Standard birds need 4 sq ft indoors and 10 sq ft in the run. Bantams need 2 sq ft indoors and 8 sq ft outdoors.
These are minimums. More space solves problems before they start.
Getting space right before you build saves money, reduces disease pressure, and keeps behavior problems from developing. Getting it wrong means tearing down and rebuilding, or watching your flock stress-pick each other apart.
We have built and torn apart enough runs to know exactly where keepers underestimate. This guide walks through the full calculation: indoor coop space, outdoor run space, free-range recommendations, breed-specific adjustments, and the warning signs that tell you your current setup is already too tight.
Chicken Run Size Calculator: Square Footage by Flock Size
Use this table to find your coop and run minimums based on flock size. All figures use the standard 4 sq ft indoor / 10 sq ft outdoor formula for standard-sized breeds.
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Add 25-30% to every number if your birds are confined full-time with no free-range access, or if you keep large breeds such as Brahmas or Jersey Giants.
| Flock Size | Indoor Coop (sq ft) | Outdoor Run (sq ft) | Run Example |
|---|---|---|---|
| 4 birds | 16 | 40 | 5 x 8 ft |
| 6 birds | 24 | 60 | 6 x 10 ft |
| 8 birds | 32 | 80 | 8 x 10 ft |
| 10 birds | 40 | 100 | 10 x 10 ft |
| 12 birds | 48 | 120 | 10 x 12 ft |
| 16 birds | 64 | 160 | 10 x 16 ft |
| 20 birds | 80 | 200 | 10 x 20 ft |
These numbers assume confined birds with run access only. Birds that free-range for at least 4 hours per day tolerate slightly tighter indoor and run space, but we still recommend hitting the minimums above as their nighttime and weather shelter.
Indoor Coop Run Space: How to Calculate for Your Breed Mix
The 4 sq ft per bird rule applies to standard dual-purpose breeds: Rhode Island Island Reds, Plymouth Rocks, Australorps, Orpingtons, Wyandottes. It is not a universal figure that scales down for small breeds or holds for very large ones.
If you keep a mixed flock, calculate each group separately at their breed-appropriate rate, then add the totals together.
Wyandottes are one of the most popular standard dual-purpose breeds for cold climates, and their rose comb changes nothing about their space requirements. Our Wyandotte breed guide covers how their heavier frame affects feeder placement and roost bar spacing compared to lighter breeds.
- Standard breeds (under 7 lbs): 4 sq ft indoor, 10 sq ft outdoor run
- Large breeds (Brahma, Jersey Giant, Cochin): 5-6 sq ft indoor, 12-15 sq ft outdoor
- Bantam breeds (Silkie, Polish, Sebright): 2 sq ft indoor, 8 sq ft outdoor
- Meat breeds (Cornish Cross): 4 sq ft indoor, 10 sq ft, but high stocking density worsens leg problems
Roost bar space matters as much as floor space. Plan 8-10 linear inches of roost bar per standard bird and 6 inches per bantam.
If birds cannot all roost comfortably at the same time, nighttime crowding generates heat, stress, and respiratory disease regardless of how large your floor area is.
Outdoor Run Space Requirements: Covered vs. Open Runs
Ten square feet per standard bird is the outdoor run minimum for a fully confined flock. That number assumes birds spend most daylight hours in the run.
If your run is small, a covered design that extends usable square footage vertically (perches, ramps, raised platforms) reduces some of the pressure but does not replace floor area.
A covered run matters beyond just space. It prevents aerial predator access from hawks and owls, keeps the run floor drier in rain, and allows year-round use without weather disruption to the flock's routine.
Run floor management in winter is harder than in summer because moisture from rain and snow compounds with manure to create conditions that promote respiratory disease. Our winter chicken care guide covers deep litter management and drainage strategies that keep run floors dry through the coldest months.
| Run Type | Min sq ft per Bird | Aerial Predator Protection | Weather Impact on Floor |
|---|---|---|---|
| Open (no roof) | 10 | None | High: mud and wet bedding after rain |
| Partially covered | 10 | Partial | Moderate: dry zone under cover |
| Fully covered | 10 | Full | Low: floor stays manageable year-round |
Run height should be at least 6 feet if you plan to walk in for cleaning and egg collection. Shorter runs work structurally but turn daily care into a constant crouch that most keepers eventually resent enough to skip.
For run floor management, sand, pea gravel, or deep mulch (the deep litter method) all outperform bare dirt or straw. Bare dirt compacts, retains moisture, and becomes a bacteria-rich mud pit within a few weeks of regular chicken traffic.
Free-Range Space: What "Free-Range" Actually Means for Run Size Planning
True free-range means 250 or more square feet per bird of accessible pasture or yard. At that density, birds spread out naturally, forage actively, and rarely develop the behavioral problems common in confined flocks.
Most backyard keepers do not have 250 sq ft per bird of fenced yard. That is fine.
Free-ranging birds that cover more ground also need more calories than confined flocks. Our chicken feed guide covers how to adjust feed access and protein levels for birds that supplement their diet through foraging versus birds that depend entirely on what you provide.
Supervised free-range time for a few hours daily, combined with a properly sized run, gives most flocks enough space to stay behaviorally healthy.
- 4 hours of free-range time per day reduces foraging pressure on run space
- Rotating pasture sections prevents soil depletion and parasite buildup
- Electric poultry netting is the most flexible solution for managed free-range access
- Birds that free-range still need a coop and run that meet minimum indoor/outdoor sq ft requirements
Free-range access is not a substitute for a properly sized run. If your run is undersized, birds still spend nights, rainy days, and cold days crammed into inadequate space.
The behavioral and health consequences accumulate even when daytime range access is available.
Large Breed Run Space: Brahmas, Jersey Giants, and Heavy Dual-Purpose Birds
Large breeds need more space per bird than the standard formula provides. A Brahma rooster weighs 10-12 pounds.
A large breed spacing guide shows how their bulk changes every calculation: roost height, nest box size, run square footage, and feeder clearance.
For birds over 8 pounds, use these adjusted figures:
- Indoor coop space: 5-6 sq ft per bird (not 4)
- Outdoor run space: 12-15 sq ft per bird (not 10)
- Roost height: 12-18 inches from the floor (lower than standard) to prevent leg injuries on dismount
- Roost bar width: 3-4 inches flat surface to support heavier bodies overnight
Jersey Giants follow the same adjustments as Brahmas. Cochins and Orpingtons fall fall between standard and large breed requirements: 4-5 sq ft indoors and 10-12 sq ft outdoors covers them adequately.
If you are choosing large breeds specifically for dual-purpose meat and egg production, space planning matters before you commit to a breed. Our dual-purpose chicken guide ranks the top breeds by body weight and egg output so you can match your run dimensions to the birds you actually want to keep.
In climates with extreme summers, heat-tolerant breeds require the same minimum run space but benefit from shaded run sections and covered areas that reduce ground temperature. Our hot-climate breed guide covers which breeds need the least intervention when your run has limited shade.
Bantam Run Space: Silkies and Small Breeds Need Less Floor, Not Less Attention
Bantam breeds like the Silkie require only 2 sq ft of indoor coop space and 8 sq ft of outdoor run per bird. Those numbers make bantam keeping look straightforward from a space standpoint, and they are.
The catch is that bantams are not simply smaller versions of standard chickens with proportionally smaller needs in every area.
Bantams are more vulnerable to aerial predators than standard birds. Their smaller size makes them targets for hawks, owls, and even crows that would not bother a full-sized hen.
A covered run matters more for bantam flocks than for standard flocks, not less.
- Bantam indoor minimum: 2 sq ft per bird
- Bantam outdoor run minimum: 8 sq ft per bird
- Covered run: strongly recommended given predator vulnerability
- Roost bars: 6 linear inches per bantam bird
- Nest boxes: 10x10 inches is adequate (standard 12x12 works fine too)
Mixed bantam and standard flocks create sizing complexity. Standard hens often bully bantams at feeders, waterers, and roosts.
If you keep both, size your run for the standard birds and watch for social exclusion of the smaller ones.
Signs of Overcrowding in the Chicken Run: What to Watch For
Overcrowding does not announce itself immediately. It accumulates over weeks as stress rises, immune function drops, and behavioral problems escalate.
Knowing the early warning signs lets you act before you are dealing with a full outbreak of feather picking or disease.
Check your flock weekly for these indicators. Any single sign warrants investigation.
Two or more signs together mean your run size is actively harming your flock.
- Feather picking and bare spots: The first behavioral sign. Boredom and crowding cause birds to peck at each other's feathers, usually starting at the back and tail.
- Increased aggression: More chasing, displacement from feeders, and roost fights than usual indicate resource competition from too-tight space.
- Dirty or cracked eggs: Overcrowded nest boxes cause hens to lay on the floor or in soiled nests, damaging egg cleanliness and shell integrity.
- Ammonia smell in the coop: Dense manure accumulation from too many birds in too little space creates ammonia buildup that damages respiratory tissue and suppresses immunity.
- Reduced laying rate: Stress from crowding suppresses laying hormones. A flock that was producing well and suddenly drops output without seasonal explanation is worth checking for space issues.
- Respiratory symptoms spreading fast: Crowded flocks are epidemiologically different from properly spaced ones. Pathogens transmit faster, and birds' immune function is already suppressed by chronic stress.
If you see these signs and cannot expand your current run, rotate birds out to a temporary grazing area, reduce flock size, or add a run extension before the behavior becomes entrenched. Feather picking that goes uncorrected becomes a learned habit that persists even after space is fixed.
Cold-hardy breeds tend to be heavier and need more roost bar space per bird than lighter Mediterranean breeds. Our cold-hardy breed guide covers the body sizes of the top winter breeds so you can size your roost and run correctly before building.
If you plan to hatch your own replacements and grow the flock over time, factor in brooder space and a transition run for young birds. Our egg incubation guide covers the brooder setup and timeline so you know how much temporary space chicks need before they move into the main run.
If you are planning a new setup from scratch, the full coop build guide covers materials, construction steps, ventilation, and the predator-proofing details that go beyond run sizing. If you are choosing your first breed and not yet sure how many birds you want to keep, the starter flock size guide helps you pick breeds and quantities that match your space before you commit.
Bantams need 2 and 8. Every keeper who follows these figures before building avoids the most common and expensive problems in backyard chicken keeping.
Feather picking, aggression, dirty eggs, and fast-spreading respiratory infections all trace back to crowding. Build to the minimum, add buffer where you can, and your flock stays calmer, healthier, and more productive without any other intervention required.