How to hatch eggs at home without incubator (and with one) in 5 Easy Steps

This post was most recently updated on April 6th, 2021

If you have chickens, or want to get some more interesting breeds, hatching chicken eggs at home is one of the easiest ways of expanding your flock. It is possible to hatch chicken eggs successfully at home once you know how. If you are wondering how to hatch eggs at home without incubator, I have some tips for you too!

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There are many variables that can influence the success rate of your eggs, and we will cover most of those off below.

How to hatch eggs at home without incubator

If you have fertile eggs and no incubator, you have a few options, buy an incubator, build an incubator or find a broody hen. The best way to hatch eggs without an incubator is by sitting them under a broody hen. A broody hen is one that is already sitting on a nest and is protective of the eggs underneath her. She will accept fertile eggs and sit on them until they hatch – it is easiest to place them under her at night, you are less likely to get pecked!

If you don’t have a broody hen, you can make a DIY incubator with little more than a thermometer, damp sponge, a cooler box and a light bulb – check out my DIY incubator instructions here.

To hatch eggs successfully without a proper incubator, you need to be able to do the following:

  • Keep the eggs consistently at 37.5 Celsius / 99.5 F
  • Turn the eggs 3 or 5 times per day
  • Keep the humidity at 45% from days 1-18 and 60-70% days 19-22

If you can do this with your proposed solution, then you can give it a go!  I have watched a video of someone somewhere very warm that managed to hatch eggs by placing them in a bowl in the sun with a cover over it. Obviously it was a lot warmer there than it ever is here!

The best way to hatch chicken eggs without an incubator

If you don’t want to buy or build an incubator, or your power source is too unreliable to guarantee no power outages, then the best way to hatch chicken eggs without an incubator is to invest in some silkie chickens.

Silkies are renowned for going broody (wanting to sit on eggs) a lot. Any broody chicken will do, but most breeds have had the broodiness bred out of them because a broody hen is not laying eggs but silkies make brilliant broodies and excellent mothers.

How to Hatch Chicken Eggs Successfully at Home

To have a successful hatch at home, you need some key ingredients and some techniques that will help ensure that you end up with live chicks at the end.

Hatching chickens at home is easy with these simple steps:

  1. Choose an incubator
  2. Source fertile eggs
  3. Keep the eggs at the right temperature and humidity
  4. Turn the eggs 3 times a day until day 18
  5. Let the chicks hatch

1 Choosing an Incubator to Hatch Chicken Eggs Successfully at Home

Incubators come in a variety of sizes and prices. You can make your own incubator with a styrofoam box and a few other supplies for under $50, or you can fork out for a small automated egg incubator. 

RELATED POST: DIY egg incubator

Automated egg incubators come as small, medium and commercial sizes. We have a medium sized one that fits 24 eggs, it automatically sets the heat, humidity and it turns the eggs.

What incubator you choose to use is up to you, but remember the heat needs to be kept steady within a small parameter, and the more eggs you set at once, the larger your chances of success.

2 Sourcing fertile eggs

Fertile eggs are the basis of a successful hatch. Without fertile eggs there will never be baby chicks! If you are in New Zealand, we actually sell fertile eggs of a few varieties of hens, feel free to email me to find out more.

Can you hatch chicken eggs from the store?

No. For eggs to be fertile, they need the mother hen to be living with a rooster. In commercial egg laying facilities there are no roosters, so store bought eggs are not fertile.

Even if they were fertile, eggs at the store are kept for 3-4 weeks before sale, which is far too long for a fertile egg to remain viable.

Where to buy or get fertile hatching eggs

If you don’t have your own hens and roosters, try asking around your friends and family. Otherwise check online, sites like Craigslist (or Trademe in NZ) often have eggs for sale, we sell ours on Trademe over the spring and summer.

Once your eggs arrive in the post, sit them at room temperature without being disturbed for 24 hours before placing them in the incubator. This gives the eggs time to resettle.

Hatching rates on eggs straight from the coop are often in the 75 to 90 percent range; with mail-order eggs, there is no guarantee that any will hatch.

Collecting and store chicken eggs for hatching

If you are collecting your own eggs or from friends, make sure you clear the nest daily and store the eggs in an egg carton inside at room temperature. Eggs should be clean and without any sign of cracks.

Store them pointed end down in an egg carton for up to 10 days. Ideally the eggs will be less than 7 days old when incubation starts.

If your eggs are grubby, you can wash them with some diluted house disinfectant (follow the bottles directions) and do not submerge the eggs for more than 2 minutes as the shells are porous. Then allow them to air dry and place them in the egg carton to wait until your clutch is ready to set.

RELATED: How to collect and store eggs

3 Setting up your egg incubator to hatch chicken eggs

Your incubator needs to be set up and running for at least 24 hours before you place eggs in it.

Humidity

For the first 18 days your humidity in the incubator should be 40-50%. This will ensure that the eggs loose enough fluid during development so that their is a good sized air bubble at the end of the shell for them to pip in to and breath through later.

If the humidity is too high for the first 18 days, the chicks can drown when it comes time to hatch. After day 18, the humidity should be increased to 60-70% and held there, this stops the egg membrane from drying out while the chick tries to hatch.

Ventilation

Egg’s shells are porous, allowing oxygen to enter and carbon dioxide to exit – this is how the chick gets its oxygen. Incubators need to have holes or vents that allow fresh air to circulate so the embryos can breathe.

Temperature

The incubator should be set to maintain the temperature at 37.5C or 99.5F for the whole time of the incubation. Any fluctuations in this temperature can kill the developing chick.

We have found that covering the top of the incubator with a folded towel helps increase the insulation and decrease the temperature fluctuations.

Turning eggs

A mother hen is constantly jostling and turning her eggs. They need to be turned at least 3 times every 24 hours. Some of the better incubators will automatically turn the eggs. This is the best option for two reasons:

  1. You don’t have to remember to do it
  2. You don’t have to keep opening the lid of the incubator, which will keep the temperature more even.

Candling Eggs

On day 14 I always check for signs of growth and remove any eggs that have not developed. This reduces the risk of them exploding in the incubator!

Eggs that are developing will have visible veins in the shell and eventually just go dark as the light cannot shine through a chicken. Eggs that have not developed just glow when you shine a light on them

To candle fertile eggs you need a bright light, I use one of these torches, and a dark room. Keep the other eggs in the incubator and try and keep them all as warm as you can, and move gently but swiftly.

There are some great pictures here.

RELATED: How to raise chicks successfully

4 Lockdown

After day 18 everything goes in to lockdown. This is when you remove the auto turning trays and lay the eggs down on their side and increase the humidity.

These last few days are crucial for the chick to get itself in to the best position for hatching. So you just leave them be, no more egg turning. Keep the humidity high and the temperature even.

How many days does it take to hatch chicken eggs?

Generally speaking eggs will take 21 days to hatch. If the incubator is too warm they may start hatching on day 19 or 20, if the incubator is too cold, they may not start until day 22 or 23.

Eggs can take up to 25 days to hatch, or they may pip as early as day 18.

It is important not to panic if your chick pips at day 19 and then does nothing much else for a day or two. Chicks need to absorb their yolk sack before they come out of their shell. Chicks born too early will still have the yolk sack on the outside and they are at a great risk of catastrophic infections that result in death.

Side Note: If your incubator counts days like mine does, it starts at day zero, so day 21 will actually read as day 20! 

Hatching – when to help chicks hatch

Generally speaking the rule is to shut your eyes and walk away. Healthy chicks can take up to 36 hours from pip to full hatch. As long as the humidity is kept high, the chick should be fine. 

On the odd occasion, a chick will get stuck on an awkward angle and be unable to complete the unzip in a safe amount of time before the membrane under the shell starts to dry out. A dried out membrane will stick to the chick like super glue.

This article has great instructions and a photo showing a browning membrane.

Once the chick is free from the egg, let it dry off in the warmth of the incubator before moving it a brooder, where it will spend the first weeks of its life.

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