A Rhode Island Red chickenA Wyandotte chicken

Rhode Island Red photo: HeatherLion (CC BY-SA 3.0) · Wyandotte photo: ripperda (CC BY 2.0) · via Wikimedia Commons

Rhode Island Red 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 Rhode Island Red is the stronger layer — about 200–300 eggs a year against the Wyandotte's 180–240.

In a hot, humid climate the Rhode Island Red copes better than the Wyandotte.

Both dual purpose birdsBoth lay brown eggsBoth cold-hardyBoth beginner-friendly

Choose the Rhode Island Red if you want…

  • More eggs — up to 300 a year
  • Better through summer heat
  • Rarely quits laying to sit on eggs
Full Rhode Island Red profile →

Choose the Wyandotte if you want…

  • Calmer and more handleable
  • More likely to go broody and mother chicks
Full Wyandotte profile →

Side by side

TraitRhode Island RedWyandotte
PurposeDual purposeDual purpose
Eggs per year200–300180–240
Egg colorBrownBrown
Egg sizeLargeLarge
Hen weight6–7 lbs6–7 lbs
TemperamentConfident and hardyCalm and confident
Cold hardyYesYes
Heat tolerantYesNo
BroodinessRarely broodySometimes broody
Beginner friendlyYesYes

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.

More head-to-heads

Or browse every comparison · see all 50 breeds

Rhode Island Red or Wyandotte — track whichever you pick

Give every bird a profile in PoultryPal, log their eggs and weight, and let the app show you which hen is really your best layer. Free on iOS and Android.

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