Chickens on my rental property.

Jocelyne

In the Brooder
Jul 24, 2017
10
5
11
My renter wants chickens. when we rented to her she said she wanted 10 chickens. Now she is talking of having 60 per year and 10 to keep through the winter.

I want to write a Chicken Agreement for My Rental Property. Any of you know where I can find an example?
I think that 60 per year is too many chicken for one person. I do not want this to be commercial.
She also wants to build a coop - how many square feet should she have per bird?
 
60 seems like a lot, is she raising meat birds?

Good idea posting here, when you figure out what you are willing to allow after considering neighbors and regulations and whatever else write a very specific addendum to your lease.

If it were me i would say no more than 12 birds. No roosters.

As for the coop i would say a full size 10x12 walk in shed. That way if she leaves it behind it can be repurposed for storage. I would tell her exactly where she can build it. I would tell her no chickens in the house. Shed must be built prior to getting chicks. Chicks must be brooded in shed under heat plate. No heat lamps.

Good luck

Gary
 
I don't know where you could find an example for a chicken agreement.... I have 14 chickens right now and am planning to expand.
But first how big is your rental property maybe 60 is too many and you could ask her to go with an amount that seems sensible to the amount of space you have. If she's never had chickens before my experience is that sixty could be a bit much. But also what is commercial for you? Is it having a small farm stand where you sell eggs are going really commercial and selling in a grocery store? If it's the latter the coop and chickens will have to undergo inspections. Maybe you are not comfortable with that and want her to just do a farm stand. Allow her to have an amount of chickens that for her is enough but small enough that you feel okay.
The rule of thumb for chicken spacing is 2-3 sq feet per chicken in a coop and 8-10 square feet in the run.
And welcome to BYC!!!!! It's a lovely site! :welcome:celebrate
 
IMHO... I would never ever ever allow one of my renters to have chickens. Now, I don't even allow a dog or a cat. Tenants do damage because it is not their property and don't care. But like I said, that is just my opinion with my experiences. First tenant I had cost me over $4000 in repairs and the others that followed still have caused some damage (not just regular wear and tear).
 
60 birds through summer and 10 over winter is not any sort of egg production. She'd only have 10 birds laying. The thought is either to brood and raise pullets to sell or she intends to breed, hatch and raise 50 birds over summer for sale and flock rotation or she intends to raise 50 meat birds which would only take 8 to 12 weeks until process. That would provide a chicken dinner per week.

If you don't want roosters then she can't breed birds. If meat birds they shouldn't be housed with the layers and would require other housing, movable tractors work well. There will be male meat birds but age to butchering is younger than crowing. Whatever your terms are restricts what she wants to do. If it is meat birds have a limit of batch size she can do. 50 birds at a whack is a lot and with meat birds that's a lot of poop. Two batches of 25 is far more manageable and can be done over spring to fall.

I'd ask flat out what the intention of that many birds are and her plans for housing. They may or may not even have a clue what it requires. Put in writing after what your comfortable with. One thing I'd require is the use of tamper proof bait boxes with chunx bait. Far too many overlook the need to keep rodents at bay right from the start. Don't allow any other method of rodent control. They all lead to the need for poison in the end so start with it, tamper proof bait box with chunx bait and never have a problem.
 
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hey welcome from Western Washington state. I would allow the birds but limit them to an amount and place but heck the others here have given you a wealth of information I would give you kudo's for even asking..
 
My renter wants chickens. when we rented to her she said she wanted 10 chickens. Now she is talking of having 60 per year and 10 to keep through the winter.

I want to write a Chicken Agreement for My Rental Property. Any of you know where I can find an example?
I think that 60 per year is too many chicken for one person. I do not want this to be commercial.
She also wants to build a coop - how many square feet should she have per bird?
Situational...I would need more information about the property, the current lease, the local laws/covenants/restrictions/etc... Bottom line is that it's your call. Knowing what kind of damage chickens can cause without the right management, I doubt that I would allow it. But if the property is rural and already has the facilities for a small flock... I had a clause in a previous lease that allowed me to inspect the property on a monthly basis...giving a minimum 12-hour notice of the inspection.
 
First, more information, please! How big is the property? Are there close neighbors? Are there any zoning laws regulating poultry keeping in the neighborhood?

If it were my property, I would allow a few chickens to meet the tenant's own personal needs for eggs. The tenant would be responsible for providing safe housing, including an enclosed run. The coop and run would need to be consistent in construction details with the rental house, as well as the neighboring properties. In other words, no little coop shacks cobbled together in a residential neighborhood. The coop would have X# of sq. feet, be a walk in style, or at least 4' tall, the run would have X# of sq. feet, and be covered. Based on your tenant agreement, there would be 4 s.f. in coop and 10 s.f. in run per bird. I think I'd limit flock size to 6 birds, no rooster. The coop and run would be at least 30' away from the rental home, and would be a minimum of the same distance from any neighboring homes. The tenant would be required to keep the coop and run in good repair, and limit odors by frequent cleaning or deep litter management. You would have to reach an agreement with tenant re: free range/supervised free range time, or birds kept secured in coop/run at all times.

NO WAY WOULD I ALLOW A TENANT TO KEEP 60 BIRDS ON A RENTAL PROPERTY, UNLESS IT WAS A FARMSTEAD.
 

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