Menu
Open the App →
HomePoultry › Chicken & Duck Breeds
Interactive breed picker

Chicken and Duck Breeds: Find the Right Bird for Your Backyard

Several backyard chicken breeds in a garden run

Twenty chicken breeds and four ducks, filtered by what you actually want: eggs, meat, a dual-purpose all-rounder, a calm family pet, or a bird that copes with your climate.

Open the breed picker Quick best-for picks

Start with your goal, not the breed

Every breed is a trade-off. The fastest way to a flock you are happy with is to decide what matters most, then shortlist from there. Most backyard keepers want one of these five things.

Eggs

Most eggs for your feed. Lean Mediterranean and hybrid layers like Leghorns and ISA Browns lead, but they live shorter, busier lives.

Meat

Fast growth and a good carcass. Heavy breeds and crosses suit this, though most home flocks pick dual-purpose instead.

Dual purpose

A fair number of eggs plus a decent table bird. Australorps, Sussex, Wyandottes and Plymouth Rocks are the classic all-rounders.

Pets and family

Calm, friendly, good with kids. Silkies, Orpingtons, Pekins and Brahmas are gentle and tolerate handling well.

Climate hardiness

Birds that shrug off your weather. Lean breeds with big combs handle heat; heavy, feather-footed breeds handle cold.

The breed picker

Filter by purpose, temperament and climate. Egg numbers are realistic first-to-second-year ranges. Every breed lays less as it ages. Nothing is saved, and it works offline.

BreedPurposeEggs/yearEgg colourTemperamentClimate notes

Quick best-for picks

Best for beginners

Australorp. Hardy, friendly, lays well and forgives mistakes. ISA Brown and Sussex are close behind.

Best for eggs

ISA Brown or Leghorn for sheer numbers. Australorp if you want eggs plus a longer-lived, calmer bird.

Best for cold

Orpington, Wyandotte and Brahma. Heavy, well-feathered birds with small combs that resist frostbite.

Best for kids

Silkie and Pekin (bantam). Small, docile and happy to be held. Orpingtons are a larger gentle option.

Best for heat

Leghorn and Australorp. Lean bodies and large combs shed warmth well in hot Australian summers.

Best for coloured eggs

Easter Egger and Araucana for blue and green, Olive Egger for olive. A pretty egg basket without losing many eggs.

Track your real flock, breed by breed

Once your birds arrive, the free Planting Season app and its Poultry and Flock tracker let you log each bird, its breed, and the eggs it lays, so you learn what actually performs in your yard rather than relying on averages. It tracks chickens, ducks and quail together.

Questions people ask

What is the best chicken breed for beginners?

Australorps, ISA Browns, Orpingtons and Sussex are all forgiving first birds. They are calm, hardy and lay well. ISA Browns are the most productive layers but live shorter lives, while Australorps are friendly dual-purpose birds well suited to the Australian climate.

Which chicken breed lays the most eggs?

ISA Browns and Leghorns lead for sheer numbers, roughly 280 to 320 eggs a year in their first year or two. Australorps are not far behind at about 250 to 300. Egg numbers fall in later years for every breed, so do not expect peak laying forever.

Do I need a rooster for hens to lay eggs?

No. Hens lay eggs with or without a rooster. You only need a rooster if you want fertilised eggs to hatch chicks. Many councils restrict or ban roosters because of the noise, so most backyard flocks are hens only.

What chicken breeds lay coloured eggs?

Araucanas and Easter Eggers lay blue or green eggs, Olive Eggers lay olive-green, and Marans lay dark brown. Most everyday layers like ISA Browns lay brown, while Leghorns lay white. Egg colour does not change the taste or nutrition.

Which breeds handle Australian heat best?

Leghorns, Australorps, Andalusians and lighter Mediterranean breeds cope better in heat because of their lean bodies and large combs that shed warmth. Heavy, fluffy breeds like Orpingtons, Brahmas and Silkies struggle in hot, humid conditions and need shade and cool water.

Are ducks easier than chickens?

Ducks are about as easy as chickens and lay more reliably through winter, but they need water to dunk their heads and they make mud. Khaki Campbells and Indian Runners are top layers, Pekins are friendly and good for meat, and Muscovies are quiet and hardy.

Pick a breed, then track the flock

Log each bird and its eggs in the free Poultry module and learn what really lays in your yard.

Start for free 🌱 Backyard poultry guide