What Are Chicken Toys?​

You’re probably already giving your chickens “toys” without realizing it. Any activity that encourages natural chicken behaviors can be considered playing. And any item that encourages that activity is a “toy”.

Some enrichment activities you are probably already providing include:
  • Cleaning out the chicken coop and run of poop and doing other daily tasks such as egg collecting. This changes their environment and chickens are intrigued by anything new.
  • Inspecting the health of your flock and any other direct human contact.
  • Providing table scraps, leftover produce, weeds, dirt clods, fodder, flats of sod, etc.
  • Letting them out to roam the run or free-range.
As the winter months approach and time and space constraints increase we find ourselves looking for more. What you provide need not be expensive or ornate, or even pretty. Most of the best toys are absolutely free.

Why Are Chicken Toys Important?​

A chicken that is not provided with adequate enrichment and mental stimulation will be more inclined towards problem behaviors. Feather pecking, bullying, egg-eating, and even cannibalism are almost always a result of chickens that are confined without proper enrichment. The cold winter months that necessitate closer quarters and fewer foraging opportunities are when chicken toys become even more necessary to avoid coop boredom. This is where the expression “feeling cooped up” comes from after all.

Below is a list of toys that many people have found effective in keeping their backyard flock entertained and happy.

Top Toys for Adult Backyard Chickens:


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Compost piles are excellent sources of enrichment and food. Simply create your pile of compostable material and let the chickens work it at will. The chickens will enjoy digging up the bugs and worms and will be warmed by the heat that is created from the decomposing material. Keeping a compost heap or pile in the run also reduces the amount of foraging/digging they do elsewhere in their run which will help the vegetation grow and prevent a bare muddy chicken run. (The one pictured is a frame made from an old privacy fence that was falling down on our property filled with yard and kitchen waste.)

Hanging a head of cabbage, squash, whole head of lettuce, kale, spinach, etc. from a string or bungee cord is a popular toy with a nutritional boost. If you can stick a skewer through it or tie a string around it then it is fair game to be hung either on the fence of the run, from the ceiling in the coop, or anywhere else they might be able to play tetherball with it.

Interactive Treat dispensers. Anything from an empty beverage bottle with holes drilled in it to cat and dog toys designed with treat-dispensing holes in them. If you can fill it with their favorite treat and poke holes in it so that the chickens can kick it around and peck at it to make the food come out then you have yourself a peck toy. There are some companies that sell chicken treat dispenser toys as well. Just make sure that you provide a healthy treat.

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Dust Bathing Area. Provide an area where they can dust bathe freely. Any bucket, bin, old tire, or any other device filled with dirt for them to bathe in is perfect. It will encourage them to do their dust bathing in one approved location and limit the number of holes they dig elsewhere for the purpose. You can mix in some Diatomaceous earth or wood ash as well to help deter mites etc., but it isn’t necessary. (Pictured is an old tire found on our property and filled with dirt.)

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Climbing/Perching places. The animal kingdom at large takes the term “top dog” pretty literally. Any spot that allows the head of the flock to perch above everyone else will be prized. Roosters especially prefer a spot where they can perch above the flock and crow their ownership of it to the rest of the world. Even an old tree that fell down on your property (or you cut down) can be erected in the chicken run for this purpose. You could also build your run around an existing live tree for the purpose. Live trees also provide protection from overhead predators as well as forage and shade. (I found the sawhorse in the picture in the woods of our property. A simple sawhorse can be built out of one or two 2x4’s inexpensively, or salvaged pallets.)

Top Toys for Chicks:

Non-food toys are best for chicks as their nutrition requirements depend mostly on their feed unless you are an experienced chicken nutritionist or a mama hen.
  • Pet bird toys (parakeet shred a box &/or bird burrito) or any small kitten or baby toy such as fake mice, small balls, rattles, etc. The more colorful the better since chickens see color better than humans do.
  • Mirror (the unbreakable varieties for babies cribs or parakeets etc. are ideal. Better safe than sorry.) An old cd on a string would be an excellent substitute for this as well. Chicks love shiny things - not only will they enjoy their reflection, but they will also enjoy the rainbows that will inevitably end up on the walls, etc. of the brooder area. An old cd hung in the run area not only provides entertainment but can aid in deterring hawks and other aerial predators.
  • Bin filled with sand (doubles as grit for wee ones also) or dry dirt for dust bathing.
  • A tunnel made from an empty oatmeal container.
  • Make a chicken swing out of some rope and a large branch or a 2x4. This is great for helping them build the muscles necessary to keep them on their roosts as well as gives them a place out of the litter to warm their feet.

Other great toy ideas that are inexpensive or free to buy or make:

  • Old stump or branch full of bugs, grubs, and other creepy crawlies. This works for any piece of wood. Just leave it in one place for a few days to a week or so and let the bugs seek refuge under it – then just flip it over and let the flock go to town.
  • Shredded newspaper
  • Cricket tubes (or just let crickets loose in the coop when they will be confined for an extended period of time). You can find these at most pet stores or tackle shops.
  • Sunflower heads complete with seeds
  • A post-Halloween jack-o-lantern or any large squash or melon. Just drop it on the ground from high enough that it splits and let them do the rest.
  • Suet cage or fruit basket stuffed with table scraps
  • Old CDs that are scratched beyond repair are great hung from a string along the fence of the run at or just above pecking height. If you are REALLY adventurous you can blow up a balloon, smash the cd’s and then glue them onto the balloon in a mosaic pattern and hang it in the run/coop to catch the light.
  • Boiled spaghetti is a special hit. Dye the noodles in different colors for added fun.
  • DIY bird feeders. Just do a Google search and you’ll come up with thousands of ideas. Just use scratch grains or BOSS or whatever else you have on hand. Molasses is a great tool for creating enough structure to hold it together enough for them to peck it to death.
Use your imagination and have fun. If it encourages their natural behaviors of eating, scratching, pecking, bathing, flying, perching, or flock socialization then it is a good toy and will provide your chickens hours of entertainment. They don’t have to be pretty and they don’t have to cost anything. If they don’t like it you can always take it away and try again another time, or move on to the next item. Enjoy your flock!