Quick Answer: How to Get Rid of Chicken Mites
Chicken mites are tiny blood-feeding parasites (about the size of a pinhead) that live on chickens and inside coops. Getting rid of them takes three coordinated steps:
- Treat the birds — apply a poultry-safe mite spray or dust directly on chickens, focusing on under wings, around the vent, and at the base of feathers.
- Treat the coop — empty all bedding, clean roosts and corners, and apply a residual mite treatment to surfaces. Mite eggs survive in cracks and crevices.
- Repeat in 7–10 days — to kill newly hatched mites before they reproduce.
Yes, chicken mites can bite humans, but they cannot live on human bodies long-term. If you’re being bitten, the mites are coming from the coop — treat the coop, and the human bites stop.
Mites won’t go away on their own. They reproduce in 7–10 day cycles and a small infestation becomes overwhelming within weeks if untreated.
Not sure if mites are your real problem? Take our 90-second Backyard Flock Health Check — answer 7 questions and get a personalized risk score plus a recommended care routine for your specific flock.
What Are Chicken Mites?
Chicken mites are external parasites that feed on chicken blood. They’re members of the arachnid family (related to spiders and ticks), typically smaller than a pinhead, and most active at night. A single female mite can lay up to 100,000 eggs in her lifetime, which is why mite populations explode quickly once established.
Mites typically live their entire lives on or near a host bird. A few species (notably the red mite) hide in coop crevices during the day and only feed at night, which makes them harder to spot but easier to control if you treat surfaces.
According to the University of Kentucky Entomology Department, even moderate mite infestations cause measurable stress responses in chickens — reduced egg production, weight loss, anemia, and increased susceptibility to other diseases.
How do chickens get mites in the first place?
Mites arrive on chickens through three main routes:
- Wild birds. Sparrows, starlings, and other wild birds frequently carry mites and shed them in feeders, on perches, or in nesting sites. This is the #1 source of new infestations.
- New flock additions. Adding chickens from another farm or breeder without quarantine almost guarantees you’ll import mites if the source flock has them.
- Pets and rodents. Dogs, cats, and rodents can carry mites between coops, especially if they have outdoor access to multiple flocks.
- Used equipment. Buying second-hand coops, feeders, or nest boxes can introduce mite eggs that survive for weeks without a host.
Types of Chicken Mites
Different mite species require slightly different treatment approaches. Knowing which type you’re dealing with helps you target the treatment.
Northern Fowl Mite
The most common backyard mite. Lives on chickens 24/7 — you’ll find them clustered around the vent, under wings, and on the breast. Dark red-brown when fed, gray when not. Causes blood spots on eggs and visible feather damage. Life cycle: 5–7 days.
Red Mite (Red Roost Mite)
Hides in coop crevices during the day, emerges at night to feed. Bright red after feeding, gray-white when empty. The hardest mite to detect because they’re rarely on the chickens during daylight. Life cycle: ~2 weeks. Can survive 4+ months without feeding.
Scaly Leg Mite
Burrows under the scales of chickens’ legs and feet, causing crusty, raised, painful scales. Doesn’t infest the coop — only lives on individual birds. Treatment requires applying oil or petroleum jelly to coat and suffocate the mites under the scales.
Poultry Lice
Not technically mites, but often grouped with them. Lice feed on skin, feathers, and dander rather than blood. They’re more active during the day and easier to spot — yellow to gray, about 1/8 inch long. Life cycle: 1–2 weeks.
Can Chicken Mites Live on Humans?
This is one of the most-asked questions in backyard chicken keeping, and the answer matters: chicken mites can bite humans but cannot live on human bodies long-term.
When mite populations explode in a coop, mites spread to anything warm and moving — including the keeper. They’ll crawl onto your hands and arms while you’re collecting eggs, ride home on your clothes, and bite for blood. The bites cause itchy red welts similar to mosquito bites, often in lines or clusters where clothing meets skin (waistband, sock line, wrist).
But human skin doesn’t provide what chicken mites need to complete their life cycle. After feeding, they fall off and die within a few days unless they find another bird host. Humans are a dead-end host.
How do I know if chicken mites are biting me?
Common signs you’re being bitten by chicken mites:
- Itchy red welts that appear after time in the coop, especially during egg collection
- Welts in lines or clusters at clothing edges (sock line, waistband, sleeves)
- Bites concentrated on arms, ankles, and lower legs
- Itching worse at night or after warm showers
- No bites on family members who don’t enter the coop
The bites themselves are harmless beyond the itching, but they’re a strong signal that the coop infestation is severe and needs immediate treatment.
How do I get rid of chicken mites on humans?
Since mites can’t reproduce on humans, getting rid of them on your body is straightforward:
- Shower immediately after coop time. Hot water and soap kill any mites still on your skin.
- Wash all clothing worn in the coop in hot water (130°F+) on a hot dryer cycle. Mites die at sustained temperatures above 125°F.
- Apply hydrocortisone cream to active bite welts to reduce itching. Antihistamines (Benadryl) help with severe itching.
- Treat the coop. This is the only step that actually solves the problem. As long as the coop is infested, you’ll keep getting bitten.
If bites continue more than 48 hours after a thorough body and clothes wash, check your home — mites occasionally hitchhike on shoes or coats and end up in laundry baskets, beds, or vehicle interiors. Vacuum thoroughly and wash bedding in hot water.
Can chicken mites infest my house?
Chicken mites can enter your house but won’t establish a permanent infestation without bird hosts. They typically die within 4–7 days indoors. If you’re seeing mites or bite welts continuing for weeks indoors, you likely have a different parasite (bird mites from a wild bird nest in the eaves, dust mites, or bed bugs) and should consult a pest control professional.
Signs Your Chickens Have Mites
A mite infestation can quietly grow for weeks before you notice it. Check your flock weekly during warm months for these signs:
- Feather loss, especially around the vent, under wings, and on the breast
- Dark spots or scabs on legs, skin, and around the vent
- Blood spots on eggs (a hallmark of Northern fowl mite infestation)
- Reluctance to enter the coop or roost at night
- Pale combs and wattles (sign of anemia from severe mite feeding)
- Reduced egg production without other obvious cause
- Visible mites on roosts at night (red mites) or on the birds themselves (Northern fowl mites)
- Excessive preening or dust bathing, especially out-of-season
How do I check my chickens for mites?
Two methods work best:
- Daytime inspection of the bird. Hold the chicken upside down (gently) and part the feathers around the vent, under the wings, and on the breast. Look for moving specks, dark debris (mite waste), or red-brown discoloration at feather bases. Northern fowl mites are visible to the naked eye.
- Nighttime inspection of the coop. Bring a flashlight into the coop after dark and check the underside of roost bars, the edges of nest boxes, and any cracks or crevices. Run your hand along roost bars — if it comes back streaked with what looks like dried blood, you have red mites.
If you find mites or strong evidence of them, assume you have a real infestation and treat the whole flock and coop, not just the bird where you saw them.
How to Get Rid of Chicken Mites: Step-by-Step
Effective mite removal requires hitting both the birds and the coop at the same time, then doing it again 7–10 days later to catch newly hatched mites.
Step 1: Empty and Clean the Coop
Remove all bedding, nesting material, feeders, and waterers. Burn or bag the bedding and dispose of it away from the coop. Don’t compost it — mite eggs can survive in compost piles.
Scrub roosts, walls, and floors with hot soapy water. Pay special attention to corners, crevices, and the underside of perches where red mites hide.
Step 2: Treat the Coop Surfaces
Apply a poultry-safe mite spray or dust to all coop surfaces — roosts, nest boxes, walls, floors, corners. We use Desecticide, which targets neurological receptors active only in insects (safe for chickens, humans, and pets but lethal to mites). Mix 6 oz per ½ gallon of water and apply with a sprayer; one batch covers about 250 sq ft.
Important mixing note: pour water into the sprayer first, then add Desecticide. Reverse the order and you’ll get foam.
Step 3: Treat the Birds
Apply the same product (or a poultry mite dust) directly to the chickens. Focus on under wings, around the vent, and at the base of breast feathers — that’s where Northern fowl mites cluster. Avoid spraying near eyes or nostrils. Birds don’t need to be removed from the coop during application.
Step 4: Add Fresh Bedding and Replace Equipment
Use clean, dry pine shavings or straw. Sprinkle a thin layer of food-grade diatomaceous earth (DE) under the bedding for ongoing dusting protection — but don’t rely on DE alone. It’s a useful preventive layer; it’s not a treatment for active infestations.
Step 5: Repeat in 7–10 Days
Mite eggs hatch in 5–7 days. The second treatment kills the new generation before they can reproduce. Skipping this step is the single most common reason mite infestations come back.
Step 6: Monitor for 4 Weeks
Check the flock and coop weekly for the next month. Catch any survivors early before they rebuild the population.
How long does it take to get rid of chicken mites?
A correctly executed two-treatment protocol (treat → wait 7–10 days → treat again) eliminates a typical mite infestation within 14 days. Severe long-standing infestations may need a third treatment 7 days after the second. Once eradicated, weekly inspections prevent reinfestation.
How to Prevent Chicken Mites
Prevention is dramatically easier than treatment. The same practices keep most flocks mite-free indefinitely:
- Quarantine new birds for 30 days before introducing them to the flock. Inspect them thoroughly during quarantine and treat preventively if any mites appear.
- Discourage wild birds from accessing the coop and run. Cover feed at night, clean up spilled grain, and use bird netting where possible.
- Maintain a dust-bathing area. A dry patch of sand or loose dirt with optional wood ash or food-grade diatomaceous earth helps chickens self-treat. This won’t stop a real infestation but reduces opportunistic mite hitchhikers.
- Inspect weekly during warm months. Mites peak in summer and fall. A 5-minute weekly check catches problems before they’re full infestations.
- Clean and replace bedding regularly. Deep-litter systems work for some keepers, but they can also harbor mites. If you use deep litter, refresh thoroughly twice a year.
- Don’t share equipment between flocks without thorough cleaning. Used coops, perches, feeders, and nest boxes can all carry mite eggs.
Frequently Asked Questions
Will chicken mites go away on their own?
No. Chicken mites do not self-resolve. They reproduce on a 5–14 day cycle (depending on species) and even a small population grows into a serious infestation within weeks. Treat as soon as you spot signs.
What kills chicken mites naturally?
Several approaches work, with varying effectiveness:
- Pyrethrin-based natural insecticides (from chrysanthemum flowers) kill mites quickly and break down within 48 hours
- Diatomaceous earth (food-grade) works as a long-term preventive but is too slow for active infestations
- Permethrin-based dusts are highly effective and approved for poultry
- Garlic juice and oil sprays have some repellent effect but rarely eliminate established infestations
- Desecticide targets insect-specific neurological receptors — effective and safe for birds, humans, and pets
For active infestations, a labeled poultry mite product gives the most reliable results. Home remedies are better for prevention than cure.
Can I use diatomaceous earth to kill mites?
Food-grade DE provides modest control of mites by absorbing the waxy coating on their bodies, causing dehydration. It works well as a preventive sprinkled in dust-bathing areas and under bedding. For active infestations, however, DE alone is rarely enough — it works slowly, doesn’t penetrate feathers well, and loses effectiveness when wet. Use it as part of a broader prevention plan, not as a standalone treatment.
Is permethrin safe for chickens?
Permethrin is approved for use on poultry and is one of the most widely used poultry mite treatments in commercial production. Follow label directions carefully. Don’t apply within 7 days of egg-laying if you’re consuming the eggs (check the specific product’s egg-withdrawal time). Permethrin is highly toxic to cats, so be extremely careful in mixed-pet households.
How often should I treat my coop for mites?
In active infestation: every 7–10 days until clear (typically 2–3 treatments). Preventively: monthly inspection, treatment only if mites are detected. Some commercial keepers do quarterly preventive treatment, but for backyard flocks the inspect-then-treat approach is more practical and avoids unnecessary chemical exposure.
Can chickens get mites in winter?
Yes, mites are active year-round in heated coops. Outdoor flocks see population drops in cold months but Northern fowl mites and scaly leg mites continue to feed. Don’t assume cold weather alone will solve a mite problem — it slows mites down but doesn’t eliminate them.
Are mites the same as lice?
No. Mites are arachnids that feed on blood; lice are insects that feed on skin and feathers. Treatment is similar, but lice are easier to spot (larger, daytime active, yellow-gray color) and slightly easier to control. Permethrin-based products work on both.
Will chicken mites bite my dog or cat?
Chicken mites occasionally bite dogs and cats but cannot establish on either. Pets that spend time in an infested coop can transport mites — including back to your house — so treat the coop promptly if pets are interacting with chickens. If your pet shows persistent itching or hair loss, see a vet to rule out canine/feline mites (a different species that does establish on those animals).
How quickly can a mite infestation grow?
A single fertilized female mite can produce 100,000+ descendants in 4–6 weeks under ideal conditions. A small population that seems “manageable” in week 1 can be a full crisis by week 4. The earlier you treat, the less work it takes.
Why does my coop keep getting mites?
Three common reasons: (1) you’re skipping the second treatment 7–10 days after the first, so newly hatched mites rebuild the population, (2) wild birds are accessing the coop and reintroducing mites, or (3) infested equipment or new birds keep bringing mites in. Audit all three pathways if you’re having recurring infestations.
Southland Organics Mite Control
We make poultry-safe pest control products that backyard keepers and commercial operations have used for over a decade.
Desecticide — Coop Mite Spray
Desecticide is our flagship pest control product. Originally developed for darkling beetles in commercial poultry houses, it works equally well on mites, lice, fleas, ticks, and bedbugs. Targets neurological receptors active only in insects and arthropods — completely safe for chickens, pets, kids, and the environment.
Application: 6 oz per ½ gallon water, sprayed on coop surfaces and birds. Covers ~250 sq ft per batch. Effective in 24 hours, no resistance buildup, no reapplication limit. Safe to spray with birds present.
Mixing tip: Always add water to the sprayer first, then add Desecticide. Reverse the order and you’ll get foam.
Big Ole Bird & Hen Helper — Gut Health Support
Mite infestations stress chickens, and stressed chickens have weaker immune systems. Adding poultry probiotics and Hen Helper to drinking water during and after a mite outbreak helps birds recover faster and resist secondary infections.
Have Questions About Mites or Other Coop Pests?
If you’re dealing with an active infestation or want to set up a prevention program, we’re here to help. Email success@southlandorganics.com or call 800-608-3755. Subscribe to our YouTube channel for application demos and case studies from real backyard flocks.
Table of Contents
- Quick Answer: How to Get Rid of Chicken Mites
- What Are Chicken Mites?
- How do chickens get mites in the first place?
- Types of Chicken Mites
- Northern Fowl Mite
- Red Mite (Red Roost Mite)
- Scaly Leg Mite
- Poultry Lice
- Can Chicken Mites Live on Humans?
- How do I know if chicken mites are biting me?
- How do I get rid of chicken mites on humans?
- Can chicken mites infest my house?
- Signs Your Chickens Have Mites
- How do I check my chickens for mites?
- How to Get Rid of Chicken Mites: Step-by-Step
- Step 1: Empty and Clean the Coop
- Step 2: Treat the Coop Surfaces
- Step 3: Treat the Birds
- Step 4: Add Fresh Bedding and Replace Equipment
- Step 5: Repeat in 7–10 Days
- Step 6: Monitor for 4 Weeks
- How long does it take to get rid of chicken mites?
- How to Prevent Chicken Mites
- Frequently Asked Questions
- Will chicken mites go away on their own?
- What kills chicken mites naturally?
- Can I use diatomaceous earth to kill mites?
- Is permethrin safe for chickens?
- How often should I treat my coop for mites?
- Can chickens get mites in winter?
- Are mites the same as lice?
- Will chicken mites bite my dog or cat?
- How quickly can a mite infestation grow?
- Why does my coop keep getting mites?
- Southland Organics Mite Control
- Desecticide — Coop Mite Spray
- Big Ole Bird & Hen Helper — Gut Health Support
- Have Questions About Mites or Other Coop Pests?
Written by
Content Manager (Former)
Agricultural content specialist • Poultry industry researcher
Isabella served as Content Manager at Southland Organics, creating educational resources that help farmers understand and implement organic solutions for poultry, turf, and agriculture.
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Founder & CEO
20+ years in organic agriculture • Humate & soil biology specialist
With years of experience in humate deposits and soil biology, Mike brings practical knowledge from the field to every conversation. He founded Southland Organics to create sustainable solutions that work with nature, not against it.
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