Country Chicken (Desi Murgi) Farming

15.03.26 07:38 PM - By JB Experts

The Complete Business and Export Guide for 2026
From Backyard to World Markets — How Indian Entrepreneurs Can Build a Profitable Poultry Enterprise and Tap Into Global Demand

1. Introduction: Why Country Chicken Farming Is India’s Next Big Export Opportunity

India’s poultry market was valued at approximately USD 32.93 billion in 2025 and is projected to grow at a compound annual growth rate (CAGR) of 8.10% through 2035, potentially reaching USD 71.75 billion. Within this massive industry, country chicken (commonly called desi murgi, nattu kozhi, or nati koli across regions) occupies a fast-growing premium niche that commands significantly higher prices than commercial broiler chicken — both domestically and in export markets.

Country chicken farming represents one of the most accessible entry points into the poultry business. It requires relatively low capital, minimal infrastructure, and lends itself perfectly to free-range and organic production methods that international buyers increasingly demand. India ranks as the third-largest egg producer and fifth-largest poultry meat producer globally, with export revenues from poultry products reaching USD 177 million in FY 2022–23. The opportunity for Indian farmers and entrepreneurs to scale this business for export is enormous and largely untapped.

This comprehensive guide covers everything you need to know — from starting your first flock of 100 birds to building a branded, export-ready poultry operation. Whether you are a first-generation farmer, an existing agribusiness owner looking to diversify, or an investor seeking a high-growth agricultural opportunity, this article will give you the complete picture.

 

2. Understanding Country Chicken: What Makes It Different

Country chicken refers to indigenous, native, or improved desi breeds of poultry that are distinct from commercial broiler and layer birds. These birds are typically raised in free-range or semi-intensive systems rather than confined battery cages, and they are prized for their superior taste, texture, nutritional profile, and perceived health benefits.

2.1 Popular Country Chicken Breeds in India

Breed

Origin/Developer

Type

Key Feature

Kadaknath

Madhya Pradesh

Dual Purpose

Black meat, high protein, medicinal value

Aseel

Andhra Pradesh

Meat

Hardy, disease-resistant, premium meat

Gramapriya

ICAR-DPR Hyderabad

Layer

200–230 eggs/year, brown eggs

Vanaraja

ICAR-DPR Hyderabad

Dual Purpose

200+ eggs/year, good meat yield

Giriraja

KVAFSU Bangalore

Dual Purpose

Fast growth, adaptable to all climates

Krishna-J

JNTU Hyderabad

Dual Purpose

Tropical adaptability, coloured plumage

CARI Nirbheek

CARI Izzatnagar

Dual Purpose

Rural backyard farming specialist

Sonali

West Bengal / Jharkhand

Dual Purpose

RIR x Fayoumi cross, excellent forager

 

2.2 Country Chicken vs. Broiler Chicken: Key Differences

Parameter

Country Chicken

Broiler Chicken

Growth Period

4–6 months

35–42 days

Weight at Sale

1.2–2.5 kg

2.0–3.0 kg

Farm Gate Price (per kg)

₹350–600

₹100–180

Egg Price (per egg)

₹10–25

₹4–8

Disease Resistance

High

Low

Feed Requirement

Low (foraging-based)

High (commercial feed)

Consumer Perception

Premium, organic, healthy

Mass market, commodity

Export Premium

High (2–3x over broiler)

Standard/Low

 

 

3. How to Start a Country Chicken Farm: Step-by-Step Guide

3.1 Initial Planning and Site Selection

Choosing the right location is foundational to your success. Country chickens thrive in free-range environments, so you need adequate open land with natural vegetation, shade trees, and good drainage. A minimum of half an acre is recommended for starting with 200–500 birds, while commercial-scale operations of 2,000–5,000 birds typically require 1–2 acres.

Key site requirements include proximity to a reliable water source, protection from flooding, distance from residential areas (at least 500 metres for odour management), access to roads for transportation of birds, eggs, and feed, and availability of electricity for lighting and incubation.

3.2 Infrastructure and Housing

One of the biggest advantages of country chicken farming is that it does not require the expensive environmentally controlled (EC) sheds that commercial broiler operations demand. However, proper housing is still essential to protect birds from predators, extreme weather, and disease.

Recommended Housing Design:

  Raised platform or deep-litter floor with rice husk, sawdust, or groundnut shells as bedding material

  Ventilated walls with wire mesh on all sides (bamboo or corrugated sheet roofing)

  Minimum floor space: 2–3 sq. ft. per bird inside the shelter, with unlimited free-range access during daytime

  Separate compartments for breeding stock, chicks (brooder section), growing birds, and egg-laying hens

  Nest boxes placed at a height of 1.5–2 feet from the ground, using artificial eggs or decoys to train hens to lay in designated spots

  Reflective ribbons or shiny strips around the perimeter to deter predatory birds and aerial threats

  Sprinkler or misting system for summer cooling (essential in regions where temperatures exceed 38°C)

3.3 Flock Management

Male-to-Female Ratio:

Maintaining the correct rooster-to-hen ratio is critical for fertility. The recommended ratio is 1 rooster for every 5 hens (approximately 20% males). This ensures optimal fertilisation rates while preventing over-mating stress on the hens.

Brooding:

For the first 4–6 weeks, chicks require supplementary heat. You can use either natural brooding (a broody hen sitting on 10–15 eggs) or artificial brooding with electric bulbs or kerosene bukharis. Maintain brooder temperature at 95°F during the first week, reducing by 5°F each subsequent week until the chicks are fully feathered.

Section Management:

Divide the farm into separate zones or chambers to prevent pile-ups, which is one of the leading causes of mortality in free-range poultry. During power outages, sudden loud noises, or nighttime disturbances, birds tend to huddle together, potentially suffocating those at the bottom. Separate sections of 200–300 birds each with physical barriers eliminate this risk.

3.4 Feeding Strategy

Country chicken feeding can be significantly cheaper than commercial broiler feeding if managed intelligently. The key principle is to concentrate commercial feed investment during the first 30 days of the chick’s life (when nutrition directly impacts survival and growth), then transition to low-cost foraging-based feeding.

Feeding Phases:

Phase

Age

Feed Type

Cost/Bird/Day

Starter

0–4 weeks

Commercial chick starter mash

₹3–5

Grower

5–12 weeks

Reduced commercial + kitchen/hotel waste + foraging

₹1–3

Finisher/Layer

13 weeks onwards

Primarily foraging + vegetable waste + insect protein

₹0.50–2

 

Cost Reduction Techniques:

  Free-range foraging: Birds consume insects, worms, seeds, and green matter — providing natural protein at zero cost

  Hotel and restaurant waste: Negotiate with local hotels to collect food waste daily — wash thoroughly before feeding

  Vegetable market waste: Leftover greens, fruits, and peels from mandis are excellent supplementary feed

  Azolla cultivation: Grow this high-protein aquatic fern on-farm as a continuous, almost-free protein supplement

  Black soldier fly larvae: Set up a simple composting unit to breed larvae — 50% protein content, ideal for poultry

3.5 Health Management and Biosecurity

Disease prevention is non-negotiable in country chicken farming. While desi breeds are inherently more disease-resistant than broilers, neglecting biosecurity can wipe out an entire flock within days.

Essential Biosecurity Measures:

  Mandatory visitor spray/dip before entering the farm premises — no exceptions

  All external feed, food waste, and materials must be washed and sanitised before entering the farm

  Monthly vaccination schedule: Ranikhet (Newcastle Disease), Marek’s, Fowl Pox, IBD (Gumboro), and deworming

  Isolate new birds for 14 days before introducing them to the existing flock

  Provide dust bath areas (sand + wood ash) — natural parasite control method used by free-range birds

  Seasonal vigilance: Monitor birds closely during weather transitions (hot to cold, dry to rainy) when immunity weakens

 

4. Investment, Expenditure, and Profitability Analysis

4.1 Startup Investment (Scale-Wise)

Scale

Birds

Investment (₹)

Land Required

Backyard / Micro

50–100

25,000–75,000

500–1,000 sq. ft.

Small Scale

200–500

1,00,000–3,00,000

0.25–0.5 acres

Medium Scale

1,000–3,000

5,00,000–15,00,000

0.5–1 acre

Commercial / Export

5,000–10,000+

25,00,000–50,00,000+

1–3 acres

 

4.2 Detailed Monthly Expenditure (Per 1,000 Birds)

Expense Category

Monthly (₹)

Annual (₹)

Feed (starter + supplementary)

30,000–50,000

3,60,000–6,00,000

Vaccines and medicines

3,000–5,000

36,000–60,000

Labour (1–2 workers)

15,000–25,000

1,80,000–3,00,000

Electricity and water

3,000–6,000

36,000–72,000

Bedding material and maintenance

2,000–4,000

24,000–48,000

Transport and packaging

5,000–10,000

60,000–1,20,000

TOTAL ESTIMATED

58,000–1,00,000

6,96,000–12,00,000

 

4.3 Revenue and Profitability

Revenue from country chicken farming comes from three primary streams: live bird sales, egg sales, and manure/byproduct sales. A well-managed farm with 1,000 birds can generate the following annual returns:

Revenue Stream

Calculation

Annual Revenue (₹)

Live Bird Sales

600 birds x 1.8 kg x ₹450/kg

4,86,000

Egg Sales

400 hens x 180 eggs x ₹15/egg

10,80,000

Manure & Byproducts

Organic manure + feathers

50,000–80,000

Chick Sales (if breeding)

Day-old chicks @ ₹40–60 each

2,00,000–4,00,000

TOTAL POTENTIAL REVENUE

 

17,16,000–20,46,000

 

Net Profit Margin: After deducting all expenses, a well-managed 1,000-bird country chicken farm can yield annual net profits of ₹7–12 lakh, representing a 40–60% profit margin. Scaling to 5,000+ birds can push annual profits beyond ₹35–50 lakh.

 

5. The Export Opportunity: Taking Indian Country Chicken Global

5.1 India’s Poultry Export Landscape

India exported poultry and poultry products to 64 countries during FY 2022–23, generating export revenue of USD 134 million. India’s table egg exports alone reached a record USD 91.55 million in FY 2023–24. The global poultry market is projected to exceed USD 530 billion by 2030, with the chicken segment accounting for over 51% of total market share. Asia-Pacific holds 38.40% of the global poultry market, making it the single largest consuming region.

5.2 Exportable Products from Country Chicken Farming

Product

HS Code

Target Markets

Export Price Range

Frozen Whole Chicken

0207.14

GCC, Southeast Asia, Africa

USD 2.50–4.50/kg

Fresh/Chilled Chicken

0207.11 / 0207.13

GCC, Maldives, Sri Lanka

USD 3.00–5.00/kg

Table Eggs (Fresh)

0407.21

UAE, Oman, Qatar, Maldives

USD 0.08–0.15/egg

Hatching Eggs

0407.11

Africa, SAARC

USD 0.25–0.60/egg

Egg Powder

0408.11 / 0408.91

Japan, Indonesia, Vietnam

USD 3.50–6.00/kg

Processed Chicken (Nuggets, Patties)

1602.32

GCC, UK, EU

USD 5.00–9.00/kg

Kadaknath (Black Chicken — Specialty)

0207.14

Japan, South Korea, Malaysia, EU

USD 8.00–15.00/kg

Organic/Free-Range Certified Chicken

0207.14

EU, UK, Australia, NZ, USA

USD 6.00–12.00/kg

Poultry Manure (Organic Fertiliser)

3101.00

Southeast Asia, Africa

USD 40–80/tonne

 

5.3 Key Export Destinations

The primary markets for Indian poultry exports include the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC) countries — UAE, Oman, Qatar, Saudi Arabia, and Bahrain — which collectively represent the largest demand centre for Indian eggs and chicken. Emerging markets in Southeast Asia (Vietnam, Malaysia, Philippines), East Africa (Djibouti, Kenya, Tanzania), and the SAARC region (Maldives, Sri Lanka, Nepal) also present growing opportunities. For premium products like Kadaknath black chicken and certified organic/free-range chicken, high-value markets such as Japan, South Korea, Australia, the EU, and the UK offer export price premiums of 2–4x over standard poultry.

5.4 Export Compliance and Certifications

Exporting poultry products requires compliance with stringent food safety and animal health regulations. The following certifications and registrations are essential:

  FSSAI License: Mandatory for all food product manufacturers and exporters in India

  APEDA Registration: Required for export of agricultural and processed food products

  Halal Certification: Essential for GCC and Muslim-majority markets

  HACCP / ISO 22000: Food safety management system certification — required by most importing countries

  Organic Certification (NPOP / USDA / EU Organic): Required if marketing as organic — commands 50–100% price premium

  Health Certificate from DAHD: Issued by the Department of Animal Husbandry and Dairying for each shipment

  Phytosanitary / Veterinary Certificate: Country-specific import permits from the destination country’s food authority

 

6. Advantages and Challenges of the Country Chicken Business

6.1 Advantages

  Low initial investment compared to commercial broiler farming — start with as little as ₹25,000

  Premium pricing: Country chicken meat sells at 2–4x the price of broiler chicken domestically and internationally

  High disease resistance: Desi breeds require far fewer antibiotics and medicines, reducing costs and meeting international antibiotic-free standards

  Free-range/organic positioning: Aligns perfectly with the global trend towards sustainable, ethical, and organic food production

  Multiple revenue streams: Meat, eggs, chicks, manure, and feathers all generate income

  Government support: Subsidies available under the National Livestock Mission (NLM), AHIDF, and state-level schemes

  Family-based operation: Minimal labour required — ideal for rural families seeking additional income

  Export potential: Growing international demand for speciality, organic, and heritage poultry products

  Integrated farming synergy: Poultry manure enhances crop yield in integrated agri-farming models

6.2 Challenges

  Slower growth rate: Country chickens take 4–6 months to reach market weight vs. 35–42 days for broilers, meaning longer capital lock-in

  Lower egg production: Desi hens produce 150–230 eggs/year compared to 280–320 for commercial layers

  Predator risk: Free-range birds are vulnerable to snakes, hawks, mongooses, and stray dogs

  Seasonal mortality: Weather transitions and monsoon conditions can spike mortality rates if biosecurity is lax

  Limited cold chain: Rural areas often lack adequate cold storage and refrigerated transport, complicating fresh product logistics

  Branding and standardisation: Loose, unbranded country chicken competes poorly against packaged, branded products in urban and export markets

  Export compliance: Meeting international food safety standards (HACCP, Halal, EU regulations) requires investment and expertise

  Bird flu (Avian Influenza) risk: Periodic outbreaks can devastate flocks and temporarily close export markets

 

7. Scaling for Export: From Farm to World Markets

7.1 Value Addition and Branding

The single most important step in building an exportable poultry business is moving from loose, unbranded sales to packaged, branded products. Branded, packaged country chicken eggs sold in retail stores and malls command 3–5x the price of loose eggs sold through street vendors. The same principle applies to export — international buyers want consistent quality, proper packaging, clear labelling, and compliance documentation.

Branding Checklist:

  Professional packaging with clear product information, weight, nutritional facts, and batch/lot numbers

  Brand identity: Logo, brand name, tagline, and consistent visual identity across all packaging and marketing materials

  Traceability: Each package should be traceable to the specific farm, batch, and production date

  Certifications displayed prominently: Halal, Organic, FSSAI, HACCP logos on packaging

  Shelf-life labelling: Manufacturing date, expiry date, and storage instructions clearly printed

7.2 Processing and Cold Chain

For export, investing in proper processing and cold chain infrastructure is essential. This includes a FSSAI-compliant processing unit with slaughter, cleaning, grading, and packaging capabilities; blast freezers for IQF (Individually Quick Frozen) products; refrigerated transport vehicles or partnerships with cold chain logistics providers; and proper export-grade packaging (vacuum-sealed, modified atmosphere packaging, or standard poly bags with ice gel packs for fresh/chilled shipments).

7.3 The Export Process: A Simplified Workflow

The typical export workflow for poultry products follows this sequence: Buyer inquiry or market identification, followed by sample dispatch and quality approval. Next comes price negotiation and contract finalisation, then production and quality control as per buyer specifications. This is followed by FSSAI and APEDA documentation preparation, pre-shipment inspection and testing (microbiological, residue, weight verification), booking of refrigerated container or air cargo, customs clearance and bill of lading issuance, and finally, shipment tracking and payment collection (typically via Letter of Credit or advance payment).

 

8. How JB Experts Can Help You Export Country Chicken Products

 JB Experts is India’s leading export management company, operating as your “Invisible Export Department.” With 12+ years of experience, 900+ companies served across 17+ industries, and a proven track record of delivering 15–20% year-on-year revenue growth for clients, we are the partners you need to take your poultry business global.

8.1 Our Export Plans

Plan 0 — Export Consultation (₹7,670)

A 60-minute one-on-one consultation session with our export strategist. Ideal for entrepreneurs who are exploring the export opportunity for the first time and need clarity on market potential, compliance requirements, pricing strategy, and next steps. This is your first step towards building a global poultry business.

Book your consultation: https://meeting.jbexperts.com/#/60min

Plan A — Export Training and Consulting (₹6.5 Lakh / 12 Months)

A comprehensive 12-month programme that transforms you into a fully capable exporter. This includes complete export documentation training, buyer identification and outreach strategy, product-market fit analysis, pricing and negotiation coaching, compliance and certification guidance, and ongoing consulting support throughout the programme. By the end of Plan A, you will have the knowledge, tools, and confidence to independently manage export operations for your poultry products.

Plan B — Exporter on Record (₹25 Lakh / 24 Months)

Our flagship programme where JB Experts becomes your Exporter on Record. We don’t just advise — we execute. We handle everything: buyer acquisition, market entry, documentation, logistics coordination, compliance, and payment collection. You focus on production; we deliver the world market to your doorstep. This plan comes with a 10x turnover commitment, meaning we are invested in your growth just as much as you are. Plan B is designed for serious entrepreneurs who want guaranteed results without building an in-house export team from scratch.

Custom Plans

We understand that every business is unique. Whether your budget is ₹1 lakh or ₹1 crore, we create custom export plans tailored to your specific product, market, and growth ambitions. No business is too small or too large for JB Experts.

 

 READY TO TAKE YOUR POULTRY BUSINESS GLOBAL?

Book Your Export Consultation (₹7,670): https://meeting.jbexperts.com/#/60min

Email: info@jbexperts.com  |  Phone: +91-9538888656

 

9. Conclusion: The Time Is Now

Country chicken farming sits at the intersection of tradition and global opportunity. India’s indigenous poultry heritage, combined with a massive and growing global demand for organic, free-range, and speciality chicken products, creates a once-in-a-generation export opportunity for Indian entrepreneurs, farmers, and agribusiness companies.

The numbers speak for themselves: India’s poultry market is on track to exceed USD 70 billion by 2035. Global poultry demand continues to grow at 6–8% annually. Premium country chicken products command 2–4x the price of commodity broiler products in international markets. And yet, India’s poultry export potential remains vastly underexploited.

Whether you are starting with 100 birds in your backyard or planning a 10,000-bird commercial operation, the path to export profitability is clear: invest in quality breeds, maintain strict biosecurity, build a branded product, achieve the right certifications, and partner with experts who know global markets inside and out.

JB Experts has spent 12+ years helping 900+ companies across 17+ industries access world markets. We have the systems, the network, and the expertise to guarantee results. Your poultry products deserve a global audience. Let us make it happen.

 

 

Disclaimer: This article is published by JB Experts for educational and informational purposes only. Market data, prices, and projections are based on publicly available research as of March 2026 and are subject to change. Readers are advised to conduct their own due diligence and consult with relevant authorities before making business or investment decisions. JB Experts does not guarantee specific returns or outcomes.

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