Do Turkeys Need a Coop?

Turkey Coops and Shelter Considerations

Do Turkeys Need a Coop?

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You’ve decided to add turkeys to your farm, and the first question you may be asking yourself is, do turkeys need a coop? The answer depends on a few factors. Are you planning to raise broad-breasted turkeys for the Thanksgiving table, or do you want to keep heritage turkeys year-round? Will your turkeys be free-range, or will they be kept inside a fenced yard? The answer will also depend on the climate where you live and whether you are getting turkey poults (juvenile turkeys) or turkeys that are a bit older. 

If you plan to raise your turkeys from poults, then the answer to “Do turkeys need a coop?” is a resounding yes. Once the poults outgrow their brooder, they will need a secure coop at night, just like any other type of poultry. If you raise your turkeys among chickens, then the turkeys may learn to go into the coop at night by following the example set by the chickens. However, if blackhead disease (histomoniasis) is a problem in your region, it is not advised to raise them together. If you are adding adult turkeys to your flock, you may not be able to train them to sleep in a coop. Turkeys are notoriously suspicious of new things and prefer to make their own decisions, despite our best efforts to convince them otherwise. 

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As your turkeys get older don’t be surprised if they prefer to sleep on top of the coop instead of in it!

Designing Turkey Coops 

A turkey coop needs to be designed differently from a chicken coop, especially for the larger, less agile broad-breasted turkeys. Broad-breasted turkeys will need a roost that is low to the ground to prevent injury to their legs or feet when jumping down from the roost. The roosting bar should be wider and must be placed farther from the wall than is typical for a chicken roosting bar. Broad-breasted turkeys can become unable to roost as they grow larger. They may choose to sleep on the coop floor, or they may appreciate something low and easy to roost on, such as a straw bale. As you design your turkey coop, remember to incorporate a door large enough to accommodate their mature size. Place the door low to the ground, and any ramps or ladders should be easy for big feet to navigate. The size of the coop will also depend on whether the turkeys will be kept confined in a yard or whether they will have access to a large pasture. The more time the turkeys will spend in the coop, the bigger it needs to be.  

You’ll have the best chance of getting your turkeys to sleep in a coop if you get them as poults and train them early.

Housing Preferences for Broad Breasted Versus Heritage Turkeys 

Broad-breasted turkeys tend to accept coop life more readily than their heritage turkey relatives. It’s common for broad-breasted turkeys to be perfectly content sleeping in a coop. Heritage turkeys, however, have a huge independent streak, and they may not appreciate your efforts to keep them safely housed at night. Heritage turkeys prefer to sleep outdoors rather than in a confined space. My first heritage turkeys slept in a coop until they were three months old, and from that time on, they resisted sleeping indoors. Knowing what I know now, I would have designed my turkey coop differently and made it larger, and just maybe (although that’s a BIG maybe!) I would still have turkeys that slept in a coop at night. 

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This covered roosting structure protects our turkeys from the weather while giving them the open-air sleeping location they prefer.

Understanding a Heritage Turkey’s Instincts 

I’ve learned over the years that the answer to the question “Do turkeys need a coop?” can be “No” in certain situations. A heritage turkey’s instinct is to sleep up high with a good view of its surroundings. A barn-type structure is more suited to a turkey’s tastes than a typically shorter and more confined chicken coop. Incorporating hardware cloth to form a large screened upper section in the coop walls instead of solid wood coop walls is one design element I’ve seen that may satisfy a turkey’s desire for a view of their surroundings. Try to think like a turkey when designing your turkey shelter, and you’ll have a better chance that they will use it. 

Turkeys are very hardy birds and can easily withstand winter weather.

Heritage turkeys are amazingly hardy birds well-adapted to withstand the winter weather. I know many people that keep heritage turkeys and share my experience that their turkeys prefer to roost outside all winter long, even in the snow and freezing temperatures. If they have a structure that shelters from the elements, when and if they choose to use it, a coop may be unnecessary. The two caveats I will add to this statement are that our turkey pasture is surrounded by electric poultry netting, which prevents the larger four-legged predators from accessing our turkey yard at night. If we did not use electric poultry netting, I would probably have made more effort to convince the turkeys to sleep inside a coop. If you have a livestock guardian dog, that may also ease your mind a bit about letting your turkeys sleep outside. Our winters are fairly mild here, but if you live in a harsh climate with freezing temperatures or snow much of the winter, I recommend making more of an effort to convince your turkeys to sleep in a coop. 

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Turkeys often shun their coop in favor of sleeping outdoors, no matter what the weather.

Simple Turkey Shelters 

A turkey shelter can take a variety of forms, but a roof and a couple of sides that protect from the rain, snow, and prevailing wind may be all that is needed. These open-sided structures also provide much-needed shade in the summer and benefit from not trapping warm air inside like a coop. The nighttime shelter that we have used successfully for several years is a six-foot-high roosting structure with multiple roosting bars and covered with a corrugated metal roof. In addition, we have several daytime shelters and lean-tos made from pallets and scrap wood. These options are not fancy to look at, and they don’t take a lot of time to build, but they protect from the winter weather and the summer heat while still meeting a turkey’s desire for open spaces. In addition, it beats spending time and effort building a coop that your independent-minded turkeys may not use — or, even more frustratingly, use to sleep on top of instead of inside it! 


Originally published in the October/November 2021 issue of Backyard Poultry and regularly vetted for accuracy.

4 thoughts on “Do Turkeys Need a Coop?”
  1. I agree with these facts..
    I rear about 12 heritage turkey breed here in Nigeria, Africa..
    I constructed a coop in their cage since when they were about 6 weeks old..
    And they’re really used to it even up till now that they’re 6months..

  2. Great insight into turkey rearing. I am Donald from Uganda and I wish to rear broad breasted turkeys. Question is land 50×100 feet enough to accommodate them? How do I prevent predators accessing the coop without suffocating the birds if I put toouch detail on the coop.

    Thanks and regards
    Donald

  3. Would a plastic dog igloo suffice as a turkey shelter?
    And how big of a pen would be accommodating for 3 pullets that will be pets?

    1. In my personal experience, a minimum size for turkeys would be a 5ft x 5ft. I use 2x4s for roosts. The reason for a larger space is lady turkeys like to nest wherever they please and I prefer that to not be outside. Giving ample space where they sleep will entice them to also nest in the same structure. I lay down some lime and put straw over it. Keeps the coop easy to clean and mostly bug free.

      When spring comes around, your ladies will lay large clutches. I also raise chickens, so I’ll replace my turk eggs with fertile chicken eggs to let the mama turkeys hatch the chicks.

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