Remove the pit before feeding every single time. The pit contains amygdalin, which breaks down into cyanide.
Halve the fruit, pull the pit out, and offer the rest freely. Feed two to three times per week during plum season.
Plums are a solid summer treat for any flock, and our fruit treat safety guide covers the broader category well. The short answer here: the flesh is safe, the pit is not, and preparation takes under a minute.
Most chickens take take to ripe plums immediately. The soft texture and natural sweetness make them appealing, and the moderate calorie count at 46 calories per 100g keeps them from being the kind of calorie-dense treat that disrupts layer feed intake the way some dried fruits can.
Are Plums Safe for Chickens? The Pit Is the Only Plum Risk
Plums sit in the stone fruit family alongside peaches, cherries, and nectarines. All of them follow the same safety rule: the flesh is safe, the pit is dangerous. Once the pit is out, a plum is a straightforward treat with no secondary concerns.
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The flesh and skin contain no compounds toxic to poultry. There is no solanine, no persin, no oxalic acid. What you get is water, natural sugar, vitamin C, vitamin K, and potassium. That is a reasonable nutritional profile for a seasonal treat fed in controlled amounts.
The sugar level at 9.9g per 100g is moderate. That is lower than grapes at around 16g per 100g, which makes plums a better choice when you want a fruit treat without a heavy sugar load. The fruit sugar levels comparison is worth keeping in mind when rotating treats through the week.
Why Plum Pits Are Dangerous: Amygdalin and Cyanide in Stone Fruit
The plum pit contains amygdalin, a cyanogenic glycoside. When amygdalin is metabolized, it releases hydrogen cyanide. In large enough quantities relative to body weight, cyanide exposure disrupts cellular oxygen use and can be fatal.
Chickens are are small animals. A single pit is unlikely to cause acute poisoning in a standard-sized hen that only gnaws at the surface, but the risk is real and the fix is immediate: remove the pit before the plum reaches the run. There is no safe way to offer a whole plum.
Never allow chickens unsupervised access to whole plums or fallen stone fruit with intact pits.
The same concern applies to plum leaves and branches. Like other stone fruit trees, plum foliage contains cyanogenic glycosides. If you have a plum tree in or near the chicken run, fence the trunk to prevent bark stripping and collect fallen fruit before it sits overnight. This is the practical management approach, not a reason to remove the tree.
How to Prepare Plums for Chickens: Halve, Pit, Feed
Preparation is a two-step process. Rinse the plum under cold water, then cut it in half along the seam and remove the pit completely. Check that the pit cavity is clean before offering the halves to your flock.
- Rinse the plum to remove surface residue and any pesticide traces.
- Cut in half along the natural seam of the fruit.
- Twist and remove the pit entirely. Discard it where chickens cannot access it.
- Check the cavity for any pit fragments before feeding.
- Offer the halves directly in the run or in a shallow dish.
For bantam breeds or smaller pullets, cut each half into quarters. The soft flesh of a ripe plum is easy for chickens to to eat, but smaller pieces reduce any minor choking risk and prevent one dominant bird from carrying off an entire half.
One detail that matters in warm weather: overripe and damaged plums attract wasps quickly. Clean up uneaten pieces before they sit in the sun and ferment. This is especially true in late summer when wasp populations peak.
Which Plum Varieties Are Safe for Chickens? Italian, Japanese, and Damson
All three common plum types are safe for chickens once once the pit is removed. The variety changes the flavor and texture, not the safety profile.
| Plum Variety | Safe for Chickens? | Notes |
|---|---|---|
| Japanese plums (Red, Black, Elephant Heart) | Yes | Most common grocery variety. Juicy and sweet. Remove pit. |
| Italian prune plums (European) | Yes | Firmer flesh, slightly less sweet. Hold shape well after pitting. |
| Damson plums | Yes | Tart and small. Chickens may show less enthusiasm, but safe. |
| Plums (fresh, flesh and skin) | Yes | All fresh varieties. Wash, halve, pit before feeding. |
| Prunes (dried plums) | Small amounts only | Concentrated sugar. No toxic compounds, but limit to occasional feeding. |
| Plum pit | No | Contains amygdalin. Always remove before feeding. |
| Plum leaves and branches | No | Contain cyanogenic glycosides. Fence plum trees in the run. |
| Plum jam or preserves | No | High added sugar, often contains preservatives. Not appropriate for chickens. |
Prunes deserve a specific note. They are dried plums with no toxic compounds, so they are not dangerous in the strict sense. The problem is concentration: a prune carries several times the sugar load of fresh plum flesh in a much smaller package. Offer a small piece occasionally if you have them on hand, but fresh plums are the better option when available.
How Often Can Chickens Eat Plums? Seasonal Frequency and the 10% Rule
The 10% rule applies to all treats: combined treats should not exceed 10% of daily feed intake. For a standard laying hen eating around 100-130g of feed daily, that is roughly 10-13g of treat room per day. Half a medium plum weighs about 30-40g, which means a single serving uses up the treat budget for the day.
The practical approach: feed plums two to three times per week during the season, not daily. Space treat days across the week so layer feed maintains its nutritional priority.
- In-season (summer): Two to three times per week is appropriate.
- Off-season: If using prunes, offer a small piece no more than once per week due to sugar concentration.
- Per-bird amount: Half to one full medium plum for standard-sized hens.
- Bantams: Quarter to half a medium plum, cut into smaller pieces.
Easter Egger snacks and treat variety matter for active foragers. Rotating plums with lower-sugar options like vegetables keeps the treat mix nutritionally balanced and prevents any single treat from dominating the weekly budget.
Heavier dual-purpose breeds like the Orpington benefit from lower-sugar fruit treats like plums over high-sugar options such as raisins or mango, since their slower metabolism makes excess dietary sugar a weight-gain concern more than it is for leaner production breeds.
Managing a Plum Tree in the Chicken Run
A plum tree in or adjacent to the chicken run is a common setup in backyard keeping. It provides shade, and chickens will will peck at fallen fruit. The management approach is straightforward:
Fence the trunk. Chickens will strip bark from young trees, which can kill the tree over several seasons. A simple hardware cloth cylinder around the base keeps them away from the bark while allowing them full run access.
Collect fallen fruit daily during season. Fallen plums land pit intact. Left overnight, they become a wasp attractant, and a wasp-stung chicken can have a serious reaction. Collect any windfalls each afternoon, pit them for feeding or discard them, and clear the ground before dark.
Prune low-hanging branches. Keep the canopy above chicken height to prevent direct access to leaves and unripe fruit. Chickens do not typically eat large amounts of leaves, but removing the easy access is better practice.
Plums vs. Peaches and Cherries: How Plums Fit the Stone Fruit Safety Picture
Plums, peaches, and cherries all carry the same core rule: flesh safe, pit dangerous. The nutrition profiles are similar too. Plums come in at 46 calories per 100g, close to peaches at around 39 calories per 100g. Both are solid seasonal treats with comparable vitamin and mineral content.
Cherries require more care at the prep stage because cherry pits are smaller and easier to miss. A plum pit is large, easy to see, and simple to remove. That makes plums slightly more forgiving in practice. The pit toxicity risks across stone fruits follow the same biochemical mechanism regardless of fruit size.
For keepers who enjoy a summer stone-fruit rotation, peaches follow the same prep rule as plums and offer slightly more beta-carotene per serving, making them a natural companion treat to alternate through the week.
The practical upshot: if you are already comfortable preparing peaches or cherries for your flock, plums require no additional knowledge. The prep steps are identical.