The catch is nutrition: corn runs 9g protein and 74g carbohydrates per 100g, which means it dilutes the 16% protein layer feed your flock needs. Keep it at 10% of total diet or less, and time heavier servings for late afternoon in cold weather.
A balanced flock diet is the single variable most keepers underestimate, and corn sits at the center of that conversation. It is the most popular scratch grain component in the country, fed by backyard keepers for generations, and it works well within the right framework.
The problem is not corn. The problem is corn without limits.
This guide covers the nutritional profile, every safe form, how corn generates body heat, the moldy corn danger most keepers overlook, and exactly how much to feed without displacing the protein your hens need.
Below: why corn's energy density is both its value and its risk, how to serve every form safely, the winter feeding case, and when to cut back.
Corn Nutrition for Chickens: High Energy, Low Protein Is the Core Trade-Off
Cracked corn delivers 365 calories per 100g, more energy-dense than most common chicken treats. That caloric load comes almost entirely from 74g of carbohydrates, with only 9g protein and 4.7g fat alongside it.
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Layer feed is formulated to 16% protein because laying hens need consistent amino acid supply to produce eggs and maintain feather condition. Corn at 9g protein per 100g runs well below that threshold.
When corn fills a meaningful portion of the crop, it crowds out the layer feed that delivers the protein, calcium, and phosphorus a hen's production depends on. The caloric substitution looks harmless in a single session and becomes measurable over two to four weeks of regular overfeeding.
The 10% rule is not arbitrary. It is the point at which supplemental treats no longer displace enough layer feed to affect production metrics.
- Cracked corn: 365 kcal, 74g carbs, 9g protein per 100g. Most common scratch ingredient. High energy, low protein ratio.
- Sweet corn (fresh/frozen): 86 kcal, 19g carbs, 3.2g protein per 100g. Lower calorie density, more sugar. Fine as occasional treat.
- Field corn (dried whole kernel): Similar profile to cracked corn. Traditional scratch grain. Hard enough that adult birds benefit from access to grit.
- Corn on the cob: Same nutritional content as loose fresh corn. Excellent enrichment form: hang it, let the flock work for it.
- Plain air-popped popcorn: Safe. Adds nothing nutritionally. Unnecessary but not harmful in small amounts.
Leghorn feed efficiency is among the highest of any laying breed, converting a tight feed budget into 280-300 eggs per year. Birds running that production rate have less dietary margin for high-carb treats than a heritage dual-purpose breed kept for mixed production.
A layer nutrition needs analysis shows that peak-production breeds consistently show protein displacement effects sooner than low-output breeds when treats exceed the 10% threshold.
Corn on the Cob: Why Hanging It Is the Best Enrichment You Can Give Your Flock
Corn on the cob is the form we recommend most often. The cob gives chickens a a target that requires effort, keeps the flock occupied for extended periods, and eliminates the all-at-once gulping that loose cracked corn encourages.
Thread a length of twine through the cob and hang it at about beak height. Every bird in the flock has to peck and pull to access the kernels, which slows consumption and turns a treat into behavioral enrichment.
Fresh, frozen, and dried cobs all work. Frozen cobs are especially useful in summer as a cooling treat.
Thaw slightly so the kernels are not frozen solid, then hang as normal.
Remove the cob after the flock loses interest. A spent cob left on damp ground can develop mold faster than you expect, especially in warm weather.
Corn in Winter: Why Thermogenesis Makes Evening Feeding the Right Call
Corn generates body heat through a process called the heat increment of feeding. When chickens digest digest high-carbohydrate grain, the metabolic work produces more heat than digesting protein or fat at the same calorie level.
That makes cracked corn a practical winter management tool. A small corn serving in the late afternoon or early evening, before the flock roosts, extends internal heat production through the coldest overnight hours.
This is why experienced keepers reach for the scratch bag in November and scale back in April. The thermogenic benefit applies precisely when overnight temperatures drop into ranges where unheated coops can stress birds.
- Timing: Feed corn in late afternoon, not morning. Birds burn the energy overnight on the roost when they need it most.
- Amount in winter: A small handful per 4-5 standard-size hens is sufficient to trigger the thermogenic effect.
- Amount in summer: Cut back or stop entirely in warm months. Excess carbohydrate load in heat can stress the liver and accelerate fatty liver syndrome in confined hens.
- Form in winter: Cracked corn absorbs more quickly than whole kernel. Either works, but cracked corn begins the digestive process slightly faster.
The thermal benefit is real but modest. It supplements an insulated, draft-free coop rather than replacing one.
Do not use extra corn as a substitute for weatherizing your housing.
Crickets are a useful protein companion to corn in a winter rotation. Where corn provides thermogenic carbohydrate energy, dried crickets for protein supplementation deliver 65% protein per 100g dry weight to offset the low protein content of scratch grain without adding excess calories.
| Form | Cal / 100g | Protein / 100g | Best Use | Notes |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Cracked corn | 365 | 9g | Winter scratch, thermogenic treat | Most common; needs grit access |
| Whole kernel (dried) | 365 | 9g | Scratch, traditional field corn | Adult birds only; harder to digest |
| Fresh corn (kernels) | 86 | 3.2g | Summer treat, lower calorie option | More sugar than dried; fine occasionally |
| Frozen corn | 86 | 3.2g | Summer cooling treat | Thaw slightly before serving |
| Corn on the cob | 86 | 3.2g | Enrichment, any season | Hang at beak height; remove when spent |
| Plain air-popped popcorn | 387 | 12g | Occasional only | No butter, salt, or flavoring of any kind |
| Moldy corn (any form) | N/A | N/A | Never feed | Aflatoxins are lethal to poultry |
A grain treat comparison shows that plain cooked rice delivers a lower glycemic load than cracked corn and disperses easily in the crop without requiring grit to break down. Both are safe; rice is the lower-calorie option for warm-weather treat rotation.
Moldy Corn and Chickens: Aflatoxins Are More Dangerous Than in Any Other Common Feed
Poultry are among the most sensitive species to aflatoxin contamination. The same Aspergillus molds that make moldy bread dangerous produce aflatoxin B1 in improperly stored corn at concentrations that can kill chickens outright outright or cause cumulative liver damage over weeks of low-level exposure.
Corn is particularly prone to aflatoxin contamination because the kernels hold moisture and the germ is a rich substrate for mold growth. Field corn harvested at high moisture content and dried slowly is higher risk than properly dried grain.
Clinical signs include lethargy, pale combs, ruffled feathers, sudden egg production drops, and in acute cases, sudden death. Discard any corn showing visible mold, musty odor, or discoloration.
Do not feed cracked corn stored in damp or poorly ventilated conditions.
Buy cracked corn from a reputable feed supplier with high turnover. Store it in a sealed, dry container away from humidity.
Inspect the bag before opening: a musty smell is reason enough to return it.
Chocolate carries a similar absolute storage rule for different reasons: both cocoa powder and dark chocolate must be kept entirely out of any area your flock can access. Our chocolate toxicity guide covers the theobromine risk and what to do if a bird gets into your chocolate supply.
Whole kernel corn stores better than cracked corn because the intact pericarp slows moisture absorption. Once cracked, the surface area exposed to air increases dramatically, and spoilage risk rises with it.
How Much Corn Chickens Can Eat: The 10% Rule Protects Protein Intake
The 10% threshold for treats is derived from the protein math of a laying hen's daily intake. A standard hen eats roughly 100-120g of feed per day.
Layer feed at 16% protein delivers 16-19g of protein in that daily ration, which matches the 15-20g daily protein requirement for consistent laying.
Replace 10% of that ration with corn at 9% protein, and the protein contribution of that fraction drops by nearly half. Replace 20% with corn, and the cumulative protein deficit becomes detectable in egg production within two to three weeks.
Corn should read as a supplement, not a staple. These guidelines keep it there.
- Daily maximum: No more than 10% of total daily feed intake. For a standard 120g intake hen, that is about 12g of cracked corn per bird.
- Frequency in summer: Once or twice per week. No thermogenic need, and liver stress risk from excess carbohydrates in heat is real.
- Frequency in winter: Several times per week in late afternoon is appropriate given the thermogenic benefit and increased caloric demand in cold conditions.
- Chicks under 8 weeks: Avoid corn entirely. Starter feed must remain the exclusive food source while the digestive system develops.
- Grit requirement: Whole kernel and cracked corn both require active grit access. Birds without free-choice grit can have difficulty grinding hard grain in the gizzard.
Corn should never become the primary food source regardless of season. Keepers who let scratch grain creep up to 20-30% of daily intake over winter often see reduced egg production and poor spring molt recovery as the cumulative protein deficit catches up.
Cooked beans are one of the best protein treats to balance against a corn-heavy scratch rotation. Our bean feeding guide covers why fully cooked black beans deliver nearly 9g of protein per 100g and how to prepare them safely from dried or canned.
Eggs are another high-protein option worth rotating in on days when corn features heavily. Our guide to feeding eggs back to chickens explains why the cooking step is essential, and how scrambled eggs support hens during molt when protein demand peaks.
Check processed grain risks if your treat rotation currently includes kitchen scraps alongside scratch. The combined carbohydrate load from bread and corn in the same day is where protein displacement becomes acute fastest.