

Buff Orpington photo: Pete Cooper (CC BY 2.0) · Wyandotte photo: ripperda (CC BY 2.0) · via Wikimedia Commons
Buff Orpington vs Wyandotte
Two backyard favorites, side by side — egg production, temperament, size, and hardiness, straight from our breed data. Here's how to choose.
The quick verdict
The Buff Orpington is the stronger layer — about 180–280 eggs a year against the Wyandotte's 180–240.
The Buff Orpington goes broody often — a bonus if you want a hen to hatch her own chicks, a hassle if you'd rather she keep laying like the Wyandotte.
Both dual purpose birdsBoth lay brown eggsBoth cold-hardyBoth beginner-friendlyBoth calm and easy to handle
Choose the Buff Orpington if you want…
- More eggs — up to 280 a year
- Will hatch and raise her own chicks
Side by side
| Trait | Buff Orpington | Wyandotte |
|---|---|---|
| Purpose | Dual purpose | Dual purpose |
| Eggs per year | ✓180–280 | 180–240 |
| Egg color | Brown | Brown |
| Egg size | Large | Large |
| Hen weight | 7–8 lbs | 6–7 lbs |
| Temperament | Affectionate and docile | Calm and confident |
| Cold hardy | Yes | Yes |
| Heat tolerant | No | No |
| Broodiness | Often broody | Sometimes broody |
| Beginner friendly | Yes | Yes |
Egg counts are healthy-hen peaks; real numbers dip in winter, during molt, and as a hen ages. Size a coop for either bird with our coop size calculator.
