Chickens

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Compared and Ranked

QUICK ANSWER
The Rhode Island Red and Plymouth Rock are the two most popular American dual-purpose breeds, and both belong in this breed comparison guide for backyard keepers. RIRs push 250-280 eggs per year with an assertive personality that suits experienced keepers.

Plymouth Rocks land at 200-280 eggs, carry heavier frames, and stay calm around children and other birds. Choosing between them comes down to one question: do you want the best egg machine, or the best all-around flock bird?

Best: Rhode Island Red for maximum egg production Budget: Plymouth Rock for family flocks and dual-purpose meat

Both breeds were developed in the 1800s, both carry American class recognition, and both show up in every major hatchery catalog. The similarities end there.

We have kept both breeds side by side, and the differences in personality and flock dynamics are visible within the first week. This breakdown covers every criterion that matters before you order chicks: egg numbers, temperament, meat yield, cold hardiness, appearance, and how each breed performs for first-time keepers.

Trait Rhode Island Red Plymouth Rock
Eggs per year 250-280 (production strain) 200-280
Egg color Large brown Large brown
Hen weight 6.5-7.5 lbs 7.5-8.5 lbs
Rooster weight 8.0-8.5 lbs 9.0-9.5 lbs
Temperament Assertive, can be aggressive Calm, docile, family-friendly
Cold hardiness Excellent Excellent
Meat quality Good (lighter frame) Better (heavier frame)
Foraging ability Excellent Excellent
Good with children Moderate Yes
Broodiness Low (production strain) Moderate
APA recognized Yes (1904) Yes (1869)
Hatchery availability Universal Universal

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Egg Production Numbers

The Rhode Island Red wins on raw egg count. A production-strain RIR delivers 250-280 large brown eggs per year, with peak layers hitting close to five to six eggs per week in the first two years.

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Plymouth Rocks overlap at the top end of their range, but their average sits lower. Most Rocks land at 220-250 eggs in year one before settling into the 200-220 range by year three.

  • RIR production-strain hens: 250-280 eggs per year at peak
  • RIR heritage-strain hens: 200-250 eggs per year with heavier broodiness
  • Plymouth Rock hens: 200-280 eggs per year, with most averaging 230-250
  • Both breeds begin laying at 18-20 weeks of age
  • Both produce large to extra-large brown eggs with dense shells

The gap narrows when you factor in broodiness. Production-strain RIRs rarely go broody, which keeps their annual egg count high.

Rocks go broody two to three times per season, and each broody stretch pulls three to four weeks of eggs off the total.

For keepers who want hard numbers on how these breeds rank across the full field, our on top egg-laying breeds covers output by strain, age, and season.

CARE TIP
If maximum eggs are your goal, order production-strain RIRs from a commercial hatchery, not a heritage breeder. Production birds are lighter, less colorful, and more assertive than heritage birds, but they reliably hit the upper end of the egg count range.

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Temperament and Flock Dynamics

This is the clearest difference between the two breeds, and it matters more than egg numbers for most backyard flocks.

Plymouth Rocks are calm, approachable birds that tolerate handling and rarely challenge other flock members. Hens settle into a stable pecking order without prolonged fighting.

Roosters are assertive but manageable and rarely escalate to aggression toward keepers.

Rhode Island Reds are a different proposition. Production-strain hens are assertive and will establish dominance aggressively in mixed flocks.

Roosters can be territorial toward humans, especially in the presence of hens. Heritage-strain RIRs are calmer, but still more assertive than Rocks across the board.

RIRs are confident, active birds that do not tolerate submissive flockmates well. In a mixed flock, they tend to take the top positions in the pecking order, sometimes at the expense of quieter breeds.

  • Production hens: assertive, may bully smaller or docile breeds
  • Heritage hens: calmer, better suited to mixed flocks
  • Roosters: can be aggressive toward keepers, especially during breeding season
  • Children: manageable with supervision, not ideal for young children
  • Response to handling: tolerates it once established, not a lap bird

Plymouth Rocks are consistently ranked among the most docile of the dual-purpose American breeds. Hens are curious without being aggressive, and they accept new flock members with less fighting than most breeds.

  • Hens: calm, steady, rarely challenge new birds introduced to the flock
  • Roosters: assertive but not typically aggressive toward keepers
  • Children: reliable and safe with supervision, one of the better family breeds
  • Response to handling: adapts quickly, often becomes hand-tame with regular contact
  • Mixed flocks: blends well with most breeds including docile varieties

WARNING
Rhode Island Red roosters have a documented history of aggression toward keepers, particularly children. If you plan to keep a rooster in a family flock with young children present, a Plymouth Rock rooster is the safer choice.

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Cold Hardiness and Climate Tolerance

Both breeds handle cold climates without supplemental heat in all but the most extreme northern winters. Their body mass, dense feathering, and compact single combs reduce frostbite risk compared to Mediterranean breeds.

Neither breed requires a heated coop in USDA zones 4 through 9. Below zone 4, any breed benefits from a well-insulated coop with adequate ventilation, but neither the RIR nor the Rock needs active heat to survive.

  • Both breeds handle temperatures down to -10°F without health issues in dry, ventilated housing
  • Single combs on both breeds carry some frostbite risk at extreme cold; apply petroleum jelly to comb tips when temperatures drop below 15°F
  • Plymouth Rocks carry more body mass, which provides additional insulation in cold weather
  • Both breeds are heat tolerant but benefit from shade, airflow, and cool water access above 90°F

Heat tolerance is adequate for both, though neither is a hot-climate specialist. In the deep South, Leghorns and and Mediterranean breeds will outperform both during summer, but RIRs and Rocks are not poor heat performers.

If single-comb frostbite risk is a genuine concern for your climate, Wyandottes are the rose-comb alternative that matches both RIRs and Rocks on egg output and dual-purpose body weight. Our Wyandotte breed guide covers their production numbers and temperament so you can compare them directly against these two breeds before ordering chicks.

Cold-weather management for single-comb breeds like both the RIR and Plymouth Rock requires petroleum jelly on combs and wide roost bars to protect toes. Our winter chicken care guide covers every cold-weather adjustment that applies to both breeds, from deep litter bedding through frost-proof watering systems.

They need shade and hydration management at high temperatures, the same as any dual-purpose breed.

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Meat Production and Dual-Purpose Value

If you are raising birds for both eggs and table meat, Plymouth Rocks carry a meaningful size advantage. Hens dress out at 5.5-6.5 pounds and roosters at 7.0-8.0 pounds of usable meat.

The frame is broader and meatier than the RIR.

Rhode Island Reds are respectable dual-purpose birds but were optimized for eggs more than meat. Dressed hens come out lighter, and the meat on production-strain birds is leaner with less breast development than a Rock or a dedicated meat breed.

Our dual-purpose breed picks cover the full ranking if you want to compare both breeds against Orpingtons, Wyandottes, and Australorps on combined egg-plus-meat value.

Both breeds are similar in size and consume roughly the same amount of feed per bird per day, but production-strain RIRs convert feed to eggs more efficiently than Rocks during peak lay. Our chicken feed guide covers the protein and calcium levels each breed needs at each life stage, which matters most when you are managing a mixed flock of both.

✓ PROS
✗ CONS
✓ PROS
✗ CONS

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Appearance

The two breeds are easy to tell apart at a distance. Rhode Island Reds carry deep mahogany-red plumage that shows a green iridescence in direct sunlight.

The body is rectangular and moderately sized, with a single red comb and yellow legs.

Plymouth Rocks in the Barred variety, the most common, wear alternating black and white bars across every feather. The pattern is sharp and runs parallel to the feather shaft.

Other Rock varieties include White, Buff, Blue, and Partridge, but Barred is what you will find at most hatcheries.

  • RIR plumage: deep mahogany red to brick red depending on strain; heritage birds are darker
  • Rock plumage: crisp black-and-white barring (Barred variety) or solid color in other varieties
  • Both breeds: single comb, red earlobes, yellow shanks, yellow skin
  • RIR body shape: rectangular, lean, medium frame
  • Rock body shape: broad, rounded, heavier and deeper-chested

The Barred Plymouth Rock's sex-linked barring pattern makes day-old chick sexing more reliable than with RIRs. Male Rock chicks hatch with a larger white head spot than females, which experienced hatchery staff use for early sexing.

RIR chick sexing relies on vent sexing at the same accuracy rates as most breeds.

Rhode Island Red vs Plymouth Rock: Beginner Suitability

Plymouth Rocks are the better first breed for most beginners Their. Their calm temperament reduces the risk of injury from pecking during handling, makes coop management less stressful, and creates a better experience for children involved in flock care.

Rhode Island Reds are not a bad beginner choice, but production-strain birds in particular require keepers who understand flock hierarchy and are not caught off guard by assertive behavior. An experienced keeper can manage RIRs without difficulty.

A first-time keeper with young children and a mixed flock may find them frustrating.

For a broader look at which breeds suit new keepers across multiple criteria, see our breed comparison guide covering temperament, care requirements, and flock compatibility.

  • Plymouth Rock: highly recommended for beginners, family flocks, and children
  • Rhode Island Red: suitable for beginners focused on egg production who do not keep mixed docile flocks
  • Both breeds: available at every major hatchery, require standard coop setup, and tolerate beginner management mistakes better than Mediterranean breeds

Both breeds need the same standard coop setup: 4 square feet of indoor space per bird, 2-inch wide roost bars, and nest boxes at one per four hens. Our coop setup guide covers ventilation, predator-proofing, and nest box placement so your build works for either breed from day one.

A flock of six Rhode Island Reds or Plymouth Rocks needs a minimum 60 square feet of outdoor run space. Our run size calculator gives you the exact dimensions for any flock count so you can confirm your existing run meets the minimum or plan an expansion before birds arrive.

Rhode Island Reds from production strains lay 250-280 eggs per year on average, placing them above most Plymouth Rocks at 200-280. The gap between the two depends heavily on strain. A production-strain RIR consistently outperforms a standard hatchery Rock by 20-40 eggs per year. Heritage-strain RIRs and top Rock producers overlap in the 220-260 range.
Yes, they can coexist, but watch the flock closely during the first two weeks. Production-strain RIR hens are assertive and will establish themselves at the top of the pecking order, which can stress Rock hens in tight coop conditions. Give both breeds adequate space at 4 square feet per bird inside the coop and 10 square feet per bird in the run, and the social friction usually settles within two weeks.
Plymouth Rocks are the clear choice for families with young children. Hens tolerate handling without pecking, and Barred Rock roosters are less likely to charge children than RIR roosters. This does not mean Rocks are completely safe around children, as any rooster can become aggressive during breeding season, but the temperament difference is consistent and well-documented across flock keepers.
Plymouth Rocks produce better dressed carcasses. Their broader frame, deeper chest, and higher live weight (7.5-9.5 lbs compared to 6.5-8.5 lbs for RIRs) translate to more meat per bird. Neither breed competes with Cornish Cross on meat yield or growth speed, but as dual-purpose birds, Rocks are the better table bird of the two.
Plymouth Rocks go broody more often. Most Rock hens go broody two to three times per season, while production-strain RIR hens rarely go broody at all. If you want to hatch chicks naturally, a Rock hen is a more reliable sitter. If you want uninterrupted egg production, a production-strain RIR is the better option. Heritage-strain RIRs sit between the two on broodiness frequency.
SOURCES & REFERENCES

1.
American Poultry Association Standard of Perfection
American Poultry Association, 2020 Edition Organization

2.
The American Standard of Perfection
American Poultry Association, 2015 Organization

3.
Breed comparison performance data for dual-purpose chickens
Poultry Science, Vol. 98, 2019 Journal

4.
Storey's Guide to Raising Chickens, 4th edition
Damerow, Storey Publishing, 2012 Organization

5.
Heritage breed selection for small-scale poultry production
Penn State Extension University

6.
Selecting Chickens for the Small Farm, Publication ASC-198
University of Kentucky College of Agriculture, UK Cooperative Extension Service, 2020 University

THE BOTTOM LINE

Rhode Island Reds win on egg production. If you want the highest egg count from a heritage dual-purpose breed and you are an experienced keeper comfortable with assertive birds, the production-strain RIR delivers 250-280 eggs per year with minimal broodiness interruptions.

Plymouth Rocks win on everything else.

Better temperament, safer with children, heavier carcass weight, and easier flock integration make them the more practical choice for most backyard keepers.

Their egg count is not far behind, and the calm disposition makes daily flock management noticeably easier.

For a pure egg operation with experienced keepers, choose the RIR. For a family flock, a mixed breed setup, or a first flock, choose the Plymouth Rock.

Both breeds are available at every major hatchery, require identical coop setups, and will perform reliably for three to five years of productive laying.

Read our full RIR full guide and Rock full guide for detailed care requirements, feeding schedules, and health management for each breed.