Commercial chicken barns shoot for 50-55% humidity, for whomever asked. Basically if you just avoid real high humidities in the coop, like 80% and up, you will be in good shape.
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Before deciding that "above freezing" is what chickens require, and "below freezing" is equivalent to freezing and shivering, it would be an awfully good idea to FIND OUT what your chickens think about colder temps. Generally it turns out that they are perfectly happy, NOT shivering, NOT freezing, NOT miserable.
There is nothing magic about 32 F (0 C), you know -- it's just where water freezes, but chickens ARE NOT made of water (they contain water, but they are not just little puddles), and the freezing point of chicken body tissue is a lot colder than that, because they are continually generating their own internal heat and wear full-body down jackets.
If a polar bear owned *you* as a pet, would you want him turning on the a/c in your quarters everytime the temperature got above 6 C (the low 40s F) just because that's when HE starts to get uncomfortably hot?
Watch your chickens, FIND OUT how they act at different temps.
Pat