Exact incubation settings, day-by-day development timeline, lockdown protocol, and hatch troubleshooting for Coturnix (Japanese) quail eggs, the fastest-hatching quail species in captive aviculture.
Coturnix quai l- Coturnix coturnix japonica, also called Japanese quail or pharaoh quail, holds a well-earned reputation as the most beginner-friendly quail species to incubate. Their eggs are small, plentiful, and relatively forgiving of minor incubation errors. At 17–18 days, their incubation period is the shortest of any commonly kept quail species, nearly two weeks faster than chicken eggs and a full week shorter than Bobwhite or California quail.
That speed, however, does not mean incubation settings can be sloppy. Temperature swings of more than 1°F, humidity held too high during incubation, or an incubator opened at the wrong moment during lockdown can crash hatch rates just as badly as with any other species. This guide gives you the exact settings, the day-by-day development markers to watch for, and a complete troubleshooting framework so your next Coturnix hatch goes as smoothly as possible.
Coturnix quail offer the ideal entry point into quail incubation for three reasons: (1) females begin laying eggs at just 6–8 weeks of age, meaning you can go from hatched chicks to a fresh batch of fertile eggs to incubate in under two months; (2) at 17–18 days, the incubation cycle is short enough that a beginner can complete two or three practice runs and make corrections before other species would have finished a single hatch; and (3) their eggs are tolerant enough of humidity variation in the 45–55% range to allow some margin of error while still producing good hatch rates. Read our Complete Beginner's Guide to Incubating Quail Eggs if you are starting from zero.
Coturnix quail eggs hatch in 17–18 days at 99.5°F and 45–50% humidity. Lock down on day 14, raise humidity to 65–70%, and expect pips on days 16–17 with full hatch by day 18.

Set a forced-air incubator to 99.5°F (37.5°C) and 45–50% relative humidity. Turn eggs 3–5 times daily (or use an auto-turner) from day 1 through day 14. On day 14, stop turning, lay eggs on their sides, fill water reservoirs, and raise humidity to 65–70%. Do not open the incubator again until all hatching activity has ceased. First external pip typically occurs on day 16–17; most chicks complete hatch by the end of day 18. A few stragglers may hatch on day 19 with no concern.
The two most common causes of hatch failure are humidity too high during incubation (days 1–14), which prevents proper air cell development and drowns chicks, and opening the incubator during lockdown, which causes humidity to crash and membranes to dry out, trapping hatching chicks. Both are 100% avoidable.

Coturnix quail have been selectively bred in captivity for generations, producing birds that are highly productive, compact, and well-adapted to artificial incubation. A healthy female produces 300 eggs per year under the right conditions, more than any other quail species, which means hatching opportunities are abundant. Their eggs are small (approximately 10–13 grams), mottled brown, and easy to handle without cracking.
Compared to Bobwhite, California, or Button quail, Coturnix eggs are more tolerant of humidity variations in the 45–55% range during incubation, making them forgiving for beginners calibrating a new incubator. They also candle more easily than heavier-speckled species like California quail. The 17–18 day incubation period is the fastest among commonly kept quail, allowing multiple hatch runs per season without the long wait of chicken (21 days) or duck (28 days) incubation.
| Characteristic | Coturnix Quail | Bobwhite Quail | California Quail |
|---|---|---|---|
| Incubation Period | 17–18 days Fastest | 23–24 days | 23–24 days |
| Lockdown Day | Day 14 | Day 20–21 | Day 21 |
| Incubation Humidity | 45–50% | 45–50% | 40–45% (stricter) |
| Lockdown Humidity | 65–70% | 65–70% | 65–70% |
| Forced-Air Temperature | 99.5°F | 99.5Year | 9.5°F |
| Eggs Per Year (female) | 200–300 Highest | 30–60 | 12–40 seasonal |
| Beginner Difficulty | Easy | Moderate | Harder |
The decisions you make before an egg enters the incubator have a larger impact on hatch rate than many incubator adjustments made during incubation. Starting with high-quality, correctly stored eggs and a properly pre-stabilized incubator is the foundation of a successful Coturnix hatch.

Size and shape: Select normally shaped, normally sized eggs for incubation. Reject very small, very large, round, elongated, or oddly tapered egg shell abnormalities, as they often signal nutritional deficiency in the laying hen and correlate with lower embryo survival. A standard Coturnix egg weighs 10–13 grams; eggs below 9g or above 14g are edge cases worth skipping if you have better options.
Shell integrity: Hold each egg up to a bright light and look for hairline cracks. Cracked eggs can be set but carry a significantly higher risk of bacterial contamination inside the incubator. When a cracked egg develops and dies mid-incubation, its contents become a pressurized bacterial reservoir that can explode and contaminate every other egg in the incubator. If in doubt, discard it.
Shell cleanliness: Lightly soiled eggs are fine; heavily soiled eggs with caked-on feces should be gently dry-rubbed with a rough cloth rather than washed. Washing removes the egg's natural bloom (cuticle), which protects against bacterial penetration. If you must wash an egg, use water that is slightly warmer than the egg (110°F). Cooler water creates a pressure differential that draws bacteria through the shell pores. Sanitize with an egg wash product rated for use during incubation.
Age of eggs: Fresh eggs set within 7 days of lay have the highest hatch rates. Eggs stored correctly can remain viable for up to 10 days; beyond that, hatch rate declines measurably with each additional day. Never use eggs stored longer than 14 days. See the storage section below for storage temperature and turning protocols.
Calibrate your hygrometer before every hatch: The most reliable way to calibrate a digital hygrometer is the salt test. Place a small amount of table salt and a few drops of water in a bottle cap, seal it with the hygrometer in an airtight bag for 6–8 hours, and it should read 75% RH at equilibrium. A reading of 72–78% is acceptable; outside that range, note the offset and adjust your target humidity setting accordingly. Budget hygrometers shipped with most incubators commonly read ±8–10% off an error of that size during Coturnix incubation is the difference between a 70% hatch rate and a 40% hatch rate.
These are the exact settings to use for Coturnix quail eggs from day 1 through lockdown on day 14. Every number below is based on forced-air incubation, the standard for modern digital incubators. Still-air settings are covered separately in the next section.
| Parameter | Forced-Air (Days 1–14) | Still-Air (Days 1–14) | Lockdown (Day 14+) |
|---|---|---|---|
| Temperature | 99.5°F (37.5°C) | 101–102°F at egg level | 99.5°F forced-air; same |
| Humidity (RH) | 45–50% | 45–50% | 65–70% |
| Turning | 3–5× daily (odd number) | 3–5× daily (odd number) | Stop turning |
| Ventilation | Vents 25–50% open | Vents 25–50% open | Increase to 50–75% open |
| Candling | Day 7 optional check | Day 7 optional check | No candling after lockdown |
| Egg position | Upright in a turner or on the side | Upright in a turner or on the side | Lie flat on your side or in a hatcher |
Dry incubation (maintaining humidity at 25–35% during days 1–14 of incubation) has a growing following among experienced quail hatchers. The logic is sound: Coturnix eggs need to lose approximately 13% of their initial weight through moisture evaporation before lockdown, and in humid climates or humid incubators, this can be difficult to achieve at 45–50%. Running lower humidity ensures proper air cell development. The method is effective when monitored with air-cell candling on days 7 and 14 and when lockdown humidity is reliably raised to 65–70%. It is not recommended for beginners without a quality hygrometer, as going too dry (below 25%) causes the inner membrane to tighten on the chick before it can pip. Start with 45–50% and adjust based on air cell progress before experimenting with dry incubation.
The choice of incubator type matters for Coturnix incubation. Both still-air and forced-air incubators can produce excellent hatch rates, but they require different temperature settings and involve different levels of monitoring effort.
A forced-air incubator circulates air with a fan, maintaining an even temperature throughout the chamber. Set the thermostat to 99.5°F (37.5°C); the same setting works for Coturnix, Bobwhite, and California quail. The fan eliminates the hot-top/cool-bottom temperature stratification that affects still-air units, meaning all eggs at any position in the temperature chamber experience the same Temperature. This makes forced-air the correct choice for any hatch of more than a few dozen eggs, for anyone who cannot check the incubator multiple times daily, and for any batch of eggs where consistent results matter.
Modern digital forced-air incubators with auto-turning and humidity control, such as the Brinsea Ovation, Nurture Right 360, or GQF Sportsman series, make Coturnix incubation highly reliable. Set the parameters, verify with an independent hygrometer, and your main task becomes monitoring rather than adjusting.
Still-air incubators rely on natural convection without a fan. They stratify: the top of the incubator chamber is warmer than the bottom, which is why still-air Temperature is always measured and set at egg level rather than at a wall-mounted thermometer. For a Cotur Temperature still-air unit, set the Temperature to 101–102°F, measured at egg level with a calibrated probe thermometer. This higher reading accounts for the temperature gradient; the ambient air at the thermostat level will be slightly cooler.
Still-air incubators require more frequent monitoring because ambient room temperature changes affect the incubator temperature more directly than in forced-air units. Avoid placing a still-air incubator in a room with significant temperature fluctuations (e.g., garages or uninsulated sheds). Still-air units are suitable for small hobby hatches of 6–24 eggs when carefully monitored. For larger batches or consistent production runs, upgrade to forced-air.
Pre-warm eggs to room temperature (68–70°F) for 4–6 hours before placing them in the incubator. Cold eggs placed directly in a 99.5°F incubator cause condensation on the shell and a temperature dip as the incubator compensates, both of which are avoidable with a simple pre-warm. If turning manually, mark one side of each egg with an X and the opposite side with an O so you can visually confirm turning has occurred on both sides.
Embryonic development begins—the number of hours is set at the correct Temperature. The primitive streak forms and the heart begins beating by approximately day 2–3. None of this is visible on candling yet; this phase requires temperature and humidity stabilization, in addition to monitoring for stability. Record temperature and humidity readings every 6–8 hours for the first 48 hours to confirm the incubator is holding settings consistently.
Day 7 is the standard first-candling point for Coturnix eggs, though fertile eggs can show visible development as early as day 5. Candle in a darkened room with a bright LED candle held firmly against the large end of the egg. Fertile, developing eggs show a clearly defined web of reddish blood vessels radiating from a darker center (the developing embryo). Infertile eggs appear uniformly clear with only the round yolk shadow visible, no vessel network, and no dark mass. These "yolkers" or "clear" eggs can be removed immediately; they will not develop and will not act as a source of bacterial contamination if left to rot in the incubator.
Eggs showing a blood ring a ring of blood with no visible developing embryo structure indicate that development started but the embryo died in the first few days. Temperature spikes, rough handling at setting, or a genetic defect in the embryo can cause this. Remove blood ring eggs promptly. Keep the candling session brief, under 5 minutes. Temperature: Heat the whole batch to minimize Temperature and humidity loss from the open incubator.
A second candle at days 10–12 is optional but useful for monitoring air cell development and catching late quitters. By day 10–12, a developing Coturnix egg should appear mostly dark with a clearly defined air cell at the large end. The air cell should occupy approximately 25–30% of the egg volume at this stage. A smaller air cell indicates humidity is running too high; lower it by a few percentage points and increase ventilation slightly. A larger-than-expected air cell indicates humidity may be too low. Add a small amount of water to the incubator's reservoir and monitor the level.
Late quitters (eggs where development has stopped after day 7) appear as a dark mass with no movement, no visible pulsing, and often a distinct odor if held close. Remove them carefully; a rotting egg in a warm incubator poses a risk of bacterial contamination to adjacent eggs. If you are unsure whether an egg is alive or dead at this stage, leave it for another 2–3 days before making a decision rather than discarding a potentially viable embryo.
Day 14 is lockdown for Coturnix quail three full days before the expected hatch. On day 14 morning, stop all turning (disable auto-turner or move eggs off the turner), lay eggs on their sides on the incubator mesh or in a hatching tray, fill all water reservoirs to maximum, and add a damp sponge if needed to bring humidity to 65–70%. Verify the humidity reading with your independent hygrometer. Once set, the incubator lid should not be opened again until all hatching activity has fully ceased.
Opening the incubator during pipping and zipping causes a rapid humidity crash. The inner membrane of the egg, kept moist and pliable by high lockdown humidity, will dry and harden within minutes of a drop in humidity. A chick that has externally pipped (broken through the outer shell) and is mid-zip when the humidity drops can become physically trapped by the tightened membrane; it cannot rotate to zip, and cannot push out. This is the most common and most preventable single cause of Coturnix hatch failure during the hatch window.
Internal pip (the chick breaks into the air cell and takes its first breath) typically occurs on day 15–16 and is not visible externally. External pip (the first crack or hole in the outer shell) follows on day 16–17. After external pip, a Coturnix chick takes 12–24 hours to zip (rotate around the shell, cutting a cap) and push free. The total hatch window typically runs from day 17 (first chicks out) through day 18 (majority hatched) to day 19 (stragglers). Eggs showing no external pip by day 19 are unlikely to hatch.
Chicks that hatch early will begin stumbling around the incubator floor and may jostle unhatched eggs. This is normal and does not harm unhatched eggs. Leave all chicks in the incubator until the last chick is dry and fluffy, typically 12–24 hours after hatch. Wet, freshly hatched chicks are susceptible to chilling. Transfer dry chicks to the pre-warmed brooder once hatching activity has fully ceased. A chick can survive up to 48–72 hours in the incubator without food or water, sustained by the absorbed yolk sac.
| Day | What You See in a Fertile Egg | Signs of Problems | Action |
|---|---|---|---|
| Day 5–7 | Spider web of red blood vessels; dark central mass (embryo); egg appears pinkish-red | Uniformly clear (infertile); blood ring (early embryo death) | Remove the clear and blood rings; continue turning the remaining eggs |
| Day 10–12 | Large dark mass filling most of the egg; air cell clearly visible at the large end; possible embryo movement. | Air cell too small (humidity too high); air cell too large (humidity too low); dark still mass with odor (late quitter) | Adjust humidity based on air cell size; carefully remove confirmed quitters. |
| Day 14 (lockdown) | Very dark egg, nearly all dark except air cell; air cell should occupy roughly 1/3 of egg volume | Air cell line uneven or wobbly (abnormal position); very small air cell = humidity was too high | Proceed to lockdown, regardless, do not open after this point |
| Day 16–17 | Internal pip: air cell becomes irregular in shape as the chick moves into it; may see shadows of movement | No movement on day 17 in any egg may indicate a temperature or humidity failure. | Do not open. Monitor for external pip sounds (peeping inside unpiped eggs is normal) |
Use the air cell size as your humidity confirmation, not just the hygrometer reading. The air cell expands as moisture evaporates from the egg during incubation. By day 14, the air cell in a Coturnix egg should occupy approximately one-third of the egg volume, the universally accepted benchmark for adequate moisture loss before lockdown. If your air cell is smaller than this at day 14, you've been running too humid,, and hatch risks increase. If it's noticeably larger, you've been too dry. Air cell size is the egg's direct feedback on whether your incubation humidity has been correct, more reliable than any hygrometer reading alone.

Lockdown is the most common point where Coturnix hatching fails for hobbyists who understand the earlier incubation phases correctly but misjudge what the hatch window requires. The rules are simple; the problem is that they require discipline when the instinct is to intervene and help.
Step 1 - Stop the auto-turner or perform the final manual turn. Turn off the auto-turner or complete your last manual turn. Eggs that are still being turned during pip can cause the chick to be positioned incorrectly relative to the air cell, making internal pip more difficult.
Step 2 - Lay eggs flat. Remove eggs from upright turner cups or shelves and lay them on their sides directly on the incubator mesh or in a hatching tray. Coturnix chicks need to be able to rotate inside the egg as they zip eggs, propped upright in turner cups during hatch, which restricts this rotation and increases the risk of stuck chicks.
Step 3 - Fill all water reservoirs. Fill every water channel or reservoir. Add a wet sponge or wet paper towels to the incubator floor to increase surface evaporation, if needed, to reach 65–70% humidity.
Step 4 - Increase ventilation slightly. Open vents to 50–75% to allow increased gas exchange as eggs approach hatch. Developing embryos consume significantly more oxygen in the last 3 days of incubation, and hatching chicks release CO⊂2; adequate ventilation prevents buildup.
Step 5 - Confirm 65–70% humidity on your independent hygrometer, then close the lid and do not reopen. This is the hardest step for most hatchers. The incubator will not be opened again until all activity has ceased and all chicks are dry and fluffy.
Understanding what normal Coturnix hatching behavior looks like prevents the panic interventions that cause more harm than the original concern. Most first-time hatchers intervene too early, not too late.
| Symptom | Most Likely Cause(s) | Fix for Next Hatch | Priority |
|---|---|---|---|
| All eggs are clear at day 7 candling | No fertile male; male too young (<8 weeks); sex ratio wrong; male nutritionally deficient; eggs too old | Confirm male is actively mating (observe); check male age; adjust sex ratio to 1:2–4 females; increase protein intake; use eggs under 7 days old | High |
| Good fertility, but most die by day 7 (blood rings) | Temperature spike in first 3 days; rough handling at setting; cold shock from improper pre-warming; bad eggs stored too long | Pre-run incubator 24–36 hrs; pre-warm eggs to room temp before setting; handle gently; use eggs under 7 days old; check for temp spikes with min/max thermometer | High |
| Good early development, but embryos die days 10–14 (late quitters). emperature | oo high during incubation; Temperature running high in the final week; bacterial contamination from cracked or dirty eggs; insufficient ventilation | Lower humidity to 45–50%; sanitize incubator between hatches; remove cracked eggs before setting; open vents partially | High |
| Fully developed chicks die in the shell, unable to pip | Humidity too high during incubation (air cell too small, insufficient Temperature for chick); malposition; Temperature too low in the final days | Lower incubation humidity; candle at day 12–14 to verify air cell is adequate; confirm temperature accuracy with calibrated probe | High |
| Chicks pip but die mid-zip (shrink-wrapped) | Humidity too low at lockdown; incubator opened during hatch; lockdown humidity set, but incubator unable to hold it | Raise lockdown humidity to 65–70% confirmed with an independent hygrometer; do not open the incubator after lockdown; add a wet sponge if the incubator struggles to hold humidity | High |
| Chicks hatch, but legs are splayed outward (spraddle leg) | Slippery hatch surface; chilled brooder floor; nutritional deficiency (riboflavin) in breeding flock | Add shelf liner or rubber mat to hatcher floor; ensure brooder floor is paper towels for week 1; review breeder flock diet | Medium |
| Hatch rate drops over successive batches from the same flock | Male aging (>12 months); nutritional decline; incubator needs deep cleaning; heat stress in breeding pen | Rotate in younger males; review breeder flock diet; sanitize incubator thoroughly between hatches; ensure breeder pen is not overheated in summer | Low–Medium |
| Chicks hatch with deformities (twisted neck, crooked beak) | issues in breeding flock; Temperature too high early in incubation; inbreeding in small flock | Introduce unrelated birds to breeding stock; verify incubator temperature stability in days 1–7; avoid mating closely related birds | Low–Medium |
Opening unhatched eggs after a poor result hatch tells you precisely what went wrong. Internal pip with no external pip = chick piped into air cell but couldn't break shell (common with small air cell / too-high humidity). External pip but no zip progress = membrane dried at lockdown (too-low lockdown humidity or incubator was opened). Fully formed chick positioned correctly, with no sign of pip = died just before pip, likely due to a temperature issue or a very small air cell. hick with partially absorbed dark yolk visible = died in the first 12–14 days from early embryo failure. Each pattern points to a specific variable to correct for the next hatch. For our detailed breakdown of each scenario, see our guide Why Are My Quail Eggs Not Hatching?
Coturnix quail are forgiving enough that a wide range of incubators can produce good hatch rates when managed correctly. The two non-negotiables are an independent digital hygrometer (the built-in gauge on budget incubators commonly reads 5–10% off) and a calibrated thermometer at egg level. Everything beyond that improves consistency and reduces monitoring burden.
Consider a dedicated hatcher separate from your incubator: A separate hatching unit, even a second budget incubator used only during lockdown, solves the contamination problem that affects incubators used for both incubation and hatching. atching is messy: chicks shed fluff, shells break, and moisture and bacterial levels spike inside the unit during the 24–48-hour hatch window. A dedicated hatcher can be cleaned and sanitized thoroughly between batches without disrupting ongoing incubation in your primary unit. Or anyone running multiple overlapping batches of Coturnix eggs, which is easy to do given how quickly females lay, a separate hatcher eliminates the conflict between a batch in lockdown and a fresh batch at day 1 that can't share humidity settings.
Coturnix quail incubation is straightforward when you hold 99.5°F and 45–50% humidity consistently, lock down correctly on day 14, and resist the urge to open the incubator during hatch.

The settings are simple. The 17–18Fertilityle is fast. Fertility rates in a well-managed Co,turnix flock are high, 85–95% is achievable when birds are well-fed and correctly paired. Hatch rates of 80–90% of fertile eggs are routine for hatchers who get humidity right. The consistent failures almost all trace back to one of three causes: humidity too high during incubation (the most common), lockdown humidity too low or incubator opened during hatch (second most common), and temperature instability from an uncalibrated or poorly placed thermometer (third).
The settings in three sentences: Run 99.5°F and 45–50% RH from day 1. Lock down on day 14 by stopping turning, laying eggs flat, and raising humidity to 65–70%. eep the lid shut until every chick is dry and fluffy, regardless of what you hear or see inside.
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