Features
How to Start a Poultry Farm in 2026 and Prepare for Christmas Profit
Atinuke Ajeniyi | 20th June 2026

Poultry farming remains one of the most practical agribusiness ideas in Nigeria and across Africa. If you start in June, you still have enough time to prepare birds for the Christmas season, which is one of the strongest sales periods of the year. The good news is that you do not need to be an expert to begin. You only need the right plan, simple systems, and the discipline to follow through.

Many beginners think poultry farming is only about buying chicks and feeding them. In reality, profit comes from good planning, proper housing, healthy birds, correct feeding, and timely sales. If any of these areas is weak, your farm may struggle. That is why this guide will walk you through the process, step by step.

Why is poultry farming still relevant in 2026?

Poultry is still one of the easiest livestock businesses to understand. People eat eggs and chicken every day, which means there is always demand. During festive periods, especially Christmas, demand rises sharply as families, restaurants, churches, and event planners all buy more birds.

This is why June is such a good time to begin. If you start now, you have enough time to raise birds properly and get them ready for the festive market. You can also build your customer base early, so you are not rushing to find buyers in December. In poultry farming, profit often comes to the farmer who plans.

Choose the right poultry type

Before you spend any money, decide what kind of poultry you want to rear. This choice will affect your housing, feeding, budget, and profit.

  • Broilers
    Broilers are birds raised for meat. They grow quickly and can be sold in about six to eight weeks, depending on the strain and how well they are managed. They are a good option for people who want a faster turnaround.
  • Layers
    Layers are birds raised for eggs. They take longer to mature, but once they start laying, they can provide a regular income for many months. They are better for farmers looking for steady cash flow rather than quick festive sales.
  • Noilers or cockerels
    Noilers and cockerels are often chosen by beginners because they are hardy and easier to manage than some other types. They may not grow as fast as broilers, but they can suit farmers who want a balance between meat quality and lower risk.

For a Christmas business, broilers are usually the best choice because they mature in time for the festive season.

Start with a simple business plan

A poultry farm should begin on paper before it begins on the ground. Your business plan does not need to be complicated, but it should answer a few basic questions.

  • How many birds will you rear?
  • What type of poultry will you keep?
  • How much money do you have?
  • Who will buy the birds?
  • Where will the birds stay?
  • Who will manage the farm?

Your budget should cover chicks, feed, housing, vaccines, water supply, transport, labour, and possible losses. Many beginners fail because they spend all their money on chicks and forget the other costs. Poultry farming is not just about production; it is also about control, planning, and timing.

Set up the right poultry house

Your birds need a clean, dry, secure, and well-ventilated house. The house should protect them from rain, heat, thieves, rats, and predators. It should also allow fresh air to move through properly.

A simple poultry house is enough for a beginner. You do not need a fancy building to start. What matters most is that the house is easy to clean, dry enough to prevent disease, and spacious enough to stop overcrowding.

You will also need feeders, drinkers, a heat source for young chicks, lighting, and litter such as wood shavings. Good housing is one of the easiest ways to reduce stress on the farm.

Get the temperature right

Temperature is very important when chicks are young. If the brooder is too cold, the chicks will crowd together and become weak. If it is too hot, they may pant, move away from the heat, and stop feeding well.

  • Day-old to one week: Keep the brooder at 32°C to 35°C. At this stage, chicks are very delicate and need steady warmth to survive and feed well.
  • Two weeks old: Reduce the temperature to about 29°C to 32°C. The chicks are stronger now, but they still need warmth.
  • Three weeks old: Lower it further to around 26°C to 29°C. If the birds are spreading out well and not huddling together, the temperature is likely fine.
  • Four weeks old: Bring the temperature down to about 23°C to 26°C. By this time, the birds should be coping better with the environment.
  • After brooding: Once the birds are fully feathered and the weather is not too cold, they may no longer need extra heat, but the house should still be dry, well-ventilated, and free from drafts.

Signs that the temperature is wrong

  • If chicks crowd tightly under the heat source, it is too cold.
  • If they move far away from the heat and pant, it is too hot.
  • If they spread out evenly and eat and drink well, the temperature is likely right.

Buy healthy chicks

The quality of your chicks will affect the quality of your profits. Buy from a trusted hatchery or supplier with a good reputation. Healthy chicks should be active, alert, dry, and free from visible deformities.

Do not let cheap price deceive you. Cheap chicks can become expensive if they are weak, sick, or poorly bred. It is better to buy fewer healthy birds than many poor-quality birds.

When chicks arrive, examine them carefully and place them quickly in a warm brooding area. The first few days of life are very important. If chicks are poorly handled at the start, they may never recover fully.

Feed by stage

Feeding is one of the most important parts of poultry farming. Birds grow quickly, so their feed must match their age and purpose. Giving the wrong feed at the wrong time can slow down growth and reduce profit.

  • Day-old to 2 weeks: At this stage, chicks need starter feed. Starter feed helps them grow well in the early days and supports strong bones, feathers, and general health. It should be given from day one until about two weeks of age, depending on the strain and management system.
Chicks should also have clean water at all times. Water is just as important as feed. If they are thirsty, they will not eat well.
  • 2 to 4 weeks: Birds at this stage should continue on starter feed, or move to a slightly more advanced grower feed if your poultry adviser recommends it. The birds are becoming stronger, but they still need good-quality feed to keep growing properly.

    Keep watching them closely. If they are not eating well, losing weight, or huddling together too much, something may be wrong with temperature, feed, or health.
  • 4 weeks to market age: For broilers, many farmers move birds to finisher feed around this period. Finisher feed is designed to help the birds gain weight and prepare them for sale. It is especially important if you want your birds ready for Christmas.

    At this stage, avoid sudden feed changes. Change feed gradually and keep the birds well watered. Stress at this stage can affect weight gain.
  • Layers: If you are raising layers, the feeding plan is different. Young layers also start on chick starter feed, then move to grower feed before they begin laying. When they mature, they should be placed on layer feed, which supports egg production and helps maintain good shell quality.

A layer farm must be fed carefully, because poor feeding will affect egg numbers and egg quality.

Use the right vaccines

Vaccination is one of the best ways to protect your flock from disease. Poultry birds are very vulnerable, especially in hot weather, crowded spaces, or places with poor hygiene. A small disease problem can destroy a whole flock very quickly.

The exact vaccine schedule may vary depending on your location, strain of bird, and advice from a qualified poultry health worker. However, a basic beginner routine often includes the following:

  • Day-old: Birds may receive early protection depending on the hatchery programme. Some chicks are already vaccinated before you buy them, while others may need immediate care after arrival. Always ask the supplier for a vaccination record.
  • First week: Common early vaccines may include protection against Newcastle disease and infectious bronchitis, depending on local guidance. These diseases are serious and can spread fast.
  • Second week: Farmers often give further protection against diseases such as Gumboro, again depending on the local programme. Timing matters, so follow the instructions from your vet or vaccine supplier carefully.
  • Third to sixth week: Booster vaccines may be given during this period to strengthen the birds’ protection. This is especially important for broilers being prepared for sale and for layers that will stay on the farm longer.

Ongoing hygiene

Vaccines are important, but they do not replace cleanliness. Keep the house dry, remove waste regularly, wash drinkers, and restrict visitors. Good hygiene lowers the chance of disease even before vaccination is needed.

Because vaccine schedules can differ from place to place, always work with a local poultry health professional for the safest plan.

Watch your birds daily

A good poultry farmer does not just feed birds and walk away. You must check them every day. Look at how they eat, how they drink, how they stand, and how they move. Healthy birds are usually active and alert.

If birds are weak, noisy, huddling together, or avoiding feed, something may be wrong. Early action can save money and reduce losses. In poultry farming, small problems can become big losses very quickly.

Daily observation also helps you spot broken drinkers, leaked water, poor ventilation, or signs of disease before they spread.

Sell before Christmas

If Christmas is your target, do not wait until December to start thinking about buyers. Begin early. Tell people what you are rearing, when the birds will be ready, and how they can place orders.

You can market through WhatsApp, Facebook, family networks, churches, neighbourhood groups, food vendors, and restaurants. If possible, collect deposits or take pre-orders. This reduces pressure when the birds are ready.

The farmers who do well at Christmas are often the ones who planned months ahead. They know their customers before the birds are mature. That is how poultry becomes a business, not just a farm.

Common beginner mistakes

Many new poultry farmers make the same errors. If you avoid these, you will already be ahead of many others.

  • Starting with too many birds.
  • Buying poor-quality chicks.
  • Ignoring vaccination.
  • Underfeeding the birds.
  • Failing to keep records.
  • Waiting too long to look for buyers.
  • Spending all the money on chicks and forgetting to feed.
  • Allowing the house to become dirty or overcrowded.

A small, well-managed flock is better than a large flock that brings losses.

Keep records

Record keeping may sound simple, but it is one of the strongest habits a farmer can build. Write down the number of birds you bought, the price of feed, vaccine costs, mortality, labour, transport, and sales.

These records will show you whether you are making money or losing money. They also help you improve in the next cycle. If you do not keep records, you may work hard and still not know where the money went.

Poultry farming can be profitable in 2026, especially if you start early and prepare for the Christmas market. The key is to begin small, stay organised, feed well, vaccinate properly, and market on time. Poultry is not a gamble when done properly; it is a business.

If you want to succeed, focus on the basics and do them well. Buy good chicks, give them the right feed at each stage, protect them with proper vaccines, and keep the brooding temperature correct. That is how a beginner can build a farm that earns money, grows steadily, and becomes stronger with each cycle.