Monday, June 30, 2025

The Benefits Of Raising Your Own Chickens In This Economic Climate


The Grocery-Store Reality


Egg prices have been anything but stable: in January 2025 the national average topped four-and-a-half dollars a dozen, more than sixty percent higher than 2021. Even when wholesale costs dip for a month or two, the savings rarely show up on retail shelves right away. Add general inflation—feed, produce, utilities—and many families are hunting for permanent ways to trim their food bills and gain a little peace of mind.


Six Ways Backyard Birds Fight Inflation


Stable Egg Costs

Once your coop and equipment are paid for, most small flocks lay eggs for roughly a dollar-and-a-half a dozen in feed. That can save a typical family well over a hundred dollars a year whenever store prices hover above four dollars.

Premium Nutrition

Fresh, yard-to-table eggs routinely test higher in vitamin D and omega-3 fats and lower in saturated fat than supermarket cartons. Better nutrition at a lower price is hard to beat.

Free Fertilizer

Ten hens can produce seven-hundred pounds of manure a year—black-gold compost that would cost fifty to eighty dollars if you bought it in bags.

Natural Pest Control

Chickens devour ticks, grasshoppers, and other garden pests. Fewer bugs mean less money spent on sprays and traps.

Mental-Health ROI

“Chicken TV” is real. Research shows that caring for animals lowers stress and boosts mood—benefits hard to put a dollar value on, but priceless all the same.

Micro-Income Streams

Even a half-dozen extra cartons a week can turn into twelve hundred dollars a year at five dollars per dozen. Hatching chicks, selling compost tea, or leasing a rooster for breeding all add to the bottom line.


What It Really Costs to Start



A basic six-hen setup breaks down like this:

  • Coop kit: about $300-400
    • Build your own from recycled and reclaimed material as inexpensively as $0
  • Feeder and waterer: $45-55
  • Bedding and misc. supplies: $40-60
The cost of birds in your area will vary greatly! You can purchase "battery hens" for as little as $5 each in some areas of the country. These are generally hens who are around 2 years old that are being released from an egg farm. They may look ragged because of their crowded living conditions but they are usually disease-free at the time they are released for sale.

You can also order started pullets from a hatchery. A pullet is a young hen who is approaching the age to start laying (about 5-6 months). "Started" means they're old enough to be put into a coop and run outside and no longer have to be treated like chicks. Started Pullets can get pricey, especially for highly sought-after breeds. You will be looking at a cost of $20-40 per pullet, plus higher shipping because they aren't little day-old chicks. The trade-off is that you don't need the expense of a brooder, heat sources, chick feed and vitamins, or chick-sized feeders and waters. Pullets are ready to go into a regular coop, eat good ol' layer feed, and will begin producing eggs for you much sooner.

Bird-buying Caveats

Be wary of "sale barn" chickens if there is no county tester present at the sale. The same goes for "flea market" chickens. If the chickens are being sold at a large gathering without being tested before admittance, you don't want to buy those birds.

If you are completely new to chickens, you may also want to steer clear of individual sellers offering "straight run" chicks. Stick to buying breeds that are easily sexable by nature - meaning the males have a distinctively different looking set of feathers right off the bat. If you are raising your chickens in an urban backyard, the last thing you need is an accidental rooster or three.



Monthly expenses

Good layer feed, grit, oyster shell, and small incidentals run a little over thirty dollars for six hens. Under those assumptions, most households hit break-even in roughly eleven months—and even sooner if they sell a few surplus eggs and keep unnecessary treat purchases to a minimum. 😉 

If your yard is large enough to let your birds roam it freely once or twice a week, you can save on feed costs as they gobble up insects and weedy plants. (Be aware they will also eat your grass!)



Food Security and Community


Remember the avian-flu egg shortage back in 2022? Supply shocks are less scary when breakfast is clucking in your own backyard. Extra cartons make welcome gifts for neighbors, and many will happily chip in for feed once they taste the difference.

Some friendly neighbors might establish co-operative chicken coops, where the coop resides in one specific yard, but the surrounding neighbors who enjoy the eggs all regularly chip in for feed, supplies, and maintenance in exchange for the eggs they get. This can help offset some of the ongoing labor and costs incurred when keeping the flock.

Controlling Costs


Controlling the costs of your urban coop is relatively easy because in an urban setting, you really can't entertain the idea of breeding up your own special flock of marvelous magical chickens in every color. Seriously, you're going to be limited by municipal guidelines. This protects you from "chicken math." 

However, if you are suburban and don't have these limits imposed on you by a higher authority, it's up to you to control the urge to add "just one more breed" to your coop. Almost everything about keeping chickens increases exponentially - from how many chickens you have to how much water they use daily to how stinky the coop is. Define the size of your self-sufficiency project flock before you start, and stick to it. Don't adopt anyone's rejects or pick up "the last" turkey poults at Tractor Supply, even if it only costs 50 cents. 

Once you figure out how many chickens you can reasonably afford to keep during the winter months or molts, when they take a break from laying, stick to that number of birds, no matter the temptation. That's the best way to hit your eventual break-even point.

Ready to Get Started?


Valley Hatchery’s selection of pullets includes hardy, heat-tolerant layers that thrive in most U.S. climates, shipping out at around 15 weeks of age, which means you only have to wait a few short weeks before they start laying regularly. Take control of your grocery bill, boost your family’s nutrition, and enjoy the daily therapy of tending a flock that pays you back in fresh eggs every morning.

Visit ValleyHatchery.com today and let’s make your coop-dreams a reality! 🐔🐣🥚


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The Benefits Of Raising Your Own Chickens In This Economic Climate

The Grocery-Store Reality Egg prices have been anything but stable: in January 2025 the national average topped four-and-a-half dollars a do...