4 Safety Tips for Chicken Heat Lamps - Backyard Poultry (2024)

Avoid Chicken Coop Heating Tragedies with These Tips

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4 Safety Tips for Chicken Heat Lamps - Backyard Poultry (1)

Everyone has seen the 250-watt red heat bulbs. Every feed and hardware store stocks them and many poultry keepers have a chicken heat lamp in their coop. Running an extension cord to the coop and slapping a heat lamp in there is a quick and relatively painless fix for the cold temperatures;however, using a chicken heat lamp introduces combustibles and electrical hazards into the coop, which in turn can cause fires and destroy your flocks (and your home).

Here are four ways to avoid fire hazards in a chicken coop and safely use red heat bulbs.

1. Stay Away From Combustible Fuels

Combustible fuels are everywhere in a coop. The bedding for chickens (when dry) can be a quick igniting and fast burning fuel with an auto-ignition point of only 212ºF. The plywood your coop will also combust when heated beyond 400ºF. Seeing as a heat lamp bulb’s temperature can reach over 480ºF, both of these are a concern. A 24-inch minimum distance is a desirable rule of thumb for bedding, walls, and ceilings. Distance your chicken heat lamp as far away as practical from anything that may melt or catch fire such as chicken nest boxes and chicken feeders.

Electrical hazards are easily avoided but commonly overlooked. Electrical fires are caused by resistance heat or arcing, and I’ll explain what that means to us.

Extension cords are how many of us get power out to our coop since few of us have the luxury of hard-wired power in our barns. If you use an extension cord you should:

2. CheckYour Extension Cord For Damage

Check the cord for cuts, abrasions or pinch marks. Don’t use a damaged cord for anything, period. If buying new, spring for the thicker gauge cable, usually labeled as 12/3 wire. Your typical cheap 16/3 gauge cord tends to be more prone to damage.

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3. Seal Extension Cord Connections

If you must connect multiple cables, be sure to shelter or seal connections. I suggest using 3M brand electrical tape liberally if you need to seal junctures exposed to the weather. Leaving your connections exposed to the weather introduces water to the connection, which will short the circuit and corrode the connectors. If the connection becomes corroded, resistance will cause the connection to create heat and may cause a fire.

4 Safety Tips for Chicken Heat Lamps - Backyard Poultry (2)

4. Use The Right Fixture

Fixtures are not created equal. I’ve unfortunately seen people use lamps known as “painter’s lamps” to install their 250-watt red heat bulb. Painter’s lamps look like a chicken heat lamp, but they’re not. The difference is the fixture (where the bulb screws in). Painter’s lamps are rated to a maximum capacity of 100 watts and are built with plastic housing. Brooder lamps use a porcelain fixture so that the fixture does not melt under the heat of a 250-watt bulb. Using a 250-watt bulb in a 100W rated fixture is a recipe for disaster that may cause the fixture to melt. Fire will shortly ensue.

Brooder lamps are an easy and popular way to heat your coop, but be sure to understand the inherent risks. Be sure your lamp is rated for 250 watts or higher. When used properly and maintained correctly, a brooder lamp will keep your chickens warm and safe through the cold winter nights.

How do you keep your flock warm when Old Man Winterarrives?

Originally published in 2015 and regularly vetted for accuracy.

4 Safety Tips for Chicken Heat Lamps - Backyard Poultry (2024)

FAQs

4 Safety Tips for Chicken Heat Lamps - Backyard Poultry? ›

Don't hang them closer than 12" to bedding.

Allow baby birds/animals space to move away from the lamps. If chicks huddle close together for warmth, then lower the lamp an inch or two.

How to safely use a heat lamp in a chicken coop? ›

Don't hang them closer than 12" to bedding.

Allow baby birds/animals space to move away from the lamps. If chicks huddle close together for warmth, then lower the lamp an inch or two.

How to safely use a heat lamp? ›

If you must use a heat lamp, follow these tips:
  1. Purchase a quality heat lamp. ...
  2. Use high- quality bulbs. ...
  3. Periodically check to make sure that the bulb is tightly secured.
  4. Avoid using bulbs over 250W.
  5. Secure the lamp to a panel using chain or a heat lamp clamp.

How safe are chicken heat lamps? ›

Every year, we hear stories of human and animal deaths due to chicken coops and adjacent buildings burning down as a result of a heat lamp fire. Heat lamps in chicken coops are very dangerous.

What is a heat lamp used for in poultry? ›

Keep chicks and other young poultry warm with heat lamps or heating plates. A multispecies heat lamp—our safer, effective alternative to common metal heat lamps can be used with all types of animals and poultry, large and small.

What should you not do with a heat lamp? ›

Fasten Tightly: The lamp must be securely connected to something that won't easily tip, blow, or fall over. It's not safe if the lamp assembly can easily slip apart on its own, or be knocked over by a person, pet, or the animals you're warming.

How to safely hang a heat lamp? ›

Get precise with height

Commercial heat lamps should be hung at the manufacturer's recommended clearances. This is for safety, but it's also tied to performance. Hang a heat lamp too high above the surface below, and the food you're holding may cool too quickly (or risk dipping into the “danger zone”).

When to use a heat lamp for chickens? ›

4-6 weeks old: Once the chicks are four-week-old chicks, you can start to turn the heat lamp of for short periods of time. Make sure to check on your baby chickens to confirm they are not huddled when the lamp is off.

Are heat lamps safe for birds? ›

Safety Tips

Keep birds and other animals away from cords, switches, heating elements, bulbs and lighting tubes, as electrocution or injury may result from such contact. Hot light bulbs may shatter if spattered by water.

What is safer than a heat lamp? ›

A properly cared for panel heater may last indefinitely. It's the safest option as well, because it doesn't get hot to the touch. It won't burn chicks or their keepers and doesn't present a fire hazard.

Can I leave a heat lamp on all night in my chicken coop? ›

I never use heat lamps and strongly recommend chicken keepers never use them either. The heat lamp clamp is easily knocked free from whatever it is attached to. The wing nut on a heat lamp ordinarily loosens during normal use. This photo shows the inside of the heat lamp where the hangar is attached to the reflector.

Are heat lamps in chicken coops a fire hazard? ›

“There are four top things that can cause a fire in your [chicken] coop,” according to Greg Day, fire inspection supervisor with the Office of the Maine Fire Marshal. “Heat lamps, extension cords, bedding and water heaters.” Of the four, heat lamps can be the most dangerous, Day said.

Is a heat lamp too hot for chickens? ›

A heat lamp with a red, 250 watt bulb is the most commonly used heat source, but it's also the most dangerous, most expensive to power and least healthy option for baby chicks. Heat lamps are the worst idea in the history of chicken care.

Can chickens survive without heat lamp? ›

A heat lamp is easy because you just set it up, turn it on, and walk away. But they don't need it. In fact, the lamps are actually a bit too hot for chicks. Chicks need to be kept at a temperature between 70 and 95 degrees Fahrenheit during their first few weeks of life.

What is a safe alternative to a heat lamp for chickens? ›

You might have seen one of the most common alternatives, a brooder plate, next to the heat lamps at the feed store. There are more and more brooder plates that you see being used. They work well and chicks like them. Most importantly they are safe.

Will a heat lamp help chickens lay eggs? ›

Some flock owners choose to heat their coops with heat lamps in the winter. This is fine, and you will likely get the added bonus of eggs through winter. However, by heating the coop with a heat lamp, you may wish to use a bit more strategy to help avoiding the photorefractory response.

At what temperature do chickens need a heat lamp in their coop? ›

Provide supplemental heat when coop temperatures fall below 35 degrees F. Collect eggs as soon as you can and throw away any with cracked shells. Make sure your chickens have free access to fresh, clean water. Manage manure and provide ventilation to control moisture in your coop.

How far should a heat lamp be away from chickens? ›

The heat lamp should be from 18 to 20 inches above the birds in a cold area and 24 to 27 inches in a warmer area. When a heat lamp is too close to the birds it creates unbearable heat so they move away from the area and become chilled.

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