Coops & runs

Chicken coop ventilation (UK): stop damp, ammonia, and respiratory misery

A coop can look lovely and still be unhealthy if it traps moisture. This guide shows where vents should be, what “draft-free” really means, and how to fix condensation fast.

Hard truth: people chase supplements while ignoring damp air. Clean air beats most “health hacks”.
Condensation fixes Winter reality Draft vs ventilation Coop design

What “good ventilation” means

Fresh air exchange without a cold stream of air blowing directly onto sleeping birds.

  • vents high up (warm moist air rises)
  • airflow above roost height
  • dry bedding by morning

Signs you need to fix it

  • condensation on walls/roof
  • ammonia smell when you open the coop
  • wet bedding or damp corners
  • hens sneezing/coughing (don’t ignore)

If you notice ammonia: clean today, fix airflow this week.

Myth: “Close vents in winter”

Cold air doesn’t cause the main issue — damp air does. In UK winter, trapped moisture is common and makes birds colder long-term.

Reality: sealing a coop usually makes things worse.

Where vents should go

Think “chimney effect”: warm moist air rises and exits high.

  • High vents on two sides are ideal (cross-ventilation).
  • Keep openings above the roost line.
  • Use covers/baffles so rain can’t blow in.

If your only vent is a little gap near the floor, that’s not ventilation — it’s a draft.

Draft vs ventilation (simple test)

At roost height, would you feel a steady breeze on your face? If yes, your vents are too low or too direct.

Good setup: air moves above the birds, not through them.

Fast fixes

  • add a baffle over low vents
  • open high vents wider
  • raise perches if needed (without blocking airflow)

Condensation: the UK winter classic

If your coop is wet inside in the morning, something is wrong — fix it before it becomes a health problem.

Checklist
  • remove wet bedding (don’t “top up” over it)
  • increase high ventilation
  • check roof leaks / rain splash
  • use a droppings board to reduce moisture load
Design upgrades that pay back
  • easier cleaning access (you’ll do it more)
  • smooth surfaces (less damp trapped in cracks)
  • roofed run area (keeps litter drier)
Cleaning routine Run mud control
Link to real life: better ventilation usually means less smell, cleaner eggs, and fewer parasite issues — because you’re not creating a damp, warm hiding place. If mites are on your mind, go here next: red mite prevention.