Coops & runs

How to fox-proof a chicken run (UK): the checklist that prevents heartbreak

Fox-proofing is not one feature. It’s a chain of decisions — mesh, fixings, doors, skirts, and a nightly routine you never skip.

Hard truth: foxes don’t need you to be careless every day — they only need you to be careless once.
Welded mesh Dig-proofing Latches Night routine

The fox-proofing checklist

If you tick every box, you’re miles ahead of most backyard setups.

1) Walls: welded mesh

Chicken wire keeps chickens in — predators out is welded mesh.

Mesh guide →

2) Roof: cover or mesh

Stops climbers and reduces wild bird contact.

Run designs →

3) Ground: dig-proof

Skirt outward, or bury mesh. Foxes dig.

Skirt methods →

4) Door: no weak edge

Most failures are at doors and corners.

5) Latches: lockable

Bolts + carabiners/locks. Simple hooks are a joke.

6) Fixings: screws & washers

Staples alone can pull out over time. Fix mesh like you mean it.

Non-negotiable: if you can flex the mesh away from the frame with your hand, it’s not secure enough.

The 5 failure points (where runs actually get breached)

  1. Door gaps — a corner that looks “fine” becomes a leverage point.
  2. Cheap staples — they loosen, rust, then pop.
  3. Ground edge — mesh stops at the soil and digging starts.
  4. Rotting timber — structural weakness makes everything else irrelevant.
  5. Human habits — forgetting a latch when tired or rushing.

If you’ve had a near miss, don’t patch it — rebuild that part properly.

Your nightly routine (the boring part that saves birds)

  • Count heads (know your flock size every night).
  • Close the coop/run door at a consistent time.
  • Latch check: pull on the door, check corners, check roof edges.
  • Quick visual scan for digging attempts along the base.
Automation helps: an automatic door can reduce “forgot once” risk — but you still need latches on the run.

Fox-proof shopping list (keep it simple)

  • Welded mesh (walls + roof as needed)
  • Screws + large washers (or proper fencing staples + battens)
  • Heavy-duty hinges
  • Bolts + carabiners/locks for every access point
  • Timber braces (to stop racking/warping)
Money truth: spend on mesh and latches first. Pretty features come later.
Run designs Mesh guide