Stop The Smell: How To Properly Clean And Maintain A Chicken Coop
Chicken Coop Cleaning Guide: Keep Your Coop Smelling Fresh
A smelly chicken coop is a ticking time bomb. It can cause an unhealthy environment for your chickens, irritate their respiratory systems and attract pests. While a smelly coop is unavoidable, it should be in the ‘smelly’ territory rather than ‘whoa, what died in here’ territory. This is where a an efficient cleaning and maintenance routine comes into play.
This video is sourced from Youtube@GARVEE
While some are regular farmers who have kept chicken coop for ages, others might be embracing fresh eggs and backyard sustainability. For everyone, a smelly coop is the most common struggle. It is a source of pain that assaults your nose when you are resting in your backyard on a windy day. If this sounds like you, you need to know the reasons for your smelly coop.
Table of Contents
- Why Does A Chicken Coop Smell So Bad?
- Stopping That Smell by Creating a Daily Cleaning Plan
- Weekly Maintenance Routine for an Odor-free Chicken Coop
- Step-by-step Deep Cleaning Guide for Chicken Coops
- Can Design Factors Affect Smell?
- Mistakes That Make Chicken Coops Smell Worse
- Long-term Maintenance Tips
- Choosing A Chicken Coop That Is Easier To Clean
Why Does A Chicken Coop Smell So Bad?

If your chicken coop starts to smell overwhelmingly foul, there are quite a few reasons for it. The very first reason, as you might have already guessed is the pile of chicken droppings. Lets find out what else contributes to a stinking chicken coop.
Piled up chicken droppings
The most obvious cause of coop odor is accumulated droppings. Chicken love their bowel movements as they seem to drop it quite frequently. Droppings collect in nesting areas, roosting spaces, or under perches, they begin to decompose quickly.
When they break down, they release ammonia gas. This is what leads to that sharp chicken coop ammonia smell many backyard chicken owners inhale when they open the coop door. If droppings are left unattended for too long, the smell becomes stronger and spreads throughout the entire coop.
Stockpiling moisture
One of the biggest culprits for odor is trapped moisture. Even a little dampness can significantly increase the number of bacteria and therefore, amplify the rate of breakdown of droppings and bedding. This intensifies the smell. Common sources of moisture in the chicken coop include:
- Water spills from drinkers
- Rain entering through gaps in the coop
- Poor drainage under the coop
- Humidity and condensation buildup
- Wet or saturated bedding
Hindered airflow
Just like how every house needs proper ventilation for air circulation even a coop needs ventilation. This is what brings the fresh air in and throws the bad air out. This cycle is essential for keeping the odor to a minimum. Poor ventilation leads to:
- Higher ammonia concentration
- Increased humidity levels
- Strong lingering smells
- Poor air quality for chickens
Improper bedding conditions
Bedding plays an important role in maintaining a healthy coop environment.
While choosing the material for bedding is important it is also crucial to change it regularly. If not it absorbs waste and moisture and begins to break down to release unpleasant odors.
Overcrowding inside the coop
Overcrowded spaces are never good news. When the space is small, droppings pile up faster and make it hard to clean up. Overcrowded coops often experience:
- Faster waste buildup
- Increased humidity from body heat and respiration
- Higher ammonia levels
- Greater difficulty maintaining a cleaning routine
A spacious and secure option like the Garvee Large Metal Chicken Coop with Waterproof and Anti‑UV Cover makes maintenance easier with its walk-in design and durable galvanized frame. The large enclosure improves airflow and space for chickens, while the waterproof cover helps protect your flock from weather.
Stopping That Smell by Creating a Daily Cleaning Plan

Here is a daily cleaning plan explained with a step by step routine that will help you reduce the smell in your coop.
Remove fresh droppings from key areas
The first thing you do when you start your cleaning routine is remove the chicken mess from high traffic areas. Their roosting spots like the area beneath perches is usually the dirtiest spot in the coop. Take a some time to:
- Scrape droppings from roosting bars and droppings boards
- Remove droppings from nesting boxes
- Clear droppings from corners or feeding areas
Removing the mess prevents waste from sitting long enough to produce the strong ammonia smell. Many chicken keepers use a small scraper or hand shovel to make the process quick and efficient.
Check and maintain dry bedding
Dry bedding plays a major role in keeping the coop fresh. Bedding materials such as pine shavings or straw absorb moisture and help contain droppings. After a point, bedding can become damp and start giving off an odor. As part of your daily chicken coop maintenance, take a moment to check and remove:
- Wet patches near water containers
- Damp bedding under roosting areas
- Clumped or heavily soiled material
Once you remove the wet portion replace it with fresh bedding.
Keep waterers from spilling
Water spills are common in chicken coops. This is one of the most common reasons coops develop strong smells. Even a small leak can soak the bedding and accelerate waste decomposition. To avoid this problem:
- Use raised or hanging waterers
- Check for leaks or tipped containers
- Clean up any spilled water immediately
Keeping bedding dry is one of the most effective strategies for long-term chicken coop odor control.
Allow fresh air to circulate
While coop design plays a major role in ventilation, there a few things you can do for better airflow throughout the day. Opening vents, windows, or doors during the day allows fresh air to circulate through the coop. If you can add exhaust fans to your coop, this can help pump out odors. Running the exhaust fan 2 - 4 times a day for about 15 - 30 minutes each time will help you pull the stale air out of the coop before ammonia accumulates.
Weekly Maintenance Routine for an Odor-free Chicken Coop

A weekly maintenance routine will ensure the overall cleanliness of the coop extending to the places where you have not serviced during the daily cleaning routine. In fact, a deeper weekly routine is what truly maintains a fresh and hygienic chicken coop.
Over time, waste particles, bedding dust, and damp spots can accumulate in areas that daily cleaning might miss. A weekly chicken coop maintenance checklist can help you set up an action plan to remove this buildup before it turns into a strong odor problem. Most backyard chicken keepers have found that devoting 20 - 30 minutes once a week is enough to maintain a clean and comfortable backyard chicken coop for their flock.
Follow this weekly action plan to maintain the overall hygiene of your coop:
Turn the bedding
Droppings and moisture can settle into lower layers throughout the week. This simply adds to the odor problem. Therefore, it is imperative that you do some bedding management for your chicken coop.
●Stir the bedding to improve airflow
●Remove heavily soiled patches
●Add a thin layer of fresh bedding if needed
Clean roosting bars and droppings boards
Chicken roost in the night and fill up their perches with droppings. Even with daily scraping, some of it can remain on the roost bars or surrounding areas.
Once a week:
●Scrape droppings boards thoroughly
●Clean up roosting bars
●Remove any visible buildup stuck to surfaces
Inspect waterers and feeders
Water and feed stations can get smelly when they get dirty. If your waterer starts to leak and you take time to fix it or if your waterer spills frequently, it can contribute to odor.
Look for:
- Leaking water containers
- Loose waterers that needs to be tightened
- Algae or residue inside drinkers
- Feed that has fallen and mixed with bedding
Check ventilation and airflow
Uninterrupted airflow is essential for pushing out the bad odor and controlling moisture. Air helps dry up damp surfaces and bedding while the airflow improves the air quality for chickens and you by taking the odor away. During your weekly routine, inspect the coop’s ventilation points to make sure that air is circulating through the coop.
Check for:
- Blocked vents or windows
- Ventilation openings that have collected dust
- Areas where air gets trapped leading to strong odors
Remove hidden waste and debris
Droppings and feathers also tend to collect in corners, under nesting boxes, and along edges of the coop. It is common to not include feathers during daily cleaning.
Take a few minutes to:
- Sweep up feathers collected in the coop corners
- Scrape the dropping from corners
- Remove loose feathers and debris from nesting and roosting areas
- Clear visible buildup along walls or under structures
A weekly cleaning routine is also the best time to check the coop’s overall condition. During this inspection, look for:
- Damp flooring or bedding
- Pests or rodents that have appeared
- Damage to the rooves
If you stick to you daily and weekly cleaning routine long-term chicken coop maintenance much easier.
Check out the Garvee Folding Chicken Coop if you are looking for a compact enclosure that offers a portable space for small flocks. Its folding design, solid pine frame, and galvanized wire mesh provide durability, ventilation, and predator protection, while top and side doors make feeding and spot cleaning quick and convenient.
Step-by-step Deep Cleaning Guide for Chicken Coops

Just like your house needs a spring cleaning, a deep cleaning is necessary for a chicken coop. Even with a daily and weekly cleaning routine, you would occasionally need deep cleaning especially because they get smelly. Dust, bacteria, and residue from droppings gradually build up on surfaces, walls, and flooring. A deep clean routine will remove hidden layers of dirt from around the coop.
This deep clean chicken coop guide will help backyard and farmyard setup owners maintain a healthy chicken coop all year round while ensuring the reduced odor. A deep cleaning routine every three months can remove any lingering odor and improve hygiene in the coop. Below is a simple step-by-step approach to how to deep clean a chicken coop.
Step 1: Move chickens to a outdoor enclosure
Before starting the cleaning process, move your chickens to a secure outdoor enclosure. If you flock is used to free ranging simply let them out until you finish cleaning. This is done so that chickens are not disturbed and affected by dust, cleaning solutions, or debris during the process. Since the coop will get wet you will have give it time to dry before you return them to their clean home.
Step 2: Clear everything from the coop
This is when you remove the bedding along with the everything else inside the coop.
Remove:
- All bedding from the floor
- Nesting box materials
- Loose feathers and debris
- Droppings boards or trays
- Waterers and feeders
Chicken coop bedding is the main source of odor buildup. Therefore, removing it every month/three months, depending on your flock, is important to cut down on odor buildup.
Step 3: Scrape off dried droppings
Once the bedding is removed, most likely there are dried droppings stuck to roost bars, floors, and corners. When a coop is used for several weeks these droppings can become hardened deposits.
Use a scraper or stiff brush to remove:
- Dried manure from roost bars
- Residue along coop flooring
- Buildup under perches or nesting boxes
Deep cleaning is necessary to remove those last remnants of the droppings that you couldn’t get out with the weekly cleaning.
Step 4: Give a thorough wash to the floor and surfaces
Now that you have worked your scraper around the chicken coop, it is time to wash the floor and other surfaces that the flock is frequently in contact with.
Surfaces to include:
- Floors and corners
- Nesting boxes
- Roosting bars
- Walls surfaces close to the coop floor
Mix a mild poultry-safe cleaner with warm water to remove dirt, dust, and any remaining organic matter. This cleaner disinfects the chicken coop by safely removing bacteria. It also helps reduce the smell of odor-causing residues.
Step 5: Allow the coop to fully dry
All the surfaces that you have washed must thoroughly dry before you can pile on fresh bedding. If there are traces of moisture left over it can lead to bacteria growth and odor.
To dry the coop:
- Leave doors and vents open
- Allow sunlight to dry up surface
- Ensure cross ventilation so air touches all surfaces
Keeping the coop dry is key to preventing moisture in the chicken coop, which is a major contributor to odor.
Step 6: Add fresh bedding
Once the coop is completely dry, add new bedding. Spread a clean layer across the coop floor making sure you are evenly stacking it without leaving out any spaces. Refill the nesting boxes as well as a part of replacing chicken coop bedding.
Common bedding options include:
- Pine shavings
- Straw
- Hemp
Fresh bedding act as cushions and absorbs moisture to help maintain a comfortable house for your flock.
Step 7: Return chickens and restore setup
Once you have washed and dried the insides you can proceed to reinstall feeders, waterers, and any removable trays that you removed while clearing out the coop.
At this point, the coop should smell fresh, clean, and dry. This type of seasonal chicken coop cleaning removes droppings that have caked into the surfaces that daily and weekly routines have neglected.
Can Design Factors Affect Smell?

Yes absolutely. A coop with multiple windows, vents and exhaust fans will definitely smell better than a closed up coop with a one window on each side. Therefore, long-term chicken coop odor control depends heavily on the coop’s design and environment. Even the most consistent chicken coop cleaning routine can struggle if airflow is poor, bedding is ineffective, or the coop layout traps moisture and waste.
A well-designed chicken coop naturally reduces odor by ensuring airflow, and controlling moisture. Modern day coop layouts also makes waste removal easier. These are some of the design factors that are crucial in maintaining a healthy and low-maintenance coop:
Proper ventilation for chicken coop airflow
A well ventilated coop is less stinky. Coupled with your deep cleaning regime this is the most effective way to prevent odor buildup. Without proper ventilation, ammonia from droppings and moisture from respiration become trapped inside the coop.
Key ventilation features include:
- High vents near the roof to release warm, humid air
- Windows or mesh openings that allow cross ventilation
- Ventilation openings protected with hardware cloth to keep predators out
Air should cycle through the coop continuously without creating direct drafts on the chickens, especially where they roost at night.
Choosing the right bedding materials
Bedding is more than just floor covering, it plays a key role in moisture absorption and waste management. Good bedding helps maintain a clean chicken coop by absorbing droppings and keeping the floor dry.
Common bedding materials include:
- Pine shavings: One of the most widely used options because it absorbs moisture well and helps reduce odor.
- Straw: Provides good insulation and comfort but may require more frequent replacement if it becomes damp.
- Hemp: Highly absorbent and increasingly popular for backyard flocks.
Proper bedding management for chicken coop care involves regularly stirring, topping up, and replacing bedding before it becomes saturated.
Removable trays and droppings boards
Modern day coop designs make cleaning significantly easier. The removable tray chicken coop concept, where droppings collect in a slide-out tray beneath the roosting bars is something every chicken coop must have.
This system allows owners to:
- Quickly remove accumulated droppings
- Clean waste without disturbing the entire coop
- Maintain a faster daily chicken coop cleaning routine
Similarly, droppings boards placed under roost bars catch most overnight waste, making it easier to scrape and remove each morning.
Coop layout that keeps waste manageable
The layout of the coop itself also affects how easy it is to maintain. A well-planned predator safe and clean coop layout separates key areas so waste does not spread unnecessarily.
Good coop layouts typically include:
- Clearly defined roosting areas where most droppings occur
- Nesting boxes positioned away from the main waste zones
- Easy access doors for cleaning and maintenance
- Raised flooring or elevated coop structures for better drainage
When these areas are properly arranged, waste becomes easier to manage and the entire coop stays cleaner.
Mistakes That Make Chicken Coops Smell Worse

Avoiding these common errors can make a big difference in maintaining a clean chicken coop and improving long-term chicken coop odor control.
Ignoring moisture problems
Have a leaky waterer? Bedding a little too damp? These are moisture problems. Fix the leaky waterer and make sure the bedding underneath leak is removed. Remove the areas with damp bedding and stir up the bedding once to fill up the empty space.
Common moisture sources include:
- Spilled water from drinkers
- Rain entering through gaps in the coop
- Damp bedding that is not replaced quickly
- Poor drainage under the coop
Waiting too long to replace bedding
Another common mistake is allowing bedding to stay in the coop for too long.
Sometimes bedding may appear dry on the surface but it will have trapped moisture and droppings underneath. If bedding becomes compacted or heavily soiled, it can quickly turn into a major source of odor.
Signs that bedding needs replacing include:
- Strong ammonia smell
- Darkened or clumped material
- Visible droppings accumulation
- Damp patches around water areas
Overcrowding the coop
Overcrowding is another factor that significantly worsens coop odor. When too many chickens share a small space, droppings accumulate much faster than normal.
This leads to:
- Faster waste buildup
- Higher moisture levels
- Increased ammonia concentration
- More frequent cleaning needs
Using the wrong bedding material
Not all bedding materials absorb moisture effectively. Some materials break down quickly or hold moisture instead of absorbing it. For eg, fine sawdust may become compacted and damp, organic materials may rot quickly and low-quality straw can trap moisture. Choosing absorbent materials like pine shavings or hemp bedding improves bedding management for chicken coop environments and helps control odor naturally.
Long-term Maintenance Tips
Keeping a chicken coop clean is much easier when maintenance is approached as a long-term system rather than a series of occasional cleaning sessions. When daily habits, weekly routines, and periodic deep cleaning all work together, coop care becomes faster, more predictable, and far less stressful.
A well-planned farmyard/backyard chicken care routine helps maintain a healthier environment for your flock while reducing odor, pests, and unnecessary maintenance work.
Establish a consistent cleaning schedule
Instead of waiting until the coop smells or appears dirty, routine maintenance prevents waste from building up. Therefore, it is wise to create a predictable cleaning schedule.
A simple schedule might include:
Daily tasks
- Remove droppings from roosting areas
- Check bedding for damp spots
- Ensure waterers are not leaking
Weekly tasks
- Stir or refresh bedding
- Clean feeders and waterers
- Remove debris from corners and nesting areas
Monthly or seasonal tasks
- Perform a deep clean chicken coop guide process
- Replace bedding completely
- Wash and disinfect interior surfaces
Following this type of routine keeps the coop environment consistently clean and supports effective chicken coop odor control.
Monitor coop conditions regularly
In today’s parlance we need to do some predictive maintenance, this will help prevent potential issues. During routine checks, pay attention to the coop’s smell, moisture level, and airflow.
Look for signs such as:
- Damp bedding patches
- Poor airflow inside the coop
- Droppings accumulating quickly in certain areas
- Unusual ammonia odor
Adjust bedding based on season
Weather and climate conditions affect how often bedding needs to be replaced. During humid or rainy seasons, bedding becomes damp more quickly, which increases odor risk.
Seasonal adjustments that usually come with chicken coop management include:
- Monsoon - Replace bedding more frequently
- Summer - Increase ventilation, add exhaust fans
- Winter - Add thicker bedding layers for warmth
Choosing A Chicken Coop That Is Easier To Clean

As mentioned earlier, the design of the chicken coop plays an important role in preventing the odor buildup but also maintaining a clean coop. When choosing a coop, certain structural features make it much easier to maintain a consistently clean chicken coop.
Easy access makes cleaning faster
A coop with large access doors makes routine cleaning far more convenient. When the interior is easy to reach, removing bedding, scraping droppings, and wiping surfaces becomes much quicker. Also if you are bringing in some equipment to clean large access doors become handy.
Pay attention to interior surfaces
If you build the coop walls with smooth interior materials, the coop becomes easier to maintain than those made of rough or unfinished wood. Smooth surfaces prevent droppings and dirt from sticking, allowing them to be wiped or scraped away more easily during a chicken coop cleaning routine.
Removable trays simplify waste removal
It is always easier to collect droppings and throw them at once rather than having to individually shovel them up. Placing removable trays beneath the roosting area where most droppings accumulate overnight is the most common method used to collect waste. This removable tray chicken coop concept allows owners to slide the tray out, dispose of the waste, and replace it quickly. It simplifies daily chicken coop cleaning and helps prevent odor buildup.
A tool like the Garvee Chicken Coop Rake helps speed up daily coop cleaning. Its adjustable handle reduces bending, while the metal sifting scoop separates droppings from bedding for faster waste removal and a cleaner coop environment.
Built-In ventilation helps control odor
A coop designed with proper ventilation for chicken coop airflow helps remove moisture and ammonia before they accumulate. Openings near the roofline and mesh-covered vents allow fresh air to circulate while keeping predators out. Good airflow plays an important role in long-term chicken coop odor control.
Elevated designs to improve airflow
Many coops are slightly raised above the ground to improve drainage and airflow. An elevated structure helps reduce moisture in the chicken coop, especially during rainy weather. Keeping the coop dry naturally reduces odor and supports a healthier environment for chickens.
Keeping a chicken coop clean and odor-free does not require complicated systems or constant heavy cleaning. In most backyard setups, odor problems develop when waste, moisture, and poor airflow are allowed to build up over time. By understanding the causes and maintaining a consistent routine, keeping a clean chicken coop becomes much more manageable.
A healthy coop environment supports healthier chickens. When the coop is clean, dry, and well-maintained, chickens are more comfortable, less stressed, and less likely to experience health problems related to poor air quality or unsanitary conditions.
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