Automated vs Manual Egg Collection — Labour, Cracks and Payback
Automated collection moves eggs on nest belts to an elevator, then a cross-conveyor and packer; manual collection has staff pick eggs from nests and trolley them to grading. The break-point is flock size, labour cost and the cracked-egg rate your market tolerates.
Automated egg collection
- Removes the largest daily labour line in a layer farm
- Consistent throughput regardless of staff turnover
- Integrates directly with in-line grading and packing
- Better traceability — batch and time-stamped flows
- High CAPEX (belts, elevators, cross-conveyors, packers)
- Downtime = daily egg backlog — service culture is critical
- Sizing errors (throughput per hour) cause chronic bottlenecks
- — Farms ≥ 30,000 hens per site
- — Regions with rising labour cost or scarcity
- — Producers with in-line grading / packing
- — Export and retail supply requiring traceability
Manual egg collection
- Very low CAPEX — trolleys, trays, hand tools
- Fast to deploy on small or staged builds
- Simple to operate — no gearboxes, belts or packers
- Flexible for mixed flock sizes and layouts
- Labour scales linearly with flock — no economies of scale
- Higher cracked / dirty egg rate (typically 1–3% additional)
- Traceability is manual and error-prone
- Staff availability becomes a production risk
- — Small farms (< 10,000 hens)
- — Very low labour-cost markets
- — Staged builds where automation is Phase 2
- — Breeder operations where hand-selection is preferred
| Criterion | Automated egg collection | Manual egg collection |
|---|---|---|
| Indicative CAPEX | USD 80–250k per 50k-hen house (belt + elevator + packer) | Minimal — trolleys and trays only |
| Labour hours per 1,000 hens/day | 0.05–0.15 | 0.6–1.2 |
| Energy per 1,000 eggs collected | Low but continuous | None |
| Maintenance focus | Belt tracking, fingers, elevator chains, packer heads | Trolley wheels, tray hygiene |
Automated collection pays back within 3–5 years above roughly 30,000 hens per site in mid-to-high labour-cost markets. Below that scale, or where labour is very cheap, manual remains viable. Always size the packer at 1.5× peak lay hourly rate — an undersized packer wipes out the labour saving.
Frequently asked questions
Transitions — nest belt to elevator, elevator to cross-conveyor, cross-conveyor to packer. Correct belt tension, elevator speed and packer-head alignment matter more than the brand of equipment.
Yes if the house is designed for it — nest lines, belt runs and packer room must be planned on day one. Retrofitting without provision usually means rebuilding the nest system.
Turn this decision into a scoped RFQ and receive comparable quotes from qualified manufacturers.
Read the full category buying guide with checklists, spec items and budget bands.
Buyer credit, ECA and leasing options — subject to third-party approval.
