Chicken Sitter Checklist
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A complete guide to leaving your flock with a chicken sitter
Your vacation is booked, and your luggage is packed. But what about the chickens? Who is going to look after them? Read below to find out all you need to know about hiring a chicken sitter so you can relax and enjoy your vacation worry free!

Adult chickens don't need a lot of supervision. You can leave them for a few days, provided they have plenty of food, water, and outdoor access, so they don't get bored (or overheated in a closed coop!) A chicken sitter is needed if you will be away from your home for more than a few days. At a minimum, it's recommended to have someone who will check on the flock just to ensure they don't knock over their waterers, for example. Or to ensure someone is around in case of an injury or emergency.
What to look for in a chicken sitter
Ideally, it would be great to find a chicken sitter with prior experience being a chicken babysitter or someone who owns a flock of their own. If that isn't possible, consider someone who is at least comfortable with chickens. Invite them to meet your flock and determine if they are someone you can trust to be reliable and follow your directions to ensure the safety of your flock. Make arrangements for pay or compensation ahead of time, so there are no surprises about expectations.
How to find a chicken sitter?
- Check with neighbors or family, or friends that live nearby.
- Consider hiring a local pet service.
- Call your local veterinarian and ask if they have any pet sitter recommendations.
- Call your local 4-H club and ask if any local members are interested in pet sitting.
What instructions should I leave for my chicken babysitter?
Be sure to share detailed instructions with your chicken sitter, so they know what to expect.
- Water - Ask your chicken sitter to check daily to ensure the water has not been knocked over. Refresh daily or as needed. Let your sitter know where the hose is located or which sink to use if you give them house access.
- Feed - Have your chicken sitter check the feed daily to ensure that they have enough. Be sure to have plenty of feed to last for the entire time you are away. If you usually store your feed in a garage or shed, ensure your chicken sitter has access.
- Treats - Don't forget the treats! Treats can be an excellent way for your pet sitter to win over the affection of your chicken flock.
- Egg collecting - Leave your sitter empty egg cartons or a basket and instruct them to gather the eggs at least once daily. As an extra bonus, offer to let your sitter keep the eggs that they collect!
- Review chicken behavior - If your chicken sitter is new to chicken sitting, warn them about some chicken behaviors. Always warn them about a broody hen and her antics. You may even want to offer your sitter a pair of garden gloves for protection when collecting the eggs. Ask them to make sure the broody hens drink and eat. You might also warn them about sunbathing, and dust bathing, which could also fool a person inexperienced with chickens into thinking something is wrong.
- Practice good biosecurity - Remind your sitter, before and after working with your birds, to wash their hands with soap and water, preferably followed by a disinfectant. Ask your chicken sitter to dedicate a particular pair of shoes when at your coop or clean their shoes with disinfectant before and after working with your flock. Following these best practices will help protect your flock from HPAI and other illnesses.
What your chicken babysitter should do in an unexpected situation
- Have an emergency plan - If a chicken should get injured somehow, even if it's not bad, instruct your chicken sitter to separate her from the rest of the flock. Provide a safe place for your sitter to separate the hen, such as a second coop or a dog crate. Whatever you use, be sure it protects your injured hen from predators and weather elements.
- Contact info - Leave your chicken sitter your contact info and the contact info of your Veterinarian. Consider leaving them a contact of a person close by who can come and help in an emergency.
What do you tell your chicken sitters? Have you ever forgotten something important? Have you added tasks to your list after a bad experience? Please tell us in the comments, so we can help other chicken sitters!




4 comments
In warmer weather, I always leave 2 water sources- 1 in the coop and 1 in the run. In the summer, I prop the door up so it cannot accidentally close and lock them inside/outside. I cover most of the run with a tarp to provide as much shade a possible. My chicken run also includes the area underneath the coop, which is cooler.
In the winter, around the holidays, I move my small flock into my walk-out basement. I put chicken wire in front of the glass door, prop a dog crate on a table, use an outdoor coffee table as a roost, put some bedding on the floor, put the waterer on an upside-down dog bowl, hang a feeder from the ceiling, and pray the rooster sleeps in. I used to schedule my life around the coop door. Not anymore. Since chicken feed attracts rats, I do not move them inside until necessary. I move them out as soon as I can, and I only give them kitchen scraps in the morning so they aren’t sitting around.
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My Pet Chicken replied:
Thank you so much for sharing your setup and routine. It is clear you have put a lot of thought into keeping your flock comfortable and safe in every season.
We especially appreciate your approach to summer care with multiple water sources and added shade, as well as making sure the coop door cannot accidentally close. Those are great practical tips that can make a big difference, especially for a chicken sitter who may be less familiar with daily flock habits.
Your winter setup is also very creative and resourceful. Having a plan for extreme weather is so important, and it sounds like you have found a system that works well when conditions require it. We also understand the balance you mentioned with feed and pests. That is something many flock owners navigate, and your routine is a helpful example.
Thank you again for contributing such thoughtful insights. Experiences like yours are incredibly valuable to others in the community.
This is very timely! I’m planning to leave my 2-month-old chicks for a week. I’m looking into making a 5-gallon waterer that has piping (PEX tubing or silicon tubing) staight from the bucket into the coop, and a cup or nipple for the hens to drink from. This will reduce the risk of water issues, and will also be easier to fill, since my sitter won’t have to enter the coop. I’ve also looked at plans to build a gravity feeder out of 5" pipe that will hold 3 to 4 days of feed.
Hopefully these will work as planned, and allow my sitter to maintain them with minimal risk of chicks escaping and take the possibility of something like them forgetting to latch the door out of the equation!
Great tips! We use a pet sitter from our local Camp Bow Wow, Pet Buddies! It costs, but better than losing a sweet chickey pet! Another tip: if your coop isn’t automated. Have the pet sitter come early morning to let them out of the secure coop and at evening to close the coop securely. Also to count the hens each time! Stuff happens.
I have 2 seperate coops with runs. One with my Silkies and the other with my “Big Girls”. Lakenvelders and sexlink Layers. I “color code” step by step directions per pen then, using my computer and printer, print large “matching color” labels to make it easier for sitter. I even label the barrels of feed with color. Example: “SILKIES” is printed in huge pink font and ""BIG GIRLS" taped to their feed barrels. I also give a natural wormer and “Kickin Chicken” so I write the amount to mix in feed each day directly on packaging/bottle with a black sharpie so it is easily read. My number is also listed on Care Sheet. Any tools needed for any quick clean up(rake, shovel, disinfectant, Healthy Pen) is hanging right on coop and marked to make it easier for them. Hope that helps!