Poultry Incubation and Hatching Unit

Poultry incubation and hatching unit

Poultry hatchery unit can be set up for a small unit. Typically, hatchability ranges between 85–90%, though it may vary depending on egg quality and incubation conditions. Fertile eggs will be sourced from nearby breeder farms, stored in a small cold room, and incubated using compact setters and hatchers under controlled temperature and humidity. The required raw materials include hatching eggs, water, electricity, disinfectants, vaccines, paper trays, and chick boxes. Essential equipment includes egg graders (sorting eggs by weight/size), candlers (checks egg quality and fertility using light), setters (first incubation stage-eggs are kept for 18 days), hatchers (final stage where eggs are kept for about 3 days), HVAC (Heating, Ventilation, and Air Conditioning) system, chick boxes, and basic sanitation tools, with machinery costs starting from ₹10–20 lakh and above depending on the capacity, scale and level of automation. The production process involves receiving and disinfecting eggs, storing them at controlled conditions, incubation for 18 days in setters, transfer to hatchers, chick pulling, grading, optional spray vaccination, and dispatch to farmers, followed by thorough cleaning and fumigation. The unit would need about 3,000–5,000 sq ft of built-up space with separate zones for egg storage, incubation, hatching, and chick dispatch to ensure biosecurity. The end product, healthy day-old chicks, can be sold to small poultry farmers, local dealers, and growers in the nearby districts. With relatively modest investment, low manpower and rising poultry demand in the state, a small hatchery offers steady income potential, provided strict hygiene, reliable utilities, and strong customer networks are maintained. Entrepreneurs should also undergo proper training in hatchery operations to ensure consistent performance.