Help! My chicken…

Soft-shelled eggs: why they happen (and the fixes that work)

A one-off soft egg happens. Repeated soft eggs usually mean diet, stress, or an older hen. Start with basics before you buy ten supplements.

Brutal truth: If half their calories are treats, shell quality will eventually show you the bill.
Calcium Vitamin D Stress Young/older hens

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 obvious discomfort.
  • Blood, discharge, or a bird that suddenly becomes lethargic.
  • Soft eggs plus other illness signs (not eating/drinking).
  • Multiple birds producing abnormal eggs suddenly.
  • You suspect an egg is stuck or there’s a serious reproductive issue.
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 layers feed the main diet (available all day)?
  • Do they have free-choice calcium (oyster shell) separate from feed?
  • Are treats/corn heavy right now (diluting nutrition)?
  • Is she very young (just started laying) or older (shell quality declines)?
  • Any big stress recently (predator scare, move, bullying)?
  • Are eggs being laid in clean, calm nest boxes?

Likely causes (the usual suspects)

  • Calcium imbalance (not enough available calcium).
  • Diet diluted by treats/greens/bread instead of layers feed.
  • Stress (especially predator stress, bullying, changes).
  • Young birds at point-of-lay (systems still stabilising).
  • Older hens with declining shell quality.
  • Temporary blip after illness, heat, or disruption.

What to do today

  1. Reset to layers feed as the foundation and reduce treats for a week.
  2. Offer free-choice calcium (separate dish) and keep it topped up.
  3. Ensure constant clean water — dehydration affects egg formation.
  4. Reduce stress: secure the run and resolve bullying/overcrowding.
  5. If the hen shows discomfort/straining or soft eggs persist: seek poultry/avian vet advice.

Prevent it next time

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