Help! My chicken…
Chicken not laying (UK): why it happens and what to check first
Eggs don’t stop for one reason. Most of the time it’s seasonal, stress, or diet — and you can fix it. Sometimes it’s a health issue that needs proper help.
Brutal truth: You can’t out-supplement a poor setup. Space and stress management matter as much as feed.
Moult
Winter light
Stress
Diet
First: when it’s urgent
If you see any of the below, stop Googling and get proper help (urgent vet / poultry expert):
- Straining, repeated nest-box visits, or a “penguin stance” (possible egg issue).
- Very lethargic, not eating/drinking, or sitting fluffed up with eyes closed.
- Swollen abdomen, discharge, or blood.
- Sudden collapse or rapid deterioration.
- You strongly suspect egg binding or severe illness.
Safety note: This is not veterinary advice. If your gut says “this bird is really unwell”, trust that and escalate.
Quick checks (60 seconds)
- Is she moulting? (lots of dropped feathers, pale comb, grumpy mood).
- Has daylight dropped recently? (winter slowdown is real).
- Any recent stress: new birds, move, predator scare, bullying?
- What’s the diet right now? Layers feed available all day, or lots of treats?
- Nest boxes: clean bedding, dimmer corner, enough boxes for the flock?
- Are eggs being laid somewhere else (garden hiding spots)?
- Is she broody (stuck in box, growly, puffy, pecking)?
Likely causes (the usual suspects)
- Moult (hens often pause laying to regrow feathers).
- Winter daylight reduction (less light = fewer eggs).
- Stress (predators, bullying, changes in flock or housing).
- Diet imbalance (too many treats, not enough balanced layers feed).
- Age (older hens lay less consistently).
- Broodiness (she’s “saving eggs” even if none are there).
- Health issues (parasites, reproductive problems, illness).
What to do today
- Reset to basics: fresh water + layers feed as the main diet; reduce treats for a week.
- Make nest boxes irresistible: clean bedding, a darker corner, and enough space that timid birds can use them.
- Reduce stress: tighten fox-proofing, check run space, and separate any bullied bird so she can eat and rest.
- Track for 72 hours: appetite, droppings, posture, and whether she’s visiting nest boxes repeatedly.
- If you see egg-straining, discharge, or sudden weakness: stop waiting and contact a poultry/avian vet.
Prevent it next time
- Use the Nutrition guide to keep layers feed as the foundation (treats are the fast route to “why aren’t they laying?”).
- Pressure-test space with the Coop & run size calculator — crowding increases stress and bullying.
- If winter laying matters to you, plan for a realistic seasonal slowdown (and don’t panic).
- Run a simple weekly health check from Happy & healthy — early intervention beats emergencies.
- Want a reality check on ongoing costs? Use the UK cost calculator.