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Finding the Right Balance: What Makes Indigenous Chickens Worth More?

Ethiopia, Shambu, Fincha, Shagar CityTuesday, June 30, 2026

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The Profit Paradox in Backyard Chicken Farming:

Why Smarter Chicken Raising Could Make or Break a Farm


From Pets to Profit: The Dual Role of Backyard Chickens

For many small-scale farmers, backyard chickens aren’t just companions—they’re primary income sources. But which chicken-raising methods actually turn a profit? A groundbreaking study in Ethiopia set out to answer this by dissecting the economics of poultry farming, blending hard numbers with real-world challenges.

Researchers dove deep, surveying local farmers and analyzing everything from genetic traits to feed expenses. Their focus? Comparing two dominant systems:

  • Free-range: Chickens roam freely, with minimal supervision.
  • Semi-intensive: A balanced approach—more control, but still natural conditions.

The Cold, Hard Numbers: Which System Wins?

The results were stark. Semi-intensive farming dwarfed free-range profits:

  • 100-bird flock, free-range: ~$1,700 total income
  • 100-bird flock, semi-intensive: $9,000+ total income

But here’s the unsustainable truth: Feed costs are eating profits alive.

System Feed Cost (100 birds) Total Income Net Profit (approx.)
Free-range ~$2,700 ~$1,700 -$1,000
Semi-intensive ~$18,000 ~$9,000 -$9,000

Even after factoring in housing and labor, feed expenses devour 50%+ of revenue in both systems. A brutal catch-22: You need feed to make money, but feed costs more than the money you make.


Chickens vs. Eggs: The Unexpected Revenue Engine

Here’s the twist—eggs weren’t the moneymaker. Instead, farmers earned big from selling:

Top Income Sources (Per 100 Birds)

  1. Surplus female chicks (pullets)
    • Free-range: +$5,700
    • Semi-intensive: +$8,000+
  2. Male chicks (cockerels)
    • Sold before they eat into feed costs.
  3. Eggs – A tiny fraction of total profit.

The Bottom Line: Farmers Need a Multi-Goal Strategy

This study exposes a harsh truth: There’s no silver bullet. Profitable chicken farming demands: ✔ The right genetics (high eggs + fast growth, without sacrificing survival). ✔ A smarter system (semi-intensive edges out free-range—but only with disciplined management). ✔ A brutal battle against feed costs (innovation in nutrition is non-negotiable).

For small farmers, the question isn’t just how to raise chickens—it’s how to outsmart the economics of feeding them.


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