Incubating Quail Eggs: Complete Beginner's Guide

This blog is a complete beginner-to-advanced guide on hatching quail eggs at home. It explains how to choose the right quail egg incubator, maintain the correct temperature (99.5°F) and humidity levels, follow a proper egg-turning schedule, and manage lockdown before hatching.

Incubating Quail Eggs: Complete Beginner's Guide
Quail Hatching Guide · Incubation Series

Everything you need to hatch quail eggs at home, the best incubator for quail eggs, exact temperature and humidity settings, a full quail egg incubation chart, step-by-step hatching timeline, candling guide, hatch rate benchmarks, and brooder setup with equipment from Incubator Warehouse.

Incubating quail eggs 2026 Coturnix quail incubation guide Quail egg incubator · Temperature · Humidity · USA Free shipping · Incubator Warehouse.
IW
Incubator Warehouse Editorial Team
The Incubator Warehouse team has helped thousands of American hobbyists, homesteaders, and small-scale poultry farmers successfully hatch and raise quail. Our guides combine hands-on incubation expertise with practical field experience from our customer community across the USA.
· incubatorwarehouse.com · Updated June 2026
Part of the complete quail raising series
The Complete Guide to Raising Quail: From Egg to Table Incubator Warehouse
17–18
Days to hatch Coturnix quail incubation period
99.5°F
Optimal forced-air incubator temperature for quail eggs
45–55%
Incubation humidity days 1–14 (raise to 65–70% at lockdown)
85%+
Excellent quail hatch rate with proper setup and equipment

If you have ever thought about hatching your own quail at home, you are in the right place. Incubating quail eggs is one of the most rewarding projects a backyard farmer or homesteader can take on. With the right incubator setup, the correct temperature and humidity, and a little patience, you can go from a clutch of tiny eggs to a brood of fluffy chicks in just 17 to 18 days for Coturnix quail, the most popular and beginner-friendly species in the US.

This complete guide covers everything: how to choose the best incubator for quail eggs, the exact settings to use, a full quail egg incubation chart by species, how to candle quail eggs at home, realistic hatch rate benchmarks, a step-by-step hatching timeline, and how to care for your chicks once they arrive. Whether you are incubating Coturnix quail eggs for the first time or want to improve your hatch rate, everything you need is right here.

New to quail altogether? Start with the basics first.

Before you incubate your first batch of eggs, understanding what quail need throughout their full lifecycle makes every stage easier. Our complete guide to raising quail covers species selection, housing, feeding, and flock management from day one. If you are also deciding whether quail fit your goals better than chickens, our comparison of quail vs chickens walks through the key differences in space, feed, egg output, and management before you commit to either.

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The short answer

Incubate quail eggs at 99.5°F and 45–55% humidity for 17–18 days (Coturnix). Turn eggs 3–5 times daily. Lock down on day 14–15, raise humidity to 65–70%, and expect chicks by day 17–18.

Temperature consistency and correct humidity are the two factors that determine your quail hatch rate more than anything else. The most common causes of failure are humidity that is too low during lockdown (shrink-wrapping), humidity that is too high during incubation (an underdeveloped air cell), and temperature fluctuations from an unstable incubator. All three are preventable with the right equipment and a pre-load test run. Incubator Warehouse carries the full range of quail egg incubators backed by the 2-year IncuCare Warranty.

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Equipment first
Choosing the Best Incubator for Quail Eggs

Before you source a single egg, you need the right equipment. A reliable quail egg incubator is the single most important investment in this process. Quail eggs are small and sensitive to environmental variation. You need a machine that maintains temperature and humidity consistently across the full incubation period. The difference between a still-air budget unit and a forced-air digital incubator with automatic turning can easily be the difference between a 40% hatch rate and an 85%+ hatch rate.

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What to Look for in a Quail Egg Incubator
Forced air · Auto-turning · Digital controls · Humidity display
Beginner Essentials

Forced-air fan: A fan circulates warm air evenly throughout the incubation chamber, eliminating hot and cold spots that cause uneven development. Still-air incubators can work, but require temperature measurement at the egg level and are far less forgiving of calibration errors. For anyone incubating quail eggs at home, a forced-air unit is strongly recommended.

Automatic egg turner: Quail eggs must be turned 3–5 times per day throughout incubation to prevent the embryo from adhering to the shell membrane. A quail egg auto-turner handles this continuously without human intervention, resulting in more consistent development and significantly higher hatch rates than manual turning. Use quail-specific rolling cradles or roller bars; standard chicken egg cups are too large for quail eggs.

Digital thermostat and hygrometer: A digital thermostat maintains temperature within a tighter range than an analog dia dial thermostat in any incubator with an independent, calibrated digital hygrometer. Factory-installed analog humidity gauges commonly read 5–10% off the actual relative humidity, which directly impacts your quail egg hatch rate.

Viewing window: Lets you monitor egg development and hatch activity without opening the lid and destabilizing internal humidity. Especially valuable during lockdown when maintaining 65–70% humidity is critical for successful pipping and zipping.

⚠️ Before buying any incubator, read our guide on 7 mistakes to avoid when buying an incubator. The most expensive mistake a beginner makes is purchasing a unit that cannot maintain a stable temperature and humidity;y no amount of technique compensates for a fundamentally unstable machine.
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Incubation parameters
Incubation Settings: Best Temperature and Humidity for Quail Eggs. Getting temperature and humidity dialed in before your eggs go in is the most critical step in the process. Here are the exact settings for incubating Coturnix quail eggs, the most common species for beginners hatching quail eggs at home.
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99.5°F
Forced-Air Temp
Still air: set to 101–102°F, measured at egg level. Maintain ±0.5°F throughout all 17–18 days.
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45–55%
Incubation Humidity
Days 1–14. Best humidity for quail eggs during incubation. Verify with an independent digital hygrometer.
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3–5×
Daily Turns
Always an odd number, so the egg rests on alternating sides each night. Follow the quail egg turning schedule until lockdown.
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Day 14–15
Quail Egg Lockdown
Stop turning. Lay eggs on their sides. Raise humidity to 65–70%. Do not open the incubator after lockdown.
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Day 17–18
Expected Hatch
Most Coturnix chicks pip and hatch between days 17 and 18 when temperature and humidity are maintained correctly.
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65–70%
Lockdown Humidity
Raised from day 14–15 through hatch. Prevents the membrane from drying and trapping chicks during pip and zip.
Parameter Forced-Air Incubator Still-Air Incubator Lockdown Phase
Temperature 99.5°F (37.5°C) 101–102°F at egg level Maintain 99.5°F throughout
Humidity (RH) 45–55% 45–55% 65–70%
Egg Turning 3–5× daily (odd number) 3–5× daily (odd number) Stop turning on day 14–15
Ventilation Vents 25–50% open Vents 25–50% open Increase to 50–75% open
Candling Day 7 (check fertility) & Day 14 Day 7 (check fertility) & Day 14 No candling after lockdown
The humidity mistake that kills the most quail hatch attempts

Many first-time hatchers use a chicken-and-egg hatching rate (55–60%) throughout the incubation period. That is too high for quail eggs. The best humidity for quail eggs during incubation is 45–55% quail eggs need to lose approximately 12–15% of their initial weight through moisture evaporation to develop the correct air cell size. Too much humidity prevents this, producing chicks that cannot pip and exit the shell. Use an independent, calibrated digital hygrometer at all times. Refer to the full egg incubator temperature chart for complete species-specific guidance.

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Reference data
Quail Egg Incubation Chart by Species

Incubation period, temperature, and lockdown timing vary among quail species. Use this quail egg incubation chart to set your parameters correctly. Using chicken settings or the wrong species settings is one of the most common beginner errors and directly impacts your quail incubation success rate.

Quail Species Incubation Period Forced-Air Temp Incubation Humidity Lockdown Day Lockdown Humidity
Coturnix (Japanese) Most Common 17–18 days 99.5°F (37.5°C) 45–55% Day 14–15 65–70%
Bobwhite Quail 23–24 days 99.5°F (37.5°C) 45–55% Day 21 65–70%
California (Valley) Quail 23–24 days 99.5°F (37.5°C) 40–45% Day 21 65–70%
Button Quail (King Quail) 16–17 days 99.5°F (37.5°C) 45–55% Day 14 65–70%
Gambel's Quail 21–23 days 99.5°F (37.5°C) 40–50% Day 19–20 65–70%
📋 For a full temperature and humidity reference covering chicken, duck, quail, and reptile eggs in one chart, see the Incubator Warehouse egg incubator temperature chart. Always match your settings to the species you are hatching. Quail egg incubation settings are not interchangeable with those for chicken eggs
The full process
How to Incubate Quail Eggs: Step-by-Step
S1
Source and Store Fertile Quail Eggs
Collect daily · Store at 55–65°F · Incubate within 7–10 days
Before You Start

Not every quail egg is fertile. For Coturnix quail, maintain a male-to-female ratio of 1:3 to 1:5 in your breeding flock to ensure a good supply of fertile quail eggs. Collect eggs daily in the morning, store them pointed-end down at 55–65°F with 70–75% humidity, and begin incubation within 7–10 days. Hatch rates decline sharply with eggs older than 10 days. Turn stored eggs 45 degrees twice daily if storing for longer than 3 days before setting. Never refrigerate eggs intended for incubation; refrigerator temperatures of 35–38°F kill embryos.

S2
Pre-Warm Incubator and Stabilize Settings
Run 24–36 hours empty ·Verify temperature and humidity with independent gauges.
Setup Phase

Run your incubator empty for at least 24–36 hours before loading any eggs. Place an independent digital hygrometer and thermometer at egg level inside and record readings every 4–6 hours. Correct any calibration issues before eggs go in. Also, pre-warm your eggs to room temperature (68–70°F) for 4–6 hours before setting them to prevent condensation on the shells when they enter the warm incubator.

S3
Set Eggs and Begin Quail Egg Turning Schedule
Mark eggs for manual turning · Load auto-turner · Confirm settings
Day 1

Place eggs in the incubator with the large end slightly elevated or on their sides in quail egg rolling cradles. If turning manually, mark one side of each egg with an X and the other with an O to confirm that every egg is being turned at each session. Follow the quail egg turning schedule of 3–5 turns per day, always an odd total number, so the egg rests on alternating sides overnight. A quail egg automatic turner eliminates this and is strongly recommended for consistent, at-home quail egg hatch results.

S4
Quail Egg Lockdown on Day 14–15
Stop turning · Lay eggs on sides · Fill water channels · Raise humidity
Lockdown

On day 14 or 15, stop all egg turning and lay eggs on their sides on the incubator mesh or hatching tray. This is a quail egg lockdown. Fill all water channels to maximum capacity and raise humidity to 65–70%. From this point, do not open the incubator until all hatching activity has fully ceased and chicks are dry. Opening the lid during active pipping instantly lowers humidity. It can cause the membrane around hatching chicks to dry rapidly, a condition called shrink-wrapping that is fatal in most cases.

S5
Pip, Zip & Hatch
First pip day 16–17 · Full hatch day 17–18 · Do not assist prematurely
Hatch Window

The first external pip typically appears on day 16–17. After pipping, Coturnix quail chicks take 12–24 hours to complete zipping and fully emerge. Do not assist a hatching chick unless it has been pipping for more than 24 hours with no progress. Premature assistance of a chick that has not fully absorbed its yolk sac causes bleeding and death. Leave all chicks in the incubator until the last one has fully dried (fluffy, not wet), typically 12–24 hours after emerging, then transfer to a pre-warmed brooder.

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Candling quail eggs
How to Candle Quail Eggs

Candling quail eggs is the process of shining a bright light through the shell to check embryo development, identify infertile eggs, and monitor air cell size as a humidity indicator. It is one of the most useful skills you can develop for improving your quail hatch rate over time.

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Quail Egg Candling Chart: What to Look For by Day
Day 7 fertility check · Day 14 air cell check · After lockdown: no candling
Candling Guide

Equipment: Use a bright, focused LED egg candler in a darkened room. Quail eggshells have heavier brown speckling than most poultry eggs, which makes candling slightly harder than with chicken eggs. A focused beam rather than a wide-angle light makes a significant difference in visibility. Keep the entire candling session under 5 minutes to minimize temperature and humidity loss from opening the incubator.

Day 7 candling fertility check: Hold the egg over the candler at the large end. A fertile, developing egg shows a web of red blood vessels radiating from a dark center (the embryo). Infertile eggs appear uniformly clear with only the yolk shadow visible. Blood ring eggs a ring of blood with no visible embryo structure indicate development has stopped. Remove the blood ring and clear eggs immediately to prevent bacterial contamination of the remaining fertile quail eggs.

Day 14 candling air cell check: By day 14, a developing egg shows a large dark mass filling most of the interior with a clearly defined air cell at the large end. The air cell should occupy approximately 30–35% of the egg's total volume. A very small air cell (under 25%) means humidity has been too high and needs to be monitored. A very large air cell (over 40%) means humidity has been too low; add water or reduce vent openings. You may also see movement inside the egg at this stage, a positive sign of a healthy, developing chick.

Fertile quail egg (day 7): Red blood vessel web with dark embryo center developing correctly Infertile egg: Clear interior, yolk shadow only — remove from incubator Blood ring: Ring of blood, no embryo movement — development stopped, remove immediately Air cell too small (day 14): Humidity too high — lower to 45–55% and recheck in 48 hours Air cell too large (day 14): Humidity too low — add water or add a damp sponge Movement visible (day 14): Healthy embryo — continue incubation and prepare for lockdown on day 14–15
🔦 Never candle quail eggs after lockdown begins on day 14–15. Opening the incubator at this stage drops the humidity sharply and can shrink-wrap actively pipping chicks inside their shells. Use the viewing window of your incubator to monitor hatch progress without opening the lid.
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Setting realistic expectations
What Is a Good Quail Egg Hatch Rate?

Understanding what a realistic quail hatch rate looks like helps you identify whether your incubation setup is performing well or whether there is a problem to address. Even experienced hatchers rarely achieve 100%, and that is normal. Here is how to benchmark your quail incubation success rate.

40–55%
Beginner / Needs Work
Typical of first hatches with a still-air incubator, manual turning, or a budget unit without digital humidity control. Improvable with better equipment and calibrated settings.
65–80%
Good Target for Most
Achievable with a forced-air incubator, an automatic egg turner, and a calibrated digital hygrometer. This is a realistic and solid target for most home hatchers.
85%+
Excellent
Consistently achievable with premium equipment, pre-tested settings, high-quality fertile eggs set within 7 days of laying, and disciplined lockdown practice.
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How to Increase Your Quail Hatch Rate
The controllable factors that move your rate from beginner to excellent
Improve Results

Use fresh eggs: Hatch rates for quail eggs set within 3–5 days of laying are significantly higher than for eggs set at 8–10 days after laying. If you are storing eggs before incubation, keep them at 55–65°F and incubate within 7–10 days. Never refrigerate eggs you plan to hatch.

Verify fertility before incubating: A poor quail hatch rate caused by infertile eggs is a flock management problem, not an incubation problem. Confirm your male-to-female ratio is correct (1:3–5 for Coturnix), your male is actively mating, and your birds are receiving adequate protein. A quail feed guide with species-appropriate protein levels makes a measurable difference to egg fertility rates.

Calibrate your hygrometer: The single most impactful accessory purchase for improving your quail incubation success rate is an independent, calibrated digital hygrometer. Factory-installed analog dials commonly read 5–10% off. An inaccurate humidity reading causes you to run too wet or too dry throughout the entire 17–18-day incubation period.

Never open during lockdown: Even one brief opening of the incubator during active hatching on days 16–18 can drop humidity sharply enough to shrink-wrap multiple chicks at once. If you need to see the hatch in progress, use the viewing window. Use a hatching liner or tray inside the incubator, so chicks have a stable, non-slip surface when they emerge.

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After the hatch
Quail Brooder Setup & Raising Quail Chicks

Once your quail chicks have hatched and dried off in the incubator, transfer them to a pre-warmed brooder. Quail chick care starts the moment they leave the incubator. Coturnix chicks are precocial, immediately mobile, and self-feeding, but tiny and vulnerable to chilling in their first week. Brooder setup matters as much as incubator settings for survival rates.

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Quail Brooder Setup: Temperature Schedule
Reduce 5°F per week until fully feathered at 4–5 weeks
Chick Care

Week 1: 95–100°F directly under the heat source. Use a brooder heat plate or heat lamp positioned to create a temperature gradient a warm zone at 95–100°F and a cooler zone at ambient room temperature so chicks can self-regulate. Chicks huddled together, cheeping loudly, are too cold. Chicks spread to the edges and panting are too warm. A chick brooder with a radiant heat plate is preferred over a heat lamp because it is safer, more consistent in temperature, and less drying to the air.

Weeks 2–5: Reduce 5°F each week. Week 2: 90–95°F. Week 3: 85–90°F. Week 4: 80–85°F. Week 5: 75–80°F. By 4–5 weeks, Coturnix quail chicks are substantially feathered and can tolerate ambient temperatures in the 65–70°F range in a draft-free space. Full feathering is complete by approximately 5–6 weeks.

Brooder floor: Paper towels for the first 3–5 days; prevents leg splaying on slick surfaces; switch to fine pine shavings after Water: Shallow waterers with marbles or pebbles in the tray quail chicks will drown in standard poultry waterers Feed: 24–28% protein quail chick feed spread on paper towel for first 2 days; transfer to shallow feeder after Brooder top: Mesh cover required from day one Coturnix chicks can launch themselves vertically within the first 5–7 days Space: Minimum 0.5 sq ft per chick for weeks 1–2; expand to 1 sq ft per chick for weeks 3–5 Outdoor transition: When fully feathered (4–6 weeks) if outdoor night temperatures stay above 60°F

Once your quail flock is established and producing eggs consistently, your focus shifts from hatching to long-term flock management and production. Our guide on raising quail for meat covers housing, feeding schedule, and processing for meat production, and our complete guide to raising quail covers the full lifecycle from egg to table.

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Avoid these errors
Common Quail Incubation Mistakes & How to Fix Them
Mistake What Happens How to Fix It Priority
Humidity too low during lockdown The membranes and traps atc catch the ick inside the shell; shrink-wrapping; pip, but no exit. Raise humidity to 65–70% at lockdown; add a damp sponge; never open the incubator during active hatching. Critical
Humidity is too high during incubation Air cell too small; insufficient oxygen space; chick cannot pip and zip at hatch Set 45–55% for days 1–14; use an independent calibrated digital hygrometer, not the built-in factory dial. Critical
Temperature fluctuations Uneven development; early embryo death; delayed or failed hatch; low hatch rate Pre-test incubator 24–36 hours; use digital min/max thermometer; choose a forced-air unit Critical
Opening the incubator during hatch Humidity drops instantly; the membrane dries on actively pipping chicks Never open after lockdown; monitor through the viewing window; wait until all chicks are fully dry High
Assisting hatching too early Yolk sac not absorbed; chick bleeds after forced removal from the shell Only assist after 24+ hours of pip with zero progress; proceed with extreme caution even then High
Using chicken settings for quail eggs Wrong lockdown timing; humidity mismatch; incorrect incubation period Always use the species-specific quail egg incubation chart; Coturnix settings differ from chicken settings Medium
Setting eggs older than 10 days Sharply declining quail hatch rate; higher proportion of non-developing eggs Collect and store eggs correctly; incubate within 7–10 days of laying; never refrigerate Medium
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Complete your setup
Essential Quail Incubation Accessories

A good incubator gets you most of the way there, but the right accessories complete your setup and eliminate the manual work that can lead to inconsistent results. Browse the full selection of egg incubator accessories from Incubator Warehouse to properly equip your hatching station.

Accessory Why You Need It Impact on Hatch Rate
Digital Hygrometer Verifies actual humidity independently of the incubator's built-in display; factory analog gauges commonly read 5–10% off. Critical
Incu-Bright LED Candler Bright focused beam for checking embryo development and air cell size through quail's heavily speckled shells. High
Quail Egg Turner / HovaBator Quail Turner Automatic turning 3–5 times daily; eliminates missed manual turns; quail-specific cradles fit small eggs correctly. High
Hatching Tray / Liner Non-slip surface at lockdown; prevents splayed legs at hatch; keeps newly hatched chicks stable. Medium
Brooder Heat Plate (Vrooder / InstaBrooder) Radiant heat for chick brooder; safer and more temperature-consistent than heat lamps; less drying to brooder air Chick Survival
Water Wicks / Humidity Pads Maintains more consistent moisture levels without opening the incubator repeatedly during the hatch window Supportive
Not sure which incubator is right for your flock size and budget?

Read the dedicated guide on the best quail egg incubator for successful hatches for a model-by-model comparison with honest recommendations at each price point. It is the most common starting point for buyers who want to match the right unit to their specific needs before making a purchase.

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Bottom Line

Incubating quail eggs successfully comes down to three things: a reliable forced-air incubator, consistent temperature and humidity control, and discipline during lockdown and hatch. Get these right, and a quail hatch rate of 80–85%+ is consistently achievable.

The equipment you choose determines more of your outcome than any other factor. A forced-air incubator with automatic egg turning, a calibrated digital hygrometer, and a 24–36-hour pre-test run before your first batch eliminates the majority of beginner hatch failures before a single egg is loaded.

For incubation: Set 99.5°F and 45–55% humidity for days 1–14 for Coturnix quail eggs. Follow the quail egg turning schedule of 3–5 times daily. Candle at day 7 and day 14. Begin quail egg lockdown on day 14–15, raise humidity to 65–70%, and do not open the incubator until all chicks are dry. Expect the first pips on day 16–17 and a full hatch by day 18.

For chicks: Transfer to a quail brooder setup at 95–100°F immediately after drying. Use shallow waterers with marbles, paper towel flooring for the first 3–5 days, and 24–28% protein quail chick feed from day one. Reduce brooder temperature 5°F per week until fully feathered at 4–5 weeks.

Incubator Warehouse carries everything you need: quail egg incubators, automatic turners, digital hygrometers, LED candlers, hatching liners, and brooder equipment, all backed by the 2-year IncuCare Warranty and US-based customer support.

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Common questions answered
Frequently Asked Questions
Q
How long does it take to incubate quail eggs?
Coturnix quail eggs incubate for 17–18 days in a forced-air incubator set at 99.5°F and 45–55% humidity. Lockdown begins on day 14–15. The first external pip typically appears on day 16–17, and most chicks complete hatching by the end of day 18. Incubation times vary by species: Bobwhite and California quail take 23–24 days; Button quail take 16–17 days. Always match your settings and lockdown timing to the specific species you are incubating.
Q
How often should quail eggs be turned?
Quail eggs should be turned 3–5 times per day throughout incubation, following the quail egg turning schedule until lockdown on day 14–15. Always turn the egg an odd number of times so it rests on alternating sides overnight, which prevents the embryo from consistently pressing against the same side of the shell. An automatic egg turner is strongly recommended as it handles this continuously and eliminates the risk of missed turns. Stop turning completely during lockdown and do not resume.
Q
When should you stop turning quail eggs?
Stop turning quail eggs on day 14–15 for Coturnix quail. This is the start of the quail egg lockdown. At this point, lay the eggs on their sides on the hatching tray, fill the water reservoirs to maximum capacity, raise the humidity to 65–70%, and do not open the incubator again until all chicks have fully hatched and dried. Continuing to turn eggs after lockdown can reposition chicks at a critical stage when they are orientating themselves for pipping.
Q
What happens if the humidity is too high during quail egg incubation?
If humidity runs too high during incubation (days 1–14), the quail egg cannot lose the correct amount of moisture through the shell. This results in an air cell that is too small, leaving the developing chick insufficient oxygen space. The most common outcomes are late-term embryo death, chicks that pip internally but cannot break through the outer shell, or fully formed chicks that never reach external pip. Monitor air cell size on day 14; it should occupy approximately 30–35% of the egg's total volume.
Q
What happens if the humidity is too low during the quail egg lockdown?
If humidity is too low during lockdown and hatch (days 14–18), the membrane inside the shell dries and sticks to the chick's body, a condition called shrink-wrapping. The chick pips the outer shell but cannot rotate to zip and exit because it is effectively glued inside by the dried membrane. This is one of the most common and heartbreaking hatch failures and is entirely preventable by maintaining 65–70% humidity from lockdown through to the end of hatching activity.
Q
Can you incubate quail eggs without an incubator?
It is technically possible to incubate quail eggs under a broody hen, but the results are highly unreliable for quail. Most domestic quail breeds (particularly Coturnix) have had the broody instinct largely bred out of them, and quail eggs require tighter humidity tolerances than chicken or duck eggs. A dedicated egg incubator is strongly recommended for consistent hatching of quail eggs at home. Even a basic forced-air digital unit produces dramatically more reliable outcomes than attempting natural incubation with quail.
Q
Can refrigerated quail eggs hatch?
No. Refrigerator temperatures of 35–38°F kill quail embryos. If you need to store fertile quail eggs before incubating, keep them at 55–65°F with 70–75% humidity, stored pointed-end down, and begin incubation within 7–10 days of laying. Hatch rates decline sharply after 10 days of storage, even under correct conditions. Refrigerated eggs should never be placed in an incubator; they will not develop.
Q
Why are my quail eggs not hatching?
The most common causes of quail eggs not hatching are: (1) infertile eggs, check male-to-female ratio and male breeding activity; (2) humidity too high during incubation producing underdeveloped air cells; (3) humidity too low at lockdown causing shrink-wrapping; (4) temperature instability from an uncalibrated incubator; (5) eggs too old when set (more than 10 days post-lay). Candle at day 7 and day 14 to identify the problem early. If all eggs are clear at day 7 candling, the problem is fertility rather than incubation conditions.

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Everything you need to hatch quail eggs at home includes forced-air incubators, digital hygrometers, LED candlers, automatic turners, hatching trays, and brooder equipment. Backed by the 2-year IncuCare Warranty.