First 24 Hours After Hatch
When to move chicks, what to check in the brooder, and how to avoid first-day stress.
The egg stage is over, but the first brooder decisions can still decide how strong the hatch feels.
Quick Answer
After hatch, let chicks dry and fluff in stable warmth, then move them to a pre-warmed brooder with safe water, feed, dry bedding, and room to move away from heat.
This page is practical hatch guidance, not a veterinary diagnosis. It is checked against the sources listed below and should be adjusted to your incubator manual, species, and local conditions.
Hatch-window path
Keep the focus on stable conditions and careful timing during the highest-risk stage.
- 1 Stop turning
- 2 Raise humidity
- 3 Wait
- 4 Review
What matters most
- Move chicks after they are dry, active, and ready for the brooder.
- Pre-warm the brooder before chicks arrive.
- Keep water shallow and easy to find.
- Watch chick behavior to judge heat instead of trusting the lamp alone.
Do not rush wet chicks into a cold brooder
A newly hatched chick needs warmth and time to dry. Moving too early can chill the chick, while leaving the brooder unprepared creates avoidable stress.
Use chick behavior as the heat check
Chicks packed under the heat source are often cold. Chicks avoiding the heat and panting are often too hot. Comfortable chicks spread out, rest, and move between heat, feed, and water.
Make water safe and visible
Use a chick-safe waterer and keep bedding dry. Small chicks can chill quickly if they get soaked, so water setup matters as much as temperature.