Many people often ask me, โCan I start poultry farming with just 50 layers and make money?โ
The honest answer is: yes, you can start โ but making real profit is another story. Let me break it down in simple terms, based on real numbers and everyday farm realities here in Uganda.
Feed Costs vs Egg Sales
A mature layer eats about 120 grams of feed per day.
For 50 birds, this comes to roughly 270,000 shillings per month spent on feed alone.
At the farm gate, a tray of eggs sells at about 11,000 shillings.
On a good day, 50 layers can give you around 40 eggs, which translates to about 40 trays in a month.
That brings in roughly 440,000 shillings per month.
If you subtract the feed cost from the egg sales, youโre left with about 170,000 shillings.
At first glance, that looks like profit โ but thatโs only part of the story.
The Hidden Costs Farmers Often Forget
Poultry farming is not just about feed and eggs. There are many other costs that quietly eat into your money.
Medicine and vaccines:
Birds must be vaccinated and dewormed regularly. Skipping this is not an option.
Water and electricity:
Eggs are made up of about 74% to 77% water, so clean water must be available at all times.
Layers also need about 16 hours of light daily for proper egg formation, which means electricity costs.
Wood shavings or bedding:
If youโre using a deep litter system, bedding needs to be changed regularly, especially on cement floors.
Egg breakages:
In deep litter systems, some eggs will break. Sometimes birds even eat the eggs. This reduces what you sell.
Mortality:
Chickens are living things. Some will die, and every loss reduces your production and income.
All these small costs add up. On average, they can easily take another 50,000 shillings or more every month.
What About Your Own Labor?
This is where many farmers lie to themselves.
After removing hidden costs from the 170,000 shillings, you remain with about 120,000 shillings.
Now ask yourself honestly:
You wake up early, clean the house, feed birds, collect eggs, manage diseases, and look for buyers.
Shouldnโt you pay yourself?
Considering that the minimum wage in Uganda is around UGX 130,000/month, farming 50 layers doesnโt even pay for your own labor. In simple terms, youโre working, but not earning properly.
The Brutal Truth
The truth is this:
50 birds is the hardest number to work with.
Too many to treat as a hobby
Too few to run as a serious business
Thatโs why many small poultry farmers feel frustrated and give up.
So Whatโs the Solution?
There are two clear ways to make poultry farming profitable:
- Scale Up
When you keep 300โ500 birds or more, things start to change.
You can buy feed in bulk and negotiate better prices.
The labor needed for 50 birds is almost the same as for 300 birds, so your effort pays better.
Bigger numbers reduce cost per bird and increase overall profit.
- Target Premium or Bulk Buyers
With more birds, you can supply:
Schools
Hotels
Restaurants
Traders who buy in bulk
Selling in bulk gives you assured buyers, repeat customers, and sometimes lump-sum cash, which helps you reinvest faster.
Final Thoughts
Starting with 50 layers is not wrong โ it can help you learn.
But if your goal is real income, not just activity, then you must either scale up or sell smarter.
Poultry farming is a business. And like any business, numbers donโt lie.
Letโs keep learning, planning better, and farming with open eyes.





