thermo Cube TC3, which will turn the power on at 35°F and off at 45°F. (there are other models that turn on at 0, off at 10, on at 20, off at 30)

Plan for power failure. If you do not have a generator to power a heat source to the coop during a blackout, do not heat the coop at all. Chickens have died and will die as a result of sudden drops in temperature from a power outage when the coop is heated.

Kathy Shea Mormino

Affectionately known internationally as The Chicken Chick®, Kathy Shea Mormino shares a fun-loving, informative style to raising backyard chickens. …Read on

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Before even considering heat options for chicken coops, it’s vital to properly winterize the coop- learn how HERE.

Never use a brooder heat lamp inside a chicken coop. Heat lamps kill.

Fires like this occur every year in coops and barns due to heat lamps installed with the best of intentions. I’ve been tracking heat lamp fires on this Pinterest board for years and these are only some of the heat lamp fire incidents that made it to media outlets- there are countless additional near-misses and close calls when someone intervened before a tragedy occurred.

Regardless of where you ultimately come down on the issue of heating the chicken coop, please understand that a chicken’s physiology is not the same as a person’s. Our perception of how cold we would be in the coop at night is not the same as a chicken’s perception of their own comfort level.

There is simply no way to make heat lamps completely safe regardless of the number of chains/clamps/tethers or guards employed. Chickens have wings and feathers that are highly flammable- any scuffle inside the coop can send a chicken and/or feathers flying into a heat lamp, catching them on fire.
There is simply no way to make heat lamps completely safe regardless of the number of chains/clamps/tethers or guards used. Flying animals that are spooked can fly up into the 500°F bulb surface at any time as can feathers, pine shavings, straw, etc.

Whether to Heat the Chicken Coop in Cold Weather

Chicken Physiology & Anatomy
Chickens are anatomically and physiologically very different from people and have unique attributes that allow them to regulate their body temperatures very well in cold weather. The average body temperature of a chicken ranges between 104°-107°F (daytime rectal temp is even higher at 105-109.4).

Whether to Heat the Chicken Coop in Cold Weather

How a Chicken Regulates Body Temperature
Without interference from well-meaning caretakers, chickens will naturally acclimate to the changes in temperature from warm weather to cold over time. Additionally, chickens can increase their body temperatures by eating more chicken feed in cold weather. Digestion creates internal heat, that heat radiates through the skin, which warms the air next to it, which is then trapped against its body by feathers. Chickens are tiny, food-fueled furnaces wrapped in down jackets!

Doc Brown is keeping herself warm by fluffing out her feathers to trap warm air next to her body

Doc Brown is shown here keeping herself warm by fluffing out her feathers to trap warmed air next to her body.

A chicken is also able to conserve body heat by restricting blood-flow to its comb, wattles and feet, the very parts of the body that give off excess heat in warm weather. Not only do they have mechanisms to keep themselves comfortable in the cold, they huddle together on the roost at night.

Chickens are tiny furnaces wrapped in down jackets |The Chicken Chick®

IF you decide to add heat to the chicken coop in the winter, please put safety first in choosing a heat source. NEVER use a heat lamp with chickens!

Radiant, flat panel heaters are a safe alternative to dangerous 250 watt heat lamps. With a zero clearance requirement, it can be mounted on the ceiling or wall without fire danger.

Oil Filled Heater

Another safer heat option to raise the temperatures inside the coop a few degrees is an oil filled radiator, BUT the inclination may be to heat the coop instead of just raising the temperatures a few degrees. That temptation should be resisted! The coop should not vary in temperature drastically from outside temps. These units would also need to be carefully monitored and vacuumed regularly due to the dust inherent to chicken coops.

Thermocube

Automatically regulate the use of electric heat sources such as a flat panel heater or cookie tin water heater by utilizing a device like the Thermo Cube TC3, which will turn the power on at 35°F and off at 45°F. (there are other models that turn on at 0, off at 10, on at 20, off at 30)

Plan for power failure. If you do not have a generator to power a heat source to the coop during a blackout, do not heat the coop at all. Chickens have died and will die as a result of sudden drops in temperature from a power outage when the coop is heated.

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Sue D
Sue D
2024 years ago

Great info–wow those heat lamps look so dangerous.

Brian
Brian
2024 years ago

Great ideas for those that want to use heat

Lisa Bissell
Lisa Bissell
2024 years ago

All the information you provide is amazing, I always find something wonderful to read each time I come to your site. I would love, love, love this incubator to show the students in my sons class the amazing journey of egg to chick. Side note: my 7 month old mottled bantam cochin hatched a blue lf cochin this afternoon, only egg to make the full journey. She/he will be very spoiled!

Carrie
Carrie
2024 years ago

Great information, especially with winter fast approaching!

Leslie Bader-Robinson
Leslie Bader-Robinson
2024 years ago

I have a CozyCoop panel heater in my Silkie coop; controlled by a ThemoCube. The other 3 coops with the large chickens with regular feathers don’t have any added heat source. Keeping the coop dry and well-ventilated is all they seem to need. When it gets really cold, I give them a small amount of scratch feed (with a lot of cracked corn in it) just before dusk to help generate body heat during the night. I’d love to own an incubator; I’ve been fascinated with them, and would love to hatch some eggs this coming spring! :)

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