Help! My chicken…
Chicken mites vs lice: what you’re dealing with (and what actually fixes it)
‘They’re itchy’ is not specific enough. Red mite is mainly a coop problem. Lice live on the bird. The solution depends on which one you’ve got.
Brutal truth: You can’t win against parasites with hope. You win with cleaning access and a repeatable routine.
Red mite
Lice
Itching
Feather loss
First: when it’s urgent
If you see any of the below, stop Googling and get proper help (urgent vet / poultry expert):
- Very pale comb, weakness, or a bird that seems anaemic.
- Bird is lethargic and losing weight rapidly.
- Skin is damaged/bleeding from heavy infestation or feather pulling.
- You see mites swarming in the coop at night.
- Multiple birds decline quickly.
Safety note: This is not veterinary advice. If your gut says “this bird is really unwell”, trust that and escalate.
Quick checks (60 seconds)
- Check at night with a torch: red mite often appears in coop cracks, under perches, nest box corners.
- Look around the vent and under wings for crawling insects or clusters of eggs stuck to feather bases.
- Check perch ends and joints (mites love hiding points).
- Look for dusty grey/red smears when wiping cracks with tissue (mite evidence).
- Ask: are birds restless on the roost at night? (classic red mite clue).
- Make sure there’s a dust bath — lack of it makes everything worse.
Likely causes (the usual suspects)
- Red mite in the coop (hides by day, feeds at night).
- Feather lice on the birds (live on bird, move fast through feathers).
- Dirty coop with lots of cracks and hiding spots.
- No dust-bathing area or very wet ground.
- Stress/crowding causing feather pulling that looks like parasites.
- Bringing in new birds without quarantine.
What to do today
- Confirm what it is: check birds AND the coop (especially at night).
- If red mite: focus on the coop — deep clean, remove bedding, and treat cracks/perches using poultry-safe products as directed.
- If lice: focus on birds — follow a poultry-safe treatment plan (label instructions) and repeat if required.
- Add/refresh a dust bath (dry soil/sand + access) and keep it dry.
- Monitor birds for anaemia and stress; escalate if any bird weakens.
Prevent it next time
- Use the Red mite prevention guide — especially in warm months.
- Keep the coop simple to clean: see 10‑minute cleaning routine.
- Reduce hiding places: smooth surfaces beat tiny cracks (see Coop size guide for design features).
- Avoid “mystery infestations”: quarantine new birds and do a quick check routine from Happy & healthy.
- If you’re upgrading coops/runs, use the UK cost calculator to plan costs.