Counting The Costs?

I'm in my first year of having chickens. We have 20 and we didn't get them to get rich. I will say though I had no idea how much pleasure and relaxation I would get out of them. The eggs are a bonus, and I do sell some and that covers their feed. Also my older daughter can't eat store bought eggs they made her really sick. She developed an allergy to them, but she can eat our backyard eggs. She has never been so happy as she really loves eggs and missed them.
 
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The eggs I eat are free.
All feed and most supply costs are covered with egg sales.
That was my goal, to have chickens kept in a nice place,
and have them pay for their feed.
Coop, run, and incubator costs will never be covered,
that's the 'hobby' part.
I eat or sell all extra cockerels and old hens.
 
@aart hits on a key point... What is break even for you? When I started this adventure, my goal was to eat for free... realizing that goal is much more challenging than one would think. But writing off infrastructure costs to the hobby make it way more palatable.
 
I don't know where you are but this Fall grade A large eggs in Aldi's grocery store were 25¢ per dozen. That is down from 28¢ a dozen this Spring. Yes that is right 25 cents per dozen or a little more than 2¢ apeace. If you desire hens get them for your own enjoyment, don't buy chickens with the expectation that you'll put Krogers or Walmart out of the egg bizz.

I dont know where you are, but I pay more than $5-6 a dozen for free range eggs here in Ontario, and it was more when I lived in BC.

I didnt have any start up costs other than the chickens themselves, (already had a barn)- but the feed is only $15 a sack which lasts my flock a month. So, Im thinking they will more than pay for them selves. (7 chickens= 140-150 eggs a month = 12 dozen eggs a month. Sell 5 dozen= 5x5= $25 (pays for all their feed plus electricity and straw) plus I get 7 dozen eggs for free ($40 value at the store).

Am I alone in seeing this as an easy "eat eggs for free forever situation?"
 
Aldi's eggs are not free range.. like Minky said free range eggs are much more.. ex large organic free range are$8 a dozen at the farm market by me.. I pay $25 for 50# organic feed

If home grown organic eggs in your neck of the woods cost 8 bucks a dozen or 32 times a dozen more than than natural, non-GMO, grocery store eggs at Aldi a.k.a. Trader Joe's, what does that tell us about the true cost of producing roll-your-own-eggs?

Chicken keeping is an amazing hobby but like all hobbies growing roll-your-own-eggs is not a profit making venture, that is unless and until you are able to earn a decent living, raise a family, amortise the start up cost and the depreciation. Otherwise you're on a slow slide into eventual insolvency.

What I'm saying is if you want chickens, by all means get chickens, but don't quit your day job.
 
I got chickens last year because they prices of eggs where going up and figured how hard could it be. I'm now going on 2 years, started with four and somehow now have 8 chickens. Yes, I have now learned that it probably would have been way cheaper to just buy eggs but they joy of raising chickens has surpassed any expectations. Yes, it is work but I'm okay with it. I do sell my eggs but I don't do it for the money ... and it doesn't make any money for me.

I would recommend starting small. 30 chickens just to start seems a lot. I will admit, if I had more land I would get more but 8 will have to do for now.
 
Prepare for your chickens if you decide to go for it. Have a good, larger-than-you-imagined coop with proper ventilation high up, nests about a foot off the floor, roosts higher than the nests but not so high they are in line with the ventilation, multiple locks on all doors to keep out dexterous racoons, all windows covered with 1/2 inch hardware cloth, a larger run than you thought, and cover every inch of that run in the same hardware cloth along the bottom so raccoons can't reach through, and the top with nothing bigger than 1inchx2inch wire fence so fishercats, weasels, and young racoons can't climb up and squeeze through. Also, and so important, make a 2 foot apron around the perimeter to keep digging preditors out. Last but not least cover the top with that 1x2 wire to keep out hawks, owls, and those climbing preditors...racoon, fishercats, weasels, etc.
Thats what I did....except the coop itself isn't tall enough for me to stand inside. Next year. There's lways next year improvements.
Lots of work. And money unless you have such supplies on hand. Then you start buying the food, unless you feed them acording to Back To Eden gardening methods.
But now it's done. You bring in your chickens. You watch them interact. You interact. You start recognising each one. You start automatically naming them. You know who the friendly one is, who the clown is, who's the boss...and they start to know you.
And you realise it was all worth it. You're in love.
OH! And there are eggs!
And the best darn fertilizer on God's earth. Now you need a garden!!
It's a hobby that is a lifestyle that keeps maturing.
Yeah, its a bit of money to start but do it right and the rest is worth it.
And come here for help and encouraging words.
 
If home grown organic eggs in your neck of the woods cost 8 bucks a dozen or 32 times a dozen more than than natural, non-GMO, grocery store eggs at Aldi a.k.a. Trader Joe's, what does that tell us about the true cost of producing roll-your-own-eggs?

Chicken keeping is an amazing hobby but like all hobbies growing roll-your-own-eggs is not a profit making venture, that is unless and until you are able to earn a decent living, raise a family, amortise the start up cost and the depreciation. Otherwise you're on a slow slide into eventual insolvency.

What I'm saying is if you want chickens, by all means get chickens, but don't quit your day job.
Aldi's doesn't sell organic or free range eggs by me... their eggs are over $2 last time I was there...trader Joe's is not by me

I raise poultry so I know what they eat, how they lived and unfortunately I know how they died,..... but they only have one bad day and live a good life... the eggs I sell people tell me are better than the ones from the market.
So it's not about the money for me, it's about treating animals right and good quality food... I just about break even if I process cockerels at 16 weeks..$5 for organic free range at the market
 
I got a large machine shipping crate (6x6x6) from work for free and already had a 6x10x6 dog kennel. So my initial startup was next to nothing but my time. Oh and my first 6 chicks were free.
Now...though, because we all know on this site that 6 chicks become 20 chickens in no time, my next coop will cost me quite a bit.
Chickens are literally the only pet I know that helps pay their way in addition to all the other benefits of a pet.
I would and 100% of the folks around here will tell you they are worth it.
 

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