Hardware Cloth vs Chicken Wire: What Actually Protects Your Flock 🦊🔒

Many keepers learn the hard way: chicken wire is for chickens—not for predators. If you want to stop raccoons, foxes, and dogs, you need hardware cloth. Here’s the plain-English breakdown so you know where each belongs and how to install it the right way.

The difference in one sentence

  • Chicken wire: Thin, hexagonal, flexible. Stops chickens, not predators.
  • Hardware cloth: Welded, square grid. Stops predators.

What to buy (and why)

  • ¼-inch, 19-gauge hardware cloth for vents, windows, and lower coop walls.
  • ½-inch can work on runs, but ¼-inch is safest against raccoon hands.
  • Galvanized to resist rust; stainless if you’re coastal.

Where to use which

  • Use hardware cloth on: vents, windows, the lower 24–36″ of run walls, and a buried skirt.
  • Use chicken wire only for interior partitions or as a bird barrier when hardware cloth is already providing the security.

The buried skirt (your silent MVP)

  • Lay 18–24 inches of hardware cloth flat around the run perimeter, L-shaped, buried 2–3 inches.
  • Predators hit the skirt and give up.

Fast install tips

  • Sandwich mesh between framing + washer-head screws.
  • Pull tight; avoid gaps at corners and doors.
  • Wear gloves—edges are sharp!

CTA:
👉 Want a coop that ships with predator-grade mesh and a skirt option? Check our models: Chicken Coop Shop.

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